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Showing posts with label BI Analytics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BI Analytics. Show all posts

Thursday 5 September 2013

Business Intelligence - Are you game for the Moneyball Process?

The importance of data-driven decision making and different aspects of looking at data was much popularized among the civic society by Brad Pitt starred Hollywood movie ‘Moneyball’ which is based on a true story.

A quick snapshot of the storyline:
“Oakland Athletics general manager Billy Beane (Brad Pitt) is upset by his team’s loss to the New York Yankees in the 2001 postseason. With the impending departure of star players, Beane attempts to devise a strategy for assembling a competitive team for 2002 but struggles to overcome Oakland’s limited payroll. Billy turns baseball on its ear when he uses statistical data to analyze and place value on the players (not star players though) he picks for the team. This resulted in Oakland’s Athletics (baseball team) set a team record of 20 wins in a row. Similar strategy was adopted by Boston Red Sox’s who won the World Series in 2004 since their first win in 1918”

(Sources: WIKI, IMDB)

What Beane had done differently that turned the game around was application of Sabermetrics (A Statistical analytics method of analyzing data points in the game of baseball). The analytics lead application of Sabermetrics helped Beane to question traditional methods of evaluation such as RBI (Runs Batted In) and batting average. It took in-depth analysis to conclude that matches were not won by players with higher batting average but by those with a higher On Base percentage (OBP), Slugging percentage (SLG). Beane formed a team based on these new metrics and other parameters.

Monday 18 February 2013

Hold Hexaware Tech; target of Rs 94: Firstcall Research


Firstcall Research has recommended hold rating on Hexaware Technologies with a target of Rs 94, in its February 11, 2013 research report.

Firstcall Research has recommended hold rating on Hexaware Technologies  with a target of Rs 94, in its February 11, 2013 research report.

“The Hexaware Technologies is formed in 1990. Hexaware is a specialized IT and BPO service provider, ranked the fastest growing mid-sized company in India. The company leadership positions in PeopleSoft, HRIT, Airlines, and BFSI. It specialize in Business Intelligence and Analytics, Legacy Modernization and Independent Testing, and have around 6000 staff in 20 countries serving 156 clients globally. The experience in the business process outsourcing arena fully complements and strengthens its service spectrum and allows operating as an enterprise-class solution delivery company.”

“The solutions that aim to provide high value by optimizing cost of ownership of technology investments for customers. Hexaware has been mentioned as one of the fastest growing RIMS providers in the Gartner report titled “Competitive Landscape in India-Based Remote Infrastructure Management Service Providers” Hexaware is a leading global provider of IT and BPO services, focusing on delivering real business results from technology solutions and specializing in Business Intelligence, Business Analytics, Enterprise Applications, HR-IT and Legacy Modernization. With 156 active clients, Hexaware has achieved leadership position in industries such as Healthcare & Life sciences, Manufacturing, Travel, Transportation, Hospitality and Logistics, Banking, Finance, Insurance, Leasing and in Domains such as HR and Business Analytics. The companies leverage over 4,000 person years of project experience and 500 engagements globally, including successful implementation of technologies like PeopleSoft, SAP, Oracle Applications, CRM and Microsoft Dynamics to affect an increased ROI from clients’ ERP investments.”

Monday 11 February 2013

A Proactive Approach to Building an Effective Data Warehouse

“We can’t solve problems by using the same kind of thinking we used when we created them.” – The famous quote attributed to Albert Einstein applies as much to Business Intelligence & Analytics as it does to other things. Many organizations that turn to BI&A for help on strategic business concerns such as increasing customer churn, drop in quality levels, missed revenue opportunities face disappointment. One of the important reasons for this is that the data that can provide such insights is just not there. For example, to understand the poor sales performance in a particular region during a year, it will not just help to have data about our sales plan, activities, opportunities, conversions and sales achieved / missed, it will also require understanding of other disruptive forces such as competitors promotions, change in customer preferences, new entrants or alternatives.

Thomas Davenport, a household name in the BI&A community, in his book ‘Analytics at Work’, explains the analytical DELTA (Data, Enterprise, Leadership, Targets and Analysts), a framework that organizations could adopt to implement analytics effectively for better business decisions and results. He emphasizes that besides the necessity of having clean, integrated and enterprise-wide data in a warehouse, it is also important that the data enables to measure something new and important.

Thursday 10 January 2013

The Business Intelligence Chasm

The term Business Intelligence was first coined by IBM researcher Hans Luhn (in the IBM Journal of Research and Development, October 1958) and then used in its modern sense in 1989 by then-Gartner analyst Howard Dresner, who defined BI as an umbrella term to describe concepts and methods to improve business decision making by using fact based support systems.Both these definitions were quite prescient for its time – Mr. Luhn’s concept of ‘action points’ in the organization and Mr. Dresner’s reference to ‘business decision making’ ensured that BI has direct business relevance to go along with its very interesting technology façade.
BI & Analytics, in some sense, represents the holy grail of computer based applications, i.e. the use of technology to solve real world business problems. Clearly, there are 2 distinct aspects to BI –Technology and Business and both have to work synergistically to deliver on the overall promise.
As we step into 2013, my contention is that we as BI practitioners are doing fairly well on the technology front by assimilating many of the new developments (In-memory, Appliances, Columnar storage, Big data processing etc.) into mainstream data management, reporting and analytics, while we lack the skills required to integrate all this in the broader business context. Let me substantiate that statement.