Home 2008 Data Warehousing, Business Intelligence & CPM (February) Contents |
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Data Warehousing, Business Intelligence & CPM Contents - February 2008 Summary
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Management Briefings
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- Market Overview & Analysis
| Part 2
Data warehousing and BI tools play a significant role
in companies but the predicted move to a more pervasive
use of BI may take some time, according to our latest
survey. Cliff Mills has the results.
- Expert Opinion
Deloitte Consulting’s Alex Plenty shows how to get
data quality up to the required standard in warehousing
and BI projects.
- View from the Top
| Part 2
Train operator Southern has installed a new corporate
performance management system to drive information
throughout the company from a single point of access
and help it to ‘think like a passenger’.
- Implementation Issues
| Part 2
BI systems are recognised as valuable, yet sometimes
there is an undercurrent of user unrest. BearingPoint’s
CJ Cox shows what you can do to combat this.
- Vendor Issues
| Part 2
Vuk Trifkovic of Datamonitor explores what the widening
of BI’s appeal means for future product development.
- BI 2.0 | Part
2
Many suppliers and industry commentators have been
promoting the idea of ‘BI 2.0’. But this attractive
vision from a vendor perspective raises a number of
issues for buyers, says Gerry Brown of Bloor Research.
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- Benefits Realisation
| Part 2
The use of data warehouses to support customer management
is increasingly commonplace – yet often CRM data warehouses
are misunderstood and fail to deliver the expected
benefits to the business. Roger Freeston finds out
why.
- Skills Development
| Part 2
As information management spreads, companies need
to consider what IM skills they need to develop and
recruit. Darron Chapman of TFPL Recruitment advises.
- Text Analytics
| Part 2
Text analytics has burst onto the scene as an important
technology for managing unstructured information,
says Fern Halper of Hurwitz & Associates.
- Master Data Management
| Part 2
Companies recognise the data held across their organisation
has to be managed in the same, standard way. Enter
master data management (MDM). Mike Ferguson of Intelligent
Business Strategies shows what’s involved.
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Conspectus 2008
Copyright
© 2008 |
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