Business Intelligence Guidebook
eBook - ePub

Business Intelligence Guidebook

From Data Integration to Analytics

Rick Sherman

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  1. 550 pages
  2. English
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eBook - ePub

Business Intelligence Guidebook

From Data Integration to Analytics

Rick Sherman

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À propos de ce livre

Between the high-level concepts of business intelligence and the nitty-gritty instructions for using vendors' tools lies the essential, yet poorly-understood layer of architecture, design and process. Without this knowledge, Big Data is belittled – projects flounder, are late and go over budget. Business Intelligence Guidebook: From Data Integration to Analytics shines a bright light on an often neglected topic, arming you with the knowledge you need to design rock-solid business intelligence and data integration processes. Practicing consultant and adjunct BI professor Rick Sherman takes the guesswork out of creating systems that are cost-effective, reusable and essential for transforming raw data into valuable information for business decision-makers.

After reading this book, you will be able to design the overall architecture for functioning business intelligence systems with the supporting data warehousing and data-integration applications. You will have the information you need to get a project launched, developed, managed and delivered on time and on budget – turning the deluge of data into actionable information that fuels business knowledge. Finally, you'll give your career a boost by demonstrating an essential knowledge that puts corporate BI projects on a fast-track to success.

  • Provides practical guidelines for building successful BI, DW and data integration solutions.
  • Explains underlying BI, DW and data integration design, architecture and processes in clear, accessible language.
  • Includes the complete project development lifecycle that can be applied at large enterprises as well as at small to medium-sized businesses
  • Describes best practices and pragmatic approaches so readers can put them into action.
  • Companion website includes templates and examples, further discussion of key topics, instructor materials, and references to trusted industry sources.

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Informations

Éditeur
Morgan Kaufmann
Année
2014
ISBN
9780124115286
Part I
Concepts and Context
Chapter 1

The Business Demand for Data, Information, and Analytics

Abstract

In the business world, knowledge is not just power. It is the lifeblood of a thriving enterprise. Knowledge comes from information, and that, in turn, comes from data. Many enterprises are overwhelmed by the deluge of data, which they are receiving from all directions. They are wondering if they can handle Big Data—with its expanding volume, variety, and velocity. There is a big difference between raw data, which by itself is not useful, and actionable information, which business people can use with confidence to make decisions. Data must to be transformed to make it clean, consistent, conformed, current, and comprehensive—the five Cs of data. It is up to a Business Intelligence (BI) team to gather and manage the data to empower the company’s business groups with the information they need to gain knowledge—knowledge that helps them make informed decisions about every step the company takes. While there are attempts to circumvent or replace BI with operational systems, there really is no good substitute for true BI. Operational systems may excel at data capture, but BI excels at information analysis.

Keywords

Big Data; Data; Data 5 Cs; Data capture; Data variety; Data velocity; Data volume; Information; Information analysis; Operational BI
Information in This Chapter
‱ The data and information deluge
‱ The analytics deluge
‱ Data versus actionable information
‱ Data capture versus information analysis
‱ The five Cs of data
‱ Common terminology

Just One Word: Data

“I just want to say one word to you. Just one word
 Are you listening? 
 Plastics. There’s a great future in plastics.”
Mr. McGuire in the 1967 movie The Graduate.
The Mr. McGuires of the world are no longer advising newly-minted graduates to get into plastics. But perhaps they should be recommending data. In today’s digital world data is the key, the ticket, and the Holy Grail all rolled into one.
I do not just mean it’s growing in importance as a profession, although it is a great field to get into, and I’m thrilled that my sons Jake and Josh are pursuing careers in data and technology. Data is where the dollars are when it comes to company budgets. Every few years there is another report showing that business intelligence (BI) is at or near the top of the chief information officer’s (CIO) list of priorities.
Enterprises today are driven by data, or, to be more precise, information that is gleaned from data. It sheds light on what is unknown, it reduces uncertainty, and it turns decision-making from an art to a science.
But whether it’s Big Data or just plain old data, it requires a lot of work before it is actually something useful. You would not want to eat a cup of flour, but baked into a cake with butter, eggs, and sugar for the right amount of time at the right temperature it is transformed into something delicious. Likewise, raw data is unpalatable to the business person who needs it to make decisions. It is inconsistent, incomplete, outdated, unformatted, and riddled with errors. Raw data needs integration, design, modeling, architecting, and other work before it can be transformed into consumable information.
This is where you need data integration to unify and massage the data, data warehousing to store and stage it, and BI to present it to decision-makers in an understandable way. It can be a long and complicated process, but there is a path; there are guidelines and best practices. As with many things that are hard to do, there are promised shortcuts and “silver bullets” that you need to learn to recognize before they trip you up.
It will take a lot more than just reading this book to make your project a success, but my hope is that it will help set you on the right path.

Welcome to the Data Deluge

In the business world, knowledge is not just power. It is the lifeblood of a thriving enterprise. Knowledge comes from information, and that, in turn, comes from data. It is up to a BI team to gather and manage the data to empower the company’s business groups with the information they need to gain knowledge—knowledge that helps them make informed decisions about every step the company takes.
Enterprises need this information to understand their operations, customers, competitors, suppliers, partners, employees, and stockholders. They need to learn about what is happening in the business, analyze their operations, react to internal and external pressures, and make decisions that will help them manage costs, grow revenues, and increase sales and profits. Forrester Research sums it up perfectly: “Data is the raw material of everything firms do, but too many have been treating it like waste material—something to deal with, something to report on, something that grows like bacteria in a petri dish. No more! Some say that data is the new oil—but we think that comparing data to oil is too limiting. Data is the new sun: it’s limitless and touches everything firms do. Data must flow fast and rich for your organization to serve customers better than your competitors can. Firms must invest heavily in building a next-generation customer data management capability to grow revenue and profits in the age of the customer. Data is an asset that even CFOs will realize should have a line on the balance sheet right alongside property, plant, and equipment” [1].
It can be a problem, however, when there is more data than an enterprise can handle. They collect massive amounts of data every day internally and externally as they interact with customers, partners, and suppliers. They research and track information on their competitors and the marketplace. They put tracking codes on their websites so they can learn exactly how many visitors they get and where they came from. They store and track information required by government regulations and industry initiatives. Now there is the Internet of Things (IoT), with sensors embedded in physical objects such as pacemakers, thermostats, and dog collars where they collect data. It is a deluge of data (Figure 1.1).

Data Volume, Variety, and Velocity

It is not only that enterprises accumulate data in ever-increasing volumes, the variety and velocity of data is also increasing. Although the emerging “Big Data” databases can cause an enterprise’s ability to gather data to explode, the volume, velocity, and variety are all expanding no matter how “big” or “small” the data is.
Volume—According to many experts, 90% of the data in the world today was created in the last two years alone. When you hear that statistic you might think that it is coming from all the chatter on social media, but data is being generated by all manner of activities. For just one example, think about the emergence of radio frequency identification (RFID) to track products from manufacturing to purchase. It is a huge category of data that simply did not exist before. Although not all of the data gathered is significant for an enterprise, it still leaves a massive amount of data with which to deal.
Velocity—Much of the data now is time sensitive, and there is greater pressure to decrease the time between when it is captured and when it is used for reporting. We now depend on the speed of some of this data. It is extremely helpful to receive an immediate notification from your bank, for example, when a fraudulent transaction is detected, enabling you to cancel your credit card immediately. Businesses across industry sectors are using current data when interacting with their customers, prospects, suppliers, partners, employees, and other stakeholders.
Variety—The sources of data continue to expand. Receiving data from disparate sources further complicates things. Unstructured data, such as audio, video, and social media, and semistructured data like XML and RSS feeds must be handled differently from traditional structured data. The CIO of the past thought phones were just for talking, not something that collected data. He also thought Twitter was something that birds did. Now that an enterprise can collect data from tweets about its products, how does it handle that data and then what does it do with it? Also, what does it do with the invaluable data that business people create in spreadsheets and Microsoft Word documents and use in decision-making? Formerly, CIOs just had to worry about collecting and analyzing data from back office applications, but now their data can come from people, machines, processes, and applications spr...

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