Business Intelligence For Dummies

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John Wiley & Sons, 2011 M02 4 - 384 páginas
You're intelligent, right? So you've already figured out that Business Intelligence can be pretty valuable in making the right decisions about your business. But you’ve heard at least a dozen definitions of what it is, and heard of at least that many BI tools. Where do you start?

Business Intelligence For Dummies makes BI understandable! It takes you step by step through the technologies and the alphabet soup, so you can choose the right technology and implement a successful BI environment. You'll see how the applications and technologies work together to access, analyze, and present data that you can use to make better decisions about your products, customers, competitors, and more.

You’ll find out how to:

  • Understand the principles and practical elements of BI
  • Determine what your business needs
  • Compare different approaches to BI
  • Build a solid BI architecture and roadmap
  • Design, develop, and deploy your BI plan
  • Relate BI to data warehousing, ERP, CRM, and e-commerce
  • Analyze emerging trends and developing BI tools to see what else may be useful

Whether you’re the business owner or the person charged with developing and implementing a BI strategy, checking out Business Intelligence For Dummies is a good business decision.

 

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Contenido

Introduction
1
Introduction
9
The BI Value
17
Fitting BI with Other Technology Disciplines
23
Fitting BI with Other Technology Disciplines
25
Customers Always Right
32
Business Intelligence User Models
49
Adding capabilities through managed queryingreporting
61
Implementing BI
183
Collecting User Requirements
205
BI Design and Development
223
The Day After Maintenance and Enhancement
243
BI and Technology
259
BI Products and Vendors
283
PurePlay BI Vendors
293
The Part of Tens
301

OLAP Online Analytical Processing
67
Dashboards and Briefing Books
89
The BI Lifecycle
115
The BI Big Picture
117
Human Factors in BI Implementations
131
Your other
134
Building a Solid BI Architecture and Roadmap
163
Ten BI Risks and How to Overcome Them
309
Ten Keys to Gathering Good BI Requirements
315
Ten Secrets to a Healthy BI Environment
331
Ten Signs That Your BI Environment Is at Risk
339
Index
345
Derechos de autor

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Acerca del autor (2011)

Swain Scheps is Manager of Business Analysis at Brierley + Partners, Inc. and a technology veteran making his first foray into the world of book authoring. He wrote the masterpiece resting in your hands with a great deal of input and inspiration from BI guru and fellow For Dummies author Alan R. Simon.
In the late 1990’s Swain, along with most people reading this book, had his dot-com boom-to-bust experience with a company called. . .well, that’s not really important now is it. (Anyone interested in buying some slightly underwater stock options should contact the publisher immediately.) After that there were consulting stints at Compaq, Hewlett-Packard, and Best Crossmark developing sales support applications and reporting tools. As of this writing, Swain basks under the fluorescent lights of Brierley, a technology company whose specialty is building customer relationship and loyalty management systems for retailers. The author has had the opportunity to learn from the very best as Brierley also provides unparalleled business intelligence and analytics services for its clients.
Swain lives in Dallas, Texas with wife Nancy and a mere four dogs. He writes about more than just technology; his work has appeared in Fodor’s travel guide books, military history magazines, and even another For Dummies book.

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