iPartners Earns “Leading Vendor” Status for Fifth Time in Celent’s Insurance Deal Trends Report

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Posted on : 18-06-2013 | By : Ben Stinner | In : Analytics

ATLANTA–(BUSINESS WIRE)–

iPartners,
the leading provider of Software as a Service (SaaS) business
intelligence and data warehousing solutions to the property casualty
(PC) insurance industry, today announced that it has again been named
as a ‘Leading Vendor’ by Celent in the recently published Insurance
Deal Trends 2013
report. This is the fifth consecutive year
iPartners has been recognized for its ‘leading’ status based on deal
flow with insurance carriers for iPartners’ business intelligence and
data warehousing solution.

“We congratulate iPartners on once again being named a leading vendor
for its continued strong deal volume. A continued investment in core
systems renewal was clearly reflected in the property and casualty deal
data,” says Mike Fitzgerald, senior analyst with Celent’s Insurance
group and coauthor of the report. “There was also an increase in data
mastery tools and PC carriers compete in pricing and risk analytics.
Once nice-to-haves, advanced analytics are becoming table stakes.”

“Our 2013 report shows that overall deal activity among PC insurers
continues to be slow. However, investments in core systems and data
analytics have buoyed sales for key vendors like iPartners,” says Karen
Monks, analyst with Celent’s Insurance group and coauthor of the report.

iPartners founder and CEO Robert Lasher commented on the recognition
saying, “We are thrilled with our fifth consecutive year of Celent
Deal Trends
recognition and credit much of our consistent success to
our ongoing investment to deepen and broaden the capabilities of our BI
and data warehouse solution. As we’ve enhanced our offering, the
industry has also become more aware of the cost, time, dependability and
ongoing support benefits of SaaS platforms and Cloud delivery, resulting
in insurers better prepared to take advantage of what we have to offer –
not just in our data and analytics capabilities, but also in our
delivery model.”

iPartners’ insurance business intelligence solution is an easy to use
SaaS solution designed specifically for the PC industry. The suite is
built around an insurance specific data model and offers a complete
analytics solution including: a data warehouse, performance management
dashboards and scorecards, ad-hoc detailed analysis, production
reporting, and drill to detail.

About iPartners

As the industry leading provider of ‘on demand’ PC insurance business
analytics solutions, iPartners enables insurance executives to make
higher quality and more timely decisions — the true measure of an
insurance executive’s productivity – by delivering accurate, up-to-date,
easy-to-use and relevant data via a suite of customized dashboards,
scorecards, and a library of PC specific KPIs (key performance
indicators). Delivered via Software as a Service (SaaS), iPartners
currently services over 45 customers and processes over 25 million
policies representing over $18 billion in premiums. For additional
information visit www.iPartners.net
or call 888.618.8360 ext 230.

 iPartners Earns “Leading Vendor” Status for Fifth Time in Celent’s Insurance Deal Trends Report

PR Contact:
Solomark Associates
Susan Douglas, 847.895.2634
susan@solomark.com

Article source: http://finance.yahoo.com/news/ipartners-earns-leading-vendor-status-120000012.html

Long-term view needed for oil & gas contractors

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Posted on : 18-06-2013 | By : admin | In : Analytics

The world’s oil gas market is lacking talent here and now – but taking a long-term view is key in the employment and deployment of contract staff.
 
This is according to sector experts speaking to Recruiter for our oil gas Sector Focus on p14 of the new edition of the magazine, out last Friday.

It is important to see that your contract staff are passing their expertise on through an organisation, says Sarah Bass, an HR business partner in the Asia-Pacific region at GL Noble Denton, which provides technical advisory services to the industry globally.

“It’s not common practice to employ a team made up exclusively of expats within the Asian oil gas industry,” Bass tells Recruiter, “and at GL Noble Denton, we focus on the need to upskill our local technical experts.

“We implement a pyramid scheme which ensures expats can transfer their skills to the local teams, so it is crucial that we only bring onboard expats who are willing to pass on their expertise,” she says.

The downside of not retaining skills within an organisation is highlighted by Helen Smith, the chief executive officer of recruiter Oil Consultants.

“Historically, companies took a short-term view and brought in contractors, also known as consultants, to complete this type of work. At the time this was the most economical option enabling the companies to maximise production and profit. As a result a lot of these key skills were ‘out-sourced’ and company employees were unable to gain experience in these areas.”

Smith, whose firm were double nominees at May’s Recruiter Awards for Excellence 2013, sponsored by Eploy, says there are some younger contractors unable to get the opportunities or pay rates they would hope for in the industry – they should look for the long-term reward rather than focusing on immediacy, she advises.

Article source: http://www.recruiter.co.uk/news/2013/06/long-term-view-needed-for-oil-gas-contractors/

WebFOCUS Cloud Express Provides UK Public Sector With Cost-Efficient Business Intelligence

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Posted on : 18-06-2013 | By : Ben Stinner | In : Analytics

NEW YORK, NY–(Marketwired – Jun 17, 2013) – Information Builders, a leader in business intelligence (BI) and analytics, information integrity, and integration solutions, today announced that the company is working with Amtex Solutions Limited to provide the UK public sector with cost efficient BI-as-a-service. The solution, WebFOCUS Cloud Express, is part of the government’s G-Cloud Framework and allows public sector entities to leverage advanced BI and analytics capabilities at a low cost.

BARC, Gartner, Ventana, and other research firms recognize Information Builders’ WebFOCUS platform as one of the leading business analytics, business intelligence, and data integration platforms. With WebFOCUS Cloud Express, this trusted toolset is now available to the G-Cloud Framework, providing a secure turnkey solution for analytics, BI, data discovery, data visualization, and enterprise reporting. Offered in a software-as-a-service (SaaS) delivery model, it features an embedded data warehouse based on Microsoft SQL Server 2012. Its wizard-based data integration automatically uploads data and generates dashboards and reports that are delivered to e-mail clients, mobile devices, and web browsers. The agreement with Amtex Solutions Limited ensures that the public sector can realize these benefits and enjoy lower costs, reduced procurement times, a simpler tendering process, and a genuinely open and competitive marketplace.

“Information Builders formed our partnership with Amtex Solutions with a clear focus in mind to deliver on the expectations of the public sector for business analytics, offering a uniquely responsive, flexible, and dynamic platform for all the public sector’s business intelligence requirements,” said Peter Walker, UK and Ireland country manager, Information Builders UK Ltd.

“Information Builders has prepared an Express version of WebFOCUS, our flagship product, that is both very easy to use and yet extensible to handle full production applications,” said Gerald Cohen, president and CEO of Information Builders. “We are delighted to bring this product to the UK market with the G-Cloud program.”

The WebFOCUS platform is used by UK public sector organizations, including Central North West London NHS Trust, Greater Manchester Police, Debt Management Office, and the Northern Ireland Civil Service.

WebFOCUS Cloud Express allows public sector entities to leverage high-performance, full-featured BI capabilities, such as:

  • 100 percent web-based deployment — no additional client hardware or software to install or maintain
  • A single web-based environment for accessing and using all reporting, dashboards, and analysis capabilities
  • Wizard-style interfaces that lower the barrier to entry, simplifying all phases of the data definition and reporting process
  • User-friendly development tools that eliminate the need for SQL coding or object-oriented development expertise
  • Access to all the data across the organization via more than 26 pre-built data adapters
  • Distribution of reports and dashboards to users across all mobile platforms (Android and iOS) and web browsers in support of New Ways of Working initiatives
  • E-mail reports and dashboards to individuals or workgroups
  • Open APIs supporting REST, XML, and JSON for external system and content integration
  • IL2-compliant cloud infrastructure (IL3 later in year) deployment
  • ISO 9001- and ISO 27001-certified operations
  • 99.995 percent up-time guarantee
  • Highly secure IL2 environment for your data with virus protection, advanced router-level firewalling, denial of service (DoS) protection, regular security vulnerability assessment, and scanning

About Information Builders
Information Builders helps organizations transform data into business value. Our software solutions for business intelligence and analytics, integration, and data integrity empower people to make smarter decisions, strengthen customer relationships, and drive growth. Our dedication to customer success is unmatched in the industry. That’s why tens of thousands of leading organizations rely on Information Builders to be their trusted partner. Founded in 1975, Information Builders is headquartered in New York, NY, with offices around the world, and remains one of the largest independent, privately held companies in the industry. Visit us at informationbuilders.com, follow us on Twitter at @infobldrs, like us on Facebook, and visit our LinkedIn page.

Article source: http://finance.yahoo.com/news/webfocus-cloud-express-provides-uk-213544216.html

Qstride Announces Got BI? Marketing Initiative Offering $50K of Leading …

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Posted on : 18-06-2013 | By : admin | In : Analytics

DETROIT, June 18, 2013 /PRNewswire via COMTEX/ –
Qstride, a leading force in the business intelligence and analytics world, today announced that it will begin offering $50,000 of no-cost software licenses of MicroStrategy, a Gartner leading magic quadrant business intelligence technology, to its client companies as part of its new “Got BI?” public awareness initiative. This offering will allow qualifying companies to experience the benefits of integrated business intelligence and analytics technology without the initial software costs and with very little financial risk. MicroStrategy is positioned in the Leaders Quadrant by Gartner.

The “Got BI?” initiative is designed to highlight and promote how having a business intelligence strategy can help companies increase overall revenue, make better business decisions faster, and gain a competitive advantage.

Qstride specializes in providing customized business intelligence and analytics solutions that include mobile, social, and cloud offerings designed to complement the way companies do business today. Combined with the elite lineup of MicroStrategy Business Intelligence software, premium research, and in-depth information resources, Qstride’s integrated solutions will offer added value and ROI in the competitive marketplace.

Qstride’s lineup of business intelligence offerings includes some of the most cutting-edge and relevant technology and services available anywhere, including the following:

– Mobile intelligence products designed to create measurable results in this expanding commercial marketplace

– Data warehousing and cloud computing solutions for maximum access to data and added control over marketing strategies in the field

– Social intelligence that delivers added commerce and marketing features for client companies in the social media environment

– Integrated business intelligence solutions that create added visibility and increased efficiency for sales and marketing, data management and access operations within the corporate environment

The launch of the new “Got BI?” campaign will further cement Qstride’s leading position in the business intelligence community. MicroStrategy’s Business Intelligence products and services are a good fit for Qstride’s integrated approach and can provide added value for companies in the Qstride client family.

About Qstride:

As a leading force for innovation in the Business Intelligence industry, Qstride offers exceptional end to end BI solutions for clients in measuring and tracking company performance, increasing delivery throughput, and decreasing delivery risk via its robust technology stack and professional services.

SOURCE Qstride

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Article source: http://www.marketwatch.com/story/qstride-announces-got-bi-marketing-initiative-offering-50k-of-leading-business-intelligence-technology-for-clients-worldwide-2013-06-18

Qstride Announces Got BI? Marketing Initiative Offering $50K of Leading Business Intelligence Technology for Clients …

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Posted on : 18-06-2013 | By : Ben Stinner | In : Analytics

DETROIT, June 18, 2013 /PRNewswire/ – Qstride, a leading force in the business intelligence and analytics world, today announced that it will begin offering $50,000 of no-cost software licenses of MicroStrategy, a Gartner leading magic quadrant business intelligence technology, to its client companies as part of its new “Got BI?” public awareness initiative. This offering will allow qualifying companies to experience the benefits of integrated business intelligence and analytics technology without the initial software costs and with very little financial risk.  MicroStrategy is positioned in the Leaders Quadrant by Gartner.

(Logo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20130306/CL72697LOGO )

The “Got BI?” initiative is designed to highlight and promote how having a business intelligence strategy can help companies increase overall revenue, make better business decisions faster, and gain a competitive advantage. 

Qstride specializes in providing customized business intelligence and analytics solutions that include mobile, social, and cloud offerings designed to complement the way companies do business today. Combined with the elite lineup of MicroStrategy Business Intelligence software, premium research, and in-depth information resources, Qstride’s integrated solutions will offer added value and ROI in the competitive marketplace.

Qstride’s lineup of business intelligence offerings includes some of the most cutting-edge and relevant technology and services available anywhere, including the following:

  • Mobile intelligence products designed to create measurable results in this expanding commercial marketplace
  • Data warehousing and cloud computing solutions for maximum access to data and added control over marketing strategies in the field
  • Social intelligence that delivers added commerce and marketing features for client companies in the social media environment
  • Integrated business intelligence solutions that create added visibility and increased efficiency for sales and marketing, data management and access operations within the corporate environment

The launch of the new “Got BI?” campaign will further cement Qstride’s leading position in the business intelligence community. MicroStrategy’s Business Intelligence products and services are a good fit for Qstride’s integrated approach and can provide added value for companies in the Qstride client family.

About Qstride:

As a leading force for innovation in the Business Intelligence industry, Qstride offers exceptional end to end BI solutions for clients in measuring and tracking company performance, increasing delivery throughput, and decreasing delivery risk via its robust technology stack and professional services.

 

Article source: http://finance.yahoo.com/news/qstride-announces-got-bi-marketing-115800007.html

WebFocus Cloud Express Business Intelligence Debuts for Governments

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Posted on : 18-06-2013 | By : admin | In : Analytics

7d297 screenshot webfocuscloud 2013 WebFocus Cloud Express Business Intelligence Debuts for GovernmentsAnalytics provider Information Builders has debuted a version of its WebFocus BI system just for governments, and the WebFocus Cloud Express will be part of the UK’s G-Cloud Framework.

Public Sector Analytics

We often speak about analytics as it pertains to business needs, but of course governments are consumers of similar Web technology, and Information Builders apparently decided this ample sector needed a bit of BI love. WebFocus Cloud Express features an embedded data warehouse based on Microsoft SQL Server 2012, and offers data discovery, data visualization and reporting.

The company has partnered with a company called Amtex, a systems integrator, to get the Saas technology up and running, and potentially give government users a bit of a price break. Of course, even at a discounted price, the WebFocus Cloud Express version is meant to a high performance tool, Information Builders has promised.

It’s a Web based system, so there’s nothing to download or install, and all the reporting and dashboard tools are available through the browser. Several UK government bodies are already using WebFocus, so the company must feel like it has developed a bit of a following there. A Gartner Business Intelligence MQ from back in February counted Information Builders as a leader in BI, and one of its strengths is that people really liked its reporting abilities. 

Availible in the CloudStore

Since governments produce so much publicly consumable information, it makes sense they would want to have a tool to help build detailed reports that were interactive and usable. WebFocus uses wizard style interfaces that are said to be intuitive, and development tools that don’t require technical knowledge. 

Additionally, the system comes prebuilt with more than 26 data adapters for accessing data from disparate sources. As part of the UK’s G-Cloud program, WebFocus joins thousands of other products in what is known as the CloudStore. WebFocus Cloud Express can be found there by government agencies for 60 pounds per user per month. 

 

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Article source: http://www.cmswire.com/cms/information-management/webfocus-cloud-express-business-intelligence-debuts-for-governments-021353.php

Self-service business intelligence

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Posted on : 17-06-2013 | By : Ben Stinner | In : Analytics

27d58 BI large Self service business intelligence

Employees have long had the ability to process and analyse small data sets themselves, thanks mainly to Microsoft Excel.

But when it came to anything that exceeded Excel’s maximum row limit (65,000 in Excel 2007), they were dependent on the reports and dashboards that the IT department had built using the enterprise standard business intelligence tools.

Recent years, however, have seen not only a staggering uptick in the volume of data produced and collected by businesses, but also a steady increase in the awareness of the power of data analytics.

The combined effect is that users are increasingly dissatisfied with the prescriptive reports and dashboards that are handed down to them from IT. In particular, the time it takes for new reports to be issued cannot keep pace with employees’ need to answer questions as they arise.

It is little wonder, then, that there is high demand for ‘self-service BI’.

In a 2011 white paper, analysts Claudia Imhoff and Colin White defined self-service BI as “the facilities within the BI environment that enable BI users to become more self-reliant and less dependent on the IT organisation”.

And according to the Wisdom of Crowds report, an annual survey of business intelligence users by BI guru Howard Dresner, self-service BI has been among the top technology priorities for two years running.

At first glance, it seems like a straightforward idea. But on reflection it quickly emerges that there are many different ways to approach self-service BI – in particular, how much autonomy is extended to users.

When it comes to enterprise-wide self-service BI programmes, IT organisations are still finding their way. But the growth of providers selling easy-to-use and easy-to-deploy BI software reveals that users are helping themselves, with or without the IT department’s aid.

Here is yet another field of technology where the IT department must find a way to offer users the tools they want while simultaneously applying the data governance and security controls that the organisation needs.

 

Self-service BI in practice

One organisation working towards self-service business intelligence is sportswear-maker Nike. According to Jimmy Lee, an expert architect at the company, it is doing so in response to the constantly changing needs of business users.

“Every time the IT department builds a new report, our users say, ‘We have more questions that we need answered,’” says Lee.

The problem is that the IT department’s workload is such that it can no longer keep up with those changing demands. “We’ve tried things like Agile but no matter what, if a user comes to us with a new requirement, we’re at least going to take a day to provide it, and probably six weeks.”

Meanwhile, the complexity of the analysis that the business needs is growing too. “We’re having to do more complicated work – more data types, deeper questions – in a shorter amount of time.”

Allowing business users to build their own reports seems like a happy compromise. In fact, Lee says, Nike’s business users already have self-service BI in a sense – they have access to the data warehouse, and they are happy to slice and dice the data in Microsoft Excel if possible.

But this does not support the information and data governance processes that the IT department demands. “We want them to do it with more governance.”

There are a number of reasons why Lee believes that now is the time for Nike to implement self-service business intelligence.

Firstly, its core BI infrastructure is up to the job. “All the data from SAP is in our Teradata data warehouse and it’s enhanced with other data feeds; we’ve got data quality tools in place; and the terms in our semantic layers are all aligned,” Lee explains. “We’re in a pretty good place.”

Secondly, there is clear evidence of demand. “Business teams are starting to hire their own data scientists and statisticians, and are buying their own BI tools,” Lee says. “The demand signals are there.”

And thirdly, technology is now available that allows non-expert users to conduct complex analyses themselves, such as Tableau and QlikView.

“Now is the time to act,” says Lee. “If our technology organisation doesn’t get in front of this, we’ll have business groups doing it on their own and end up with lots of point solutions across the organisation.”

To gauge what kind of self-service BI functions it should be building, Nike’s IT department has interviewed various stakeholders on how they use analytics today, and how they plan to in the future. This process has identified three end-user personas within the organisation.

There are what Lee calls ‘front-line users’. “They don’t want to make their reports, they just want pre-built reports with the parameters that they need,” he says.

Then there are conventional analysts, who want to perform OLAP reports on defined data sets. And then there are the ‘data scientists’, who want access to as much data as possible to perform ‘exploratory’ analysis.

“We need to support all three groups at an appropriate level,” says Lee.

Another interesting finding from the interviews was that when asked, “Do we have enough BI tools?”, a number of business users replied, “We have too many!”

“That was surprising because we only have [IBM's BI platform] Cognos,” Lee says. “But to fill the gaps, they’d bought their own tools, and now they have too many.”

Software selection is just one of the challenges facing self-service BI initiatives. As Lee found, there is also the thorny issue of democratising access to information.

“We ran a proof of concept using Tableau, and the project got stalled for a week because the team couldn’t get access to the data they needed,” Lee explains. It turned out that the project team was using the wrong process to apply for access to the data, and was being blocked on security grounds.

“I met with our security guys and said, if a financial analyst wants this data, shouldn’t he be able to access it? They replied, that would be really complex for us to do. My response was, yes, it is complex, but we’re currently pushing the complexity onto the users.”

The lesson? “We need global support for this strategy or it won’t work,” Lee says.

As for paying for the self-service BI initiative, Lee’s plan is to tie investments to existing initiatives in each of the departments. “If the supply chain team has some initiative under way to improve their performance, and I can tie the self-service BI strategy to that initiative, they will support it, and I won’t need to work out some complicated return-on-investment case that probably won’t deliver anyway.”

The aim is roll out self-service business intelligence in 2014, Lee says. The implementation will start by identifying potential early adopters. “We’ll focus on the areas with more interest first,” he explains.

The first project will be a reference implantation – a “stake in the ground”, Lee says –that will be used as the template for all future projects.

Another company putting business intelligence in the hands of its employees is Barclays.

Lee Mooney is visual analytics manager at the bank’s innovation and customer experience team. The unit is tasked with finding ways to improve customer engagement through technology, Mooney says, and it uses business intelligence to provide insight into what Barclays customers want.

In the past, there was not one easily accessible repository for customer data, however. “Barclays is really old and really big, and its data landscape is the same,” says Mooney.

The team therefore constructed its own BI infrastructure. It built a data warehouse using Teradata technology, and chose Tableau’s visual BI tool as the user interface. “I think of Teradata as the engine and Tableau as the vehicle.”

The system has had some remarkable benefits, Mooney says. It has revealed some fundamental truths about Barclays’ customers that were not previously known, for example.

“It showed us that 2 million of our customers only have a savings account,” says Mooney. “No-one knew that before.”

It has also dramatically accelerated the speed of analysis at the bank. “By using this capability, our team of three data scientists can outperform hundreds of staff,” Mooney claims. “One executive was pretty jumping for joy after seeing what we could do.”

Now, the Teradata/Tableau platform is available for anyone in the organisation to use. “If you want it, you can have it,” Mooney says.

That means that front-line customer service staff are now building dashboards to track complaints, for example.

“Even our internal auditors are using Tableau now,” Mooney explains. “We showed it to one auditor, who had no background in business intelligence, and he had built his own dashboard in ten minutes.”

 

Industry impact

Looking at the recent financial performances of some of the BI software vendors, it certainly seems as though a significant change is afoot.

Tableau Software, for example, saw sales double in 2012 to $128 million. The company raised in the region of $250 million in its recent initial public offering (IPO).

CEO Christian Chabot recently told Information Age that Tableau owes it success to the fact that people of any skill level can use the software. This breaks the hegemony of BI experts over analysis.

“I think we’ll look back at the analytics industry like we currently look back at typing pools,” he said. “We live in that age now when it comes to data – anyone who has a question is reliant on a high priesthood of specialists in the back room.”

Another company riding high in the BI software market is Sweden’s QlikTech, which in April reported 22% revenue growth year-on-year for its first quarter of the financial year, up to $96.5 million.

QlikTech CEO Lars Bjork says that, like Tableau, usability by non-BI experts has been the key to its success.

“We are driving consumerisation of enterprise software in our space,” he says. “We always focused on the use. You want the user to be able to make changes to the application, add an extra data source, build a different chart on their own.

“Because if it doesn’t have that element of self-service, the tool is going to be abandoned.”

More established BI vendors have not fared as well. For example, MicroStrategy, the largest remaining independent BI software supplier, reported a 6% decline in sales to $130 million in its most recent quarter. Behind that figure lay a 24% fall in licence sales.

The company rejects the suggestion that this is due to the rise of Tableau and QlikView. According to Nick Barth, the company’s UK sales engineering manager, the company recently launched a number of new, non-BI applications, and its sales force has yet to adapt.

“Whenever you add a bunch of new products to your kit bag, sometimes you’re going to see your sales team stumble,” he says.

But the company has introduced self-service functionality to its BI platform. This includes the ability for users to upload their own datasets – i.e. not from the enterprise data warehouse – and an in-memory visual analytics tool.

Barth is candid about the inspiration for this last feature. “We have customers who are coming to us saying, “We’ve got these 20 users who all want to use Tableau.’”

That is proof enough that there has been a fundamental shift in the way that BI systems are being procured and used. The challenge for IT departments is to enable that shift while keeping data under control. 

Article source: http://www.information-age.com/technology/information-management/123457131/self-service-business-intelligence

US intelligence in bed with business

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Posted on : 17-06-2013 | By : admin | In : Analytics

Thousands of technology, finance and manufacturing companies are working closely with U.S. national security agencies, providing sensitive information and in return receiving benefits that include access to classified intelligence, four people familiar with the process said.

These programs, whose participants are known as trusted partners, extend far beyond what was revealed by Edward Snowden, a computer technician who did work for the National Security Agency. The role of private companies has come under intense scrutiny since his disclosure this month that the NSA is collecting millions of U.S. residents’ telephone records and the computer communications of foreigners from Google Inc. and other Internet companies under court order.

Many of these same Internet and telecommunications companies voluntarily provide U.S. intelligence organizations with additional data, such as equipment specifications, that don’t involve their customers’ private communications, the four people said.

Makers of hardware and software, banks, Internet security providers, satellite telecommunications companies and many other companies also participate in the government programs. In some cases, the information gathered may be used not just to defend the nation but to help infiltrate the computers of its adversaries.

Along with the NSA, the Central Intelligence Agency, the Federal Bureau of Investigation and branches of the U.S. military have agreements with such companies to gather data that might seem innocuous but could be highly useful in the hands of U.S. intelligence or cyberwarfare units, according to the people, who have either worked for the government or are in companies that have these accords.

Microsoft bugs

Microsoft Corp., the world’s largest software company, provides intelligence agencies with information about bugs in its popular software before it publicly releases a fix, according to two people familiar with the process. That information can be used to protect government computers and to access the computers of terrorists or military foes.

Redmond, Washington-based Microsoft and other software or Internet security companies have been aware that this type of early alert allowed the U.S. to exploit vulnerabilities in software sold to foreign governments, according to two U.S. officials. Microsoft doesn’t ask and can’t be told how the government uses such tip-offs, said the officials, who asked not to be identified because the matter is confidential.

Frank Shaw, a spokesman for Microsoft, said those releases occur in cooperation with multiple agencies and are designed to give government “an early start” on risk assessment and mitigation.

In an emailed statement, Shaw said there are “several programs” through which such information is passed to the government, and named two that are public, run by Microsoft and for defensive purposes.

Willing cooperation — offshore

Some U.S. telecommunications companies willingly provide intelligence agencies with access to facilities and data offshore that would require a judge’s order if it were done in the U.S., one of the four people said.

In these cases, no oversight is necessary under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, and companies are providing the information voluntarily.

The extensive cooperation between commercial companies and intelligence agencies is legal and reaches deeply into many aspects of everyday life, though little of it is scrutinized by more than a small number of lawyers, company leaders and spies. Company executives are motivated by a desire to help the national defense as well as to help their own companies, said the people, who are familiar with the agreements.

Most of the arrangements are so sensitive that only a handful of people in a company know of them, and they are sometimes brokered directly between CEOs and the heads of America’s major spy agencies, the people familiar with those programs said.

NSA praise a matter of course

Michael Hayden, who formerly directed the National Security Agency and the CIA, described the attention paid to important company partners: “If I were the director and had a relationship with a company who was doing things that were not just directed by law but were also valuable to the defense of the Republic, I would go out of my way to thank them and give them a sense as to why this is necessary and useful.”

“You would keep it closely held within the company and there would be very few cleared individuals,” Hayden said.

Cooperation between nine U.S. Internet companies and the NSA’s Special Source Operations unit came to light along with a secret program called Prism. According to a slide deck provided by Snowden, the program gathers email, videos, and other private data of foreign surveillance targets through arrangements that vary by company, overseen by a secret panel of judges.

In addition to private communications, information about equipment specifications and data needed for the Internet to work — much of which isn’t subject to oversight as it doesn’t involve private communications — is valuable to intelligence, U.S. law enforcement and the military.

‘Committing officer’ clears way

If necessary, a company executive, known as a “committing officer,” is given documents that guarantee immunity from civil actions resulting from the transfer of data. The companies are provided with regular updates, which may include the broad parameters of how that information is used.

Intel Corp.’s McAfee unit, which makes Internet security software, regularly cooperates with the NSA, FBI and the CIA, for example, and is a valuable partner because of its broad view of malicious Internet traffic, including espionage operations by foreign powers, according to one of the four people, who is familiar with the arrangement.

Such a relationship would start with an approach to McAfee’s chief executive, who would then clear specific individuals to work with investigators or provide the requested data, the person said. The public would be surprised at how much help the government seeks, the person said.

McAfee firewalls collect information on hackers who use legitimate servers to do their work, and the company data can be used to pinpoint where attacks begin. The company also has knowledge of the architecture of information networks worldwide, which may be useful to spy agencies who tap into them, the person said.

In exchange, leaders of companies are showered with attention and information by the agencies to help maintain the relationship, the person said.

In other cases, companies are given quick warnings about threats that could affect their bottom line, including serious Internet attacks and who is behind them.

Following an attack on his company by Chinese hackers in 2010, Sergey Brin, Google’s co-founder, was provided with highly sensitive government intelligence linking the attack to a specific unit of the People’s Liberation Army, China’s military, according to one of the people, who is familiar with the government’s investigation. Brin was given a temporary classified clearance to sit in on the briefing, the person said.

According to information provided by Snowden, Google, owner of the world’s most popular search engine, had at that point been a Prism participant for more than a year.

Article source: http://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2013/06/17/business/u-s-intelligence-in-bed-with-business/

Online business intelligence exchange developed

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Posted on : 17-06-2013 | By : admin | In : Analytics

CALGARY — Brad Gaulin calls it the elephant in the room for a growing number of companies.

It’s the knowledge, expertise and plain know-how many of them are losing due to an increasing number of people retiring these days.

That is combining with a very mobile younger workforce which has no qualms about changing location of employment.

To tackle that issue, Gaulin and more than 20 founders created BIXnets Inc., the business intelligence exchange, which is an online knowledge base.

“What we created is a solution, a tool, to deal with the challenge that faces the oil and gas industry and pretty much every business right now, which is the issue that there’s a whole generation that’s getting ready to exit, that’s going to leave with an immense, invaluable knowledge base that’s about to walk out of industry and businesses everywhere,� says Gaulin, the company’s chief executive.

“The other factor that’s complicating this is the fact that young professionals are coming into the world of work who are trained differently, who have grown up and worked differently, and learned differently. And also they’re very, very highly mobile.�

The company was incorporated October 2011. Gaulin says there are 25 founders who have invested 22,000 hours into the research and development of the platform.

“The challenge for organizations is how do we have a legacy, how do we capture that know-how both young and old, make it available so that anybody coming in can get a quick start, build their skills, solve problems faster, be successful. Fast track success for future generations,� says Gaulin, who had a booth at the recent Gas Oil Expo event in Calgary to reach more business.

He says the idea is to empower the next generation of professionals but on their terms. They’re a generation that has grown up networking, building relationships and shopping online.

“We have to give them knowledge in the same way that they’ve solved all their other problems and built all their other relationships,� says Gaulin.

“Our platform is going to make it super easy for anybody to be able to package their know-how as a resource. And a resource is something you can put together to solve a problem.�

The idea is to be able to sell knowledge through the online resource just like someone would sell a dishwasher on Kijiji.

There are two streams of revenue for the company. The corporate sales area is for companies who want to retain knowledge. BIXnets has started to licence a cloud application for companies to help them capture their internal know-how and share that. That’s a closed system.

There’s also an open system where people can obtain knowledge and expertise from other people and resources.

“We believe this is a global problem. The challenge in business is universal,� says Gaulin.

mtoneguzzi@calgaryherald.com

Twitter.com/MTone123

BIXnets Inc.

Description: Online business intelligence exchange platform

Chief Executive: Brad Gaulin

Established: October 2011

Founders: 25

Phone: 403.660.9961

Website: www.bixnets.com

Article source: http://www.calgaryherald.com/business/Online+business+intelligence+exchange+developed/8532798/story.html

Self-service business intelligence

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Posted on : 17-06-2013 | By : admin | In : Analytics

7fc07 BI large Self service business intelligence

Employees have long had the ability to process and analyse small data sets themselves, thanks mainly to Microsoft Excel.

But when it came to anything that exceeded Excel’s maximum row limit (65,000 in Excel 2007), they were dependent on the reports and dashboards that the IT department had built using the enterprise standard business intelligence tools.

Recent years, however, have seen not only a staggering uptick in the volume of data produced and collected by businesses, but also a steady increase in the awareness of the power of data analytics.

The combined effect is that users are increasingly dissatisfied with the prescriptive reports and dashboards that are handed down to them from IT. In particular, the time it takes for new reports to be issued cannot keep pace with employees’ need to answer questions as they arise.

It is little wonder, then, that there is high demand for ‘self-service BI’.

In a 2011 white paper, analysts Claudia Imhoff and Colin White defined self-service BI as “the facilities within the BI environment that enable BI users to become more self-reliant and less dependent on the IT organisation”.

And according to the Wisdom of Crowds report, an annual survey of business intelligence users by BI guru Howard Dresner, self-service BI has been among the top technology priorities for two years running.

At first glance, it seems like a straightforward idea. But on reflection it quickly emerges that there are many different ways to approach self-service BI – in particular, how much autonomy is extended to users.

When it comes to enterprise-wide self-service BI programmes, IT organisations are still finding their way. But the growth of providers selling easy-to-use and easy-to-deploy BI software reveals that users are helping themselves, with or without the IT department’s aid.

Here is yet another field of technology where the IT department must find a way to offer users the tools they want while simultaneously applying the data governance and security controls that the organisation needs.

 

Self-service BI in practice

One organisation working towards self-service business intelligence is sportswear-maker Nike. According to Jimmy Lee, an expert architect at the company, it is doing so in response to the constantly changing needs of business users.

“Every time the IT department builds a new report, our users say, ‘We have more questions that we need answered,’” says Lee.

The problem is that the IT department’s workload is such that it can no longer keep up with those changing demands. “We’ve tried things like Agile but no matter what, if a user comes to us with a new requirement, we’re at least going to take a day to provide it, and probably six weeks.”

Meanwhile, the complexity of the analysis that the business needs is growing too. “We’re having to do more complicated work – more data types, deeper questions – in a shorter amount of time.”

Allowing business users to build their own reports seems like a happy compromise. In fact, Lee says, Nike’s business users already have self-service BI in a sense – they have access to the data warehouse, and they are happy to slice and dice the data in Microsoft Excel if possible.

But this does not support the information and data governance processes that the IT department demands. “We want them to do it with more governance.”

There are a number of reasons why Lee believes that now is the time for Nike to implement self-service business intelligence.

Firstly, its core BI infrastructure is up to the job. “All the data from SAP is in our Teradata data warehouse and it’s enhanced with other data feeds; we’ve got data quality tools in place; and the terms in our semantic layers are all aligned,” Lee explains. “We’re in a pretty good place.”

Secondly, there is clear evidence of demand. “Business teams are starting to hire their own data scientists and statisticians, and are buying their own BI tools,” Lee says. “The demand signals are there.”

And thirdly, technology is now available that allows non-expert users to conduct complex analyses themselves, such as Tableau and QlikView.

“Now is the time to act,” says Lee. “If our technology organisation doesn’t get in front of this, we’ll have business groups doing it on their own and end up with lots of point solutions across the organisation.”

To gauge what kind of self-service BI functions it should be building, Nike’s IT department has interviewed various stakeholders on how they use analytics today, and how they plan to in the future. This process has identified three end-user personas within the organisation.

There are what Lee calls ‘front-line users’. “They don’t want to make their reports, they just want pre-built reports with the parameters that they need,” he says.

Then there are conventional analysts, who want to perform OLAP reports on defined data sets. And then there are the ‘data scientists’, who want access to as much data as possible to perform ‘exploratory’ analysis.

“We need to support all three groups at an appropriate level,” says Lee.

Another interesting finding from the interviews was that when asked, “Do we have enough BI tools?”, a number of business users replied, “We have too many!”

“That was surprising because we only have [IBM's BI platform] Cognos,” Lee says. “But to fill the gaps, they’d bought their own tools, and now they have too many.”

Software selection is just one of the challenges facing self-service BI initiatives. As Lee found, there is also the thorny issue of democratising access to information.

“We ran a proof of concept using Tableau, and the project got stalled for a week because the team couldn’t get access to the data they needed,” Lee explains. It turned out that the project team was using the wrong process to apply for access to the data, and was being blocked on security grounds.

“I met with our security guys and said, if a financial analyst wants this data, shouldn’t he be able to access it? They replied, that would be really complex for us to do. My response was, yes, it is complex, but we’re currently pushing the complexity onto the users.”

The lesson? “We need global support for this strategy or it won’t work,” Lee says.

As for paying for the self-service BI initiative, Lee’s plan is to tie investments to existing initiatives in each of the departments. “If the supply chain team has some initiative under way to improve their performance, and I can tie the self-service BI strategy to that initiative, they will support it, and I won’t need to work out some complicated return-on-investment case that probably won’t deliver anyway.”

The aim is roll out self-service business intelligence in 2014, Lee says. The implementation will start by identifying potential early adopters. “We’ll focus on the areas with more interest first,” he explains.

The first project will be a reference implantation – a “stake in the ground”, Lee says –that will be used as the template for all future projects.

Another company putting business intelligence in the hands of its employees is Barclays.

Lee Mooney is visual analytics manager at the bank’s innovation and customer experience team. The unit is tasked with finding ways to improve customer engagement through technology, Mooney says, and it uses business intelligence to provide insight into what Barclays customers want.

In the past, there was not one easily accessible repository for customer data, however. “Barclays is really old and really big, and its data landscape is the same,” says Mooney.

The team therefore constructed its own BI infrastructure. It built a data warehouse using Teradata technology, and chose Tableau’s visual BI tool as the user interface. “I think of Teradata as the engine and Tableau as the vehicle.”

The system has had some remarkable benefits, Mooney says. It has revealed some fundamental truths about Barclays’ customers that were not previously known, for example.

“It showed us that 2 million of our customers only have a savings account,” says Mooney. “No-one knew that before.”

It has also dramatically accelerated the speed of analysis at the bank. “By using this capability, our team of three data scientists can outperform hundreds of staff,” Mooney claims. “One executive was pretty jumping for joy after seeing what we could do.”

Now, the Teradata/Tableau platform is available for anyone in the organisation to use. “If you want it, you can have it,” Mooney says.

That means that front-line customer service staff are now building dashboards to track complaints, for example.

“Even our internal auditors are using Tableau now,” Mooney explains. “We showed it to one auditor, who had no background in business intelligence, and he had built his own dashboard in ten minutes.”

 

Industry impact

Looking at the recent financial performances of some of the BI software vendors, it certainly seems as though a significant change is afoot.

Tableau Software, for example, saw sales double in 2012 to $128 million. The company raised in the region of $250 million in its recent initial public offering (IPO).

CEO Christian Chabot recently told Information Age that Tableau owes it success to the fact that people of any skill level can use the software. This breaks the hegemony of BI experts over analysis.

“I think we’ll look back at the analytics industry like we currently look back at typing pools,” he said. “We live in that age now when it comes to data – anyone who has a question is reliant on a high priesthood of specialists in the back room.”

Another company riding high in the BI software market is Sweden’s QlikTech, which in April reported 22% revenue growth year-on-year for its first quarter of the financial year, up to $96.5 million.

QlikTech CEO Lars Bjork says that, like Tableau, usability by non-BI experts has been the key to its success.

“We are driving consumerisation of enterprise software in our space,” he says. “We always focused on the use. You want the user to be able to make changes to the application, add an extra data source, build a different chart on their own.

“Because if it doesn’t have that element of self-service, the tool is going to be abandoned.”

More established BI vendors have not fared as well. For example, MicroStrategy, the largest remaining independent BI software supplier, reported a 6% decline in sales to $130 million in its most recent quarter. Behind that figure lay a 24% fall in licence sales.

The company rejects the suggestion that this is due to the rise of Tableau and QlikView. According to Nick Barth, the company’s UK sales engineering manager, the company recently launched a number of new, non-BI applications, and its sales force has yet to adapt.

“Whenever you add a bunch of new products to your kit bag, sometimes you’re going to see your sales team stumble,” he says.

But the company has introduced self-service functionality to its BI platform. This includes the ability for users to upload their own datasets – i.e. not from the enterprise data warehouse – and an in-memory visual analytics tool.

Barth is candid about the inspiration for this last feature. “We have customers who are coming to us saying, “We’ve got these 20 users who all want to use Tableau.’”

That is proof enough that there has been a fundamental shift in the way that BI systems are being procured and used. The challenge for IT departments is to enable that shift while keeping data under control. 

Article source: http://www.information-age.com/technology/information-management/123457131/self-service-business-intelligence