Business Intelligence

CIO

Business Intelligence (BI)—that collection of technologies used to analyze data from different business systems in order to reveal meaningful insights about a company's operations—is among CIOs' top spending priorities, according to Merrill Lynch's CIO Spending Survey.

It's no wonder. Even a limited investment in BI software can yield compelling returns. Companies use BI to improve their decision-making, cut costs and identify new business opportunities. BI is more than just corporate reporting and more than a set of tools to coax recalcitrant data out of enterprise systems. Leading-edge CIOs are using BI to identify inefficient business processes that are ripe for reengineering.

Although BI holds great promise, implementations can be dogged by technical and cultural challenges. You have to ensure that the data feeding your BI applications is clean and consistent so that users trust it, and you want users to embrace these tools. Our range of content on BI will show you how companies are getting a competitive advantage from it and what you need to do to ensure smooth deployments and user acceptance.

Business Intelligence: Not Just for Bosses Anymore
Business intelligence has long been about spitting out data—often irrelevant and outdated—to a few big bosses. But today’s BI is both more meaningful and more egalitarian. And it requires ever tighter alignment between IT and the business.

The Brain Behind the Big, Bad Burger and Other Tales of Business Intelligence
Business intelligence systems have, for the most part, been dreary failures. But not in the restaurant industry. There, the payoffs have been significant.

Business Intelligence Gets Smart(er)
Companies are using business intelligence software for more than simple data mining. They're using it to identify hot sellers, cut costs and discover new business.

**Irving Tyler, profiled in this story, answered readers' questions about his use of Business Intelligence at Quaker Chemical.

Boiling Up Data
On a wider scale than ever before, energetic hunters and gatherers collect raw data and throw it in the pot before anyone else gets a good look. Then they cook it into a dubious information stew.

Analyze This
More and more companies are using analytics to drive their decision-making processes. But there’s a right and a wrong way to do it.

Ask the Expert: Business Intelligence
Foster Hinshaw, CTO and founder of Framingham, Mass.-based Netezza Corp., answered your questions about business intelligence.

For DBAs and developers who are familiar with Oracle solutions and want to learn about NonStop SQL/MX, this whitepaper provides an overview of the similarities and differences between the two products-with a specific focus on implementation.
See how the Nebraska Medical Center implemented a SQL solution to make information more readily available to streamline operations, improve patient care and facilitate medical research with an enterprise solution running on HP NonStop servers.
This whitepaper offers a detailed look into the fundamentals of HP NonStop SQL solutions. See how this system delivers unprecedented levels of application availability with fail-safe data integrity and meets the needs of enterprises with large-scale business critical applications.
CIOs know that Information technology is the foundation for business competitiveness and essential to regulatory compliance. Increasing IT complexity and tight budgets create a dilemma for CIOs.
Images captured from conventional surveillance systems are often very poor. But recent advances in digital imaging technology, computers, and networking hardware make it possible to usher in a new level of performance. With a system that leverages the latest technologies and that is designed from end-to-end with the goal of capturing and preserving image quality, the Avigilon High Definition Surveillance System achieves unmatched performance.
The HP Business Decision Appliance is a solution optimized for Microsoft SQL Server 2008 R2 and Microsoft SharePoint Server 2010 and designed for enterprises that want to provide business intelligence (BI) capabilities in a pre-configured single enclosure.
Download this webcast to learn the virtual hardware design considerations for Exchange 2010, deployment using the building block approach, options for high-availability and disaster recovery and support considerations.
Please join guest speaker IDC Analyst Carl Olofson as he discusses Enterprise Data Center challenges and why database consolidation is important and necessary. And hear from HP expert Joe Sullivan, who will discuss the HP Database Consolidation Appliance and how it addresses enterprise industry challenges. Joe will provide an overview of product architecture and details on how the appliance enables companies to build their own private cloud. This webcast will provide the latest information for simplifying your data management needs while reducing costs.
Fact: The demand to respond faster and with greater insight to business demands, based on data, is increasing. Fact: More organizations are turning to business intelligence (BI) and data warehousing for insightful decision-making.
Optimized for Microsoft® SQL Server 2008 R2, the preinstalled, pretuned HP Enterprise Database Consolidation Appliance simplifies database infrastructure management, improves resource utilization, and reduces costs resulting in exceptional levels of return.
The first appliance in the industry which consolidates and manages thousands of databases, integrates hardware, software and support and is scalable to meet your changing business needs.
Latitute is the only platform that combines the 3 essential capabilites for agile BI. View now to learn more
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