Business intelligence and the Web

Published: 29 September 1999 y., Wednesday
Companies are beginning to move business intelligence capabilities beyond internal use and are incorporating them into their e-business strategies. Analysts expect the trend to grow as vendors introduce technologies that make it easier to offer data-analysis capabilities over the Internet to customers, suppliers, and business partners. MicroStrategy next month will debut InfoCenter, software that lets users develop a Web portal that enables customers to remotely query a company_s data warehouse using PCs, phones, handheld computers, and notebooks. Beverage Data Network in Verona, N.J., plans to use the product to extend data-analysis capabilities to its customers, alcoholic beverage companies. The company uses other tools from MicroStrategy to develop reports that analyze information such as sales trends and distributors_ sales volumes; it then e-mails these reports to clients. "[But] users have a need to get down to a real low level of detail, and you can_t e-mail a data warehouse," said Jonathan Fieldman, Beverage Data Network_s data warehouse director. Also in October, QueryObject Systems will introduce QueryObject Analyzer for building Internet data marts, and will provide free browsers for accessing them.There should be plenty of demand for such tools, as business intelligence is a natural fit for e-business, analysts said. "The Net is providing organizations with a much less expensive medium to transport and disseminate information to a broader constituency," said Aberdeen Group analyst Bob Moran. "Business intelligence and the Web should be interwoven."
Šaltinis: InformationWeek
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