Business Intelligence: Where to turn now?

In my discussions with customers and others in the BI field I am hearing a lot of anguish about software vendors.  Many of the larger BI players have been sucked up into bigger companies and I’m hearing that these BI vendors, which were never customer-friendly to begin with, are now becoming downright customer-hostile – even with customers who have paid maintenance for the privilege of obtaining technical support.  Take a look at this article from CIO Magazine for more detail on the turmoil, and this article on Business Intelligence vendors to watch.

BI software vendors used to be grouped into the top three or four players, with open source and smaller players taking a far back-seat.  Things have changed.  Every week I’m seeing product announcements from new entrants.  Some of the tools look really good.  One I’m a big fan of, despite some limitations, is QlikView.  They’ve been around for a while, but are still relatively new compared with long-time BI players.

As consultants, we have the opportunity to work with a great group of clients, and we apply our expertise regardless of the technology they have already deployed – even if its one of the aforementioned customer service-challenged companies.  What to do, though, when a client asks us to recommend a new technology to help them rid themselves of their BI headaches, or make a new start in the field?  We’ve learned that the company behind a technology is as important to a successful implementation as the technology itself.  After all, you can get management dashboards, alerts, statistical analysis and basic reporting from virtually all of the established players.

So, who to choose?

Of course it depends on the application, but if you’re looking for enterprise-class reporting, dashboarding capability, the ability to email basic business intelligence to a broad audience, reasonable licensing models, and an independent vendor partner with a great reputation for customer service, the answer could very well be Information Builders, IBI, the creators of Focus and WebFocus.

What?  Isn’t IBI an old-line mainframe reporting solution?  That’s what I thought.  But, then I saw the technology demonstrated to one of my clients.  Is it perfect?  No.  Other major vendors like Business Objects, Cognos and MicroStrategy each have their unique advantages and disadvantages.  But, IBI really seems to ‘get it’ in two very important ways:

1) WebFocus provides flexibility but also comprehends a fact I’ve been talking about for a long time: MOST USERS DO NOT CREATE REPORTS FROM SCRATCH.  In most BI environments reports are created by IT and, perhaps, a few power users.  The vast majority of users don’t want to and don’t need to create reports from scratch.  (For more on this see my post on tying the BI tool to the user. )

2) IBI customers are genuinely happy both with the tools AND with the vendor.  As with any piece of software, tech support issues do occasionally arise, but the feedback I’ve received is that when they occur, they are given top priority.  Can you say that about your BI vendor?

We were so impressed with the research we’ve conducted, that we’re considering partnership with IBI.  If you are evaluating Business Intelligence tool sets, I recommend that you consider them.

– Ben

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Comments

2 Responses to “Business Intelligence: Where to turn now?”
  1. Rich Meyer says:

    Hey Ben

    We attended a presentation last spring from the IB folks here in GR. They had some interesting things to show, but it didn’t make a lot of sense for us since we are Microsoft clones. Good luck with your future endeavors, hopefully they turn out well.

    Rich

  2. btaub says:

    Thanks, Rich. Like most products, the IBI stuff will work with a Microsoft environment and, probably, give you functionality above what Microsoft provides. On the other hand, of course, it would be hard to introduce it if the organization won’t step outside the Microsoft framework.

    Also, I should add, if what you have right now is working for you and you don’t see it limiting what you’re trying to get done in the future then don’t mess with it. If the Microsoft stuff is getting you where you want to go, don’t change horses unless you need to.

    Anyhow, thanks for the note. It’s great to hear from you!

    – Ben

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