Business Intelligence – BI

Business Intelligence – BI

Table of Contents Expand BI tools and software come in a wide variety of forms such as spreadsheets, reporting/query software, data visualization software, data mining tools, and online analytical processing (OLAP). Self-service BI is an approach to analytics that allows individuals without a technical background to access and explore data. The need for BI was derived from the concept that managers with inaccurate or incomplete information will tend, on average, to make worse decisions than if they had better information. What Is Business Intelligence – BI? Understanding Business Intelligence (BI) Special Considerations Types of BI Tools and Software Benefits of Business Intelligence Examples of BI Business intelligence (BI) refers to the procedural and technical infrastructure that collects, stores, and analyzes the data produced by a company’s activities. Some of the many benefits companies can experience after adopting BI into their business models include faster, more accurate reporting and analysis, improved data quality, better employee satisfaction, reduced costs, and increased revenues, and the ability to make better business decisions. Some of the insights emerging from big data have companies scrambling to capture everything, but data analysts can usually filter out sources to find a selection of data points that can represent the health of a process or business area as a whole.

BI represents the technical infrastructure that collects, stores, and analyzes company data.

What Is Business Intelligence (BI)?

Business intelligence (BI) refers to the procedural and technical infrastructure that collects, stores, and analyzes the data produced by a company’s activities.

BI is a broad term that encompasses data mining, process analysis, performance benchmarking, and descriptive analytics. BI parses all the data generated by a business and presents easy-to-digest reports, performance measures, and trends that inform management decisions.

BI represents the technical infrastructure that collects, stores, and analyzes company data.
BI parses data and produces reports and information that help managers to make better decisions.
Software companies produce BI solutions for companies that wish to make better use of their data.
BI tools and software come in a wide variety of forms such as spreadsheets, reporting/query software, data visualization software, data mining tools, and online analytical processing (OLAP).
Self-service BI is an approach to analytics that allows individuals without a technical background to access and explore data.

Understanding Business Intelligence (BI)

The need for BI was derived from the concept that managers with inaccurate or incomplete information will tend, on average, to make worse decisions than if they had better information. Creators of financial models recognize this as “garbage in, garbage out.”

BI attempts to solve this problem by analyzing current data that is ideally presented on a dashboard of quick metrics designed to support better decisions.

Most companies can benefit from incorporating BI solutions; managers with inaccurate or incomplete information will tend, on average, to make worse decisions than if they had better information.

Special Considerations

To be useful, BI must seek to increase the accuracy, timeliness, and amount of data.

These requirements mean finding more ways to capture information that is not already being recorded, checking the information for errors, and structuring the information in a way that makes broad analysis possible.

In practice, however, companies have data that is unstructured or in diverse formats that do not make for easy collection and analysis. Software firms thus provide business intelligence solutions to optimize the information gleaned from data. These are enterprise-level software applications designed to unify a company’s data and analytics.

Although software solutions continue to evolve and are becoming increasingly sophisticated, data scientists still need to manage the trade-offs between speed and the depth of reporting.

Some of the insights emerging from big data have companies scrambling to capture everything, but data analysts can usually filter out sources to find a selection of data points that can represent the health of a process or business area as a whole. This can reduce the need to capture and reformat everything for analysis, saving analytical time and increasing the reporting speed.

Types of BI Tools and Software

BI tools and software come in a wide variety of forms. Let's take a quick look at some common types of BI solutions.

Benefits of Business Intelligence

There are many reasons why companies adopt BI. Many use it to support functions as diverse as hiring, compliance, production, and marketing. BI is a core business value; it is difficult to find a business area that does not benefit from better information to work with.

Some of the many benefits companies can experience after adopting BI into their business models include faster, more accurate reporting and analysis, improved data quality, better employee satisfaction, reduced costs, and increased revenues, and the ability to make better business decisions.

BI was derived to help businesses avoid the problem of "garbage in and garbage" out, resulting from inaccurate or insufficient data analysis.

If, for example, you are in charge of production schedules for several beverage factories and sales are showing strong month-over-month growth in a particular region, you can approve extra shifts in near real-time to ensure your factories can meet demand.

Similarly, you can quickly idle down that same production if a cooler than normal summer starts impacting sales. This manipulation of production a limited example of how BI can increase profits and reduce costs when used properly.

Examples of BI

Lowe's Corp

Lowe's Corp, which operates the nation's second-largest home improvement retail chain, is one of the earliest big-box adopters of BI tools. Specifically, it has leaned on BI tools to optimize its supply chain, analyze products to identify potential fraud, and solve problems with collective delivery charges from its stores.

Coca-Cola Bottling Company

Coca-Cola Bottling had a problem with its daily manual reporting processes: they restricted access to real-time sales and operations data.

But by replacing the manual process with an automated BI system, the company completely streamlined the process and saved 260 hours a year (or more than six 40-hour work weeks). Now, the company's team can quickly analyze metrics like delivery operations, budget, and profitability with just a few clicks.

What Is Power BI?

Power BI is a business analytics product offered by software giant Microsoft. According to the company, it allows both individuals and businesses to connect to, model, and visualize data using a scalable platform.

What Is Self-Service BI?

Self-service BI is an approach to analytics that allows individuals without a technical background to access and explore data. In other words, it gives people throughout the organization, not just those in the IT department, to have control over the data.

What Are Disadvantages of Self-Service BI?

Drawbacks to self-service BI include a false sense of security in end-users, high licensing costs, a lack of data granularity, and sometimes too much accessibility.

What Is IBM's BI Product?

One of IBM's main BI products is its Cognos Analytics tool, which the company touts as an all-inclusive, AI-powered BI solution.

Related terms:

Benchmark

A benchmark is a standard against which the performance of a security, mutual fund or investment manager can be measured. read more

Big Data

Big data refers to large, diverse sets of information from a variety of sources that grow at ever-increasing rates. read more

Competitive Intelligence

Competitive intelligence is the act of collecting and analyzing actionable information about competitors and the marketplace to form a business strategy. read more

Compliance Program

A compliance program is a set of internal policies and procedures of a company to meet mandated requirements or to uphold the business's reputation. read more

Data Analytics

Data analytics is the science of analyzing raw data in order to make conclusions about that information.  read more

Data Science

Data science focuses on the collection and application of big data to provide meaningful information in different contexts like industry, research, and everyday life. read more

Data Warehousing

A data warehouse is an electronic system for storing information in a manner that is secure, reliable, easy to retrieve, and easy to manage. read more

Data Mining

Data mining is a process used by companies to turn raw data into useful information by using software to look for patterns in large batches of data. read more

Descriptive Analytics

Descriptive analytics refers to a process whereby historical data is interpreted to understand changes in business operations. read more

Financial Modeling

Financial modeling is the process of creating a summary of a company's costs and income in the form of a spreadsheet that can be used to calculate the impact of a future event or decision. read more