Business Analytics Roadmap
Business Analytics Roadmap
Developing a Business
Analytics Roadmap
A Guide to Assessing Your
Organization and Building a
Roadmap to Analytics Success
Business Analytics Strategy
business analytics roadmaps. If you are not sure how to proceed, you are
Where you are now?
not alone. It is not an easy task to design and implement a successful Where you want to end
up?
analytics-driven enterprise. Creating a well thought-out roadmap to What stands between the
bridge the gap between information and analytics can be daunting. The first two questions?
How do I approach the
challenge lies in accessing your data and turning it into a tool for challenge?
competitive advantage. The purpose of this white paper is to assist you What course of action
should I undertake
in accomplishing this goal by providing valuable insight on: (roadmap)?
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Business Analytics Strategy
● Return on Investment
● Revenue
● Profitability
● Cash Flow
● Productivity
● Long-term Planning
● Other metrics specific to your organization
So how do analytics help? Analytics help you measure the performance of the various business areas
outlined above. They give you the ability to establish a benchmark to determine what is good and
what is bad. Proper analytics then help you monitor these metrics on an ongoing basis and help you
troubleshoot bad performance to identify a root cause.
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Business Analytics Strategy
The value from key insights comes from the improvements of business processes brought to light by
the analysis. If properly executed, analytics have the ability to deliver better business decisions and
outcomes and deliver tremendous benefits, including:
● Improved analysis to predict and profile ROI and its impacts for proposed business initiatives
● Improved understanding of customers and their habits, especially buying and searching
characteristics
● Creation of a rapid, fact-based culture to make decisions and reduce guesswork, especially when
making strategic product and revenue decisions
● Identification and optimization of the most profitable activities and elimination of money-losing
business activities
● Identification and optimization of the true drivers of financial performance and cost efficiencies
● Improved response to customer needs and trends
Operational Analytics. This analytics type tends to assist in “business as usual” situations where
basic corporate metrics are reported and visualized. It is typically related to mature transactional
systems. The organization is typically dealing with reporting of the “here and now” metrics for the
business. It has sub-categories (all sub-categories are discussed in more detail in Appendix A) that
include topics like monitoring analytics and event-driven analytics.
In some organizations, operational analytics results give you recommendations so that you can decide
what to do with the information. The next level of analytics can even act on those recommendations
automatically. Some industry experts view that as part of operational analytics; others place it more in
the tactical analytics arena.
Tactical Analytics. This analytics view is usually longer term and focuses more on analytics to assist
management in tackling problems, often including fairly simple predictive models based on past
historical performance. One way to think of it is the ability to find out key metric “outliers” that do not
have a big impact on your business strategy; they are more localized issues. The results of these
outliers can be addressed by either human or machine-based business rules.
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Business Analytics Strategy
For example, your analytics system discovers an anomaly in sales, maybe in a region or with a specific
product. The organization now investigates a one-time only situation -- oftentimes a situation that is
not repeatable. You now identify the cause and find the solution.
Strategic Analytics. This type business analytics can play a vital role in helping a company make
dramatic decisions affecting the strategic direction of the organization. More complex systems and
disciplines are needed in order for strategic analytics to become a key part of the company’s decision
making.
Strategic analytics also has sub-categories (all sub-categories are discussed in more detail in Appendix
A) that include things like predictive analytics, drill-down analytics, subject-matter analytics, ad-hoc analytics
and comparative analytics.
Within these categories, there are additional classifications that can be made and are fairly widespread
in their use. Some of these sub-categories may appear within more than one of the three major
analytics categories. You will find a description of these analytic types in Appendix A.
Understanding the types of analytics can be helpful in improving the overall value of your business
analytics platform. Review them as part of your overall needs assessment and in building your
analytics roadmap.
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Business Analytics Strategy
The first part of your plan is assessing your organization’s readiness for analytics. During this exercise
you are typically asking questions and searching for information to ascertain the truth about the state
of your organization in various areas related to analytics.
Using the discipline shown in the diagram above, start with a carefully developed assessment of the
analytics capabilities and sophistication within your company. The various components of this
assessment are outlined next.
IT Readiness
Do you have the right technical team?
Analytics projects often require different skill sets, especially with some of the new tools and
technologies that are available. Drill down and make sure you have the right people in your IT
team to bring analytics successfully to your organization.
Do you have the right leadership in place?
Building analytics systems can sometimes be as much art as science. When you start combining
business, IT, data, and corporate strategy issues all on the same project, you need clear and
experienced leadership.
Does IT have the proper data governance practices in place?
One of the main causes for analytics failure is the lack of data clarity in the source systems.
Specifically, many source systems do not have properly designed data models that can be
easily interpreted by downstream systems. Make sure your IT organization understands the state
of its source systems.
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Business Analytics Strategy
Business Readiness
Have you identified your needs?
Business managers who are the real drivers of these projects need to clearly document why they
need a properly-designed analytics system and where their current pain exists that is preventing
them from proper business analysis.
Do you have the right analysts?
Often overlooked until the end, a good team of business analysts is critical early in the project.
Do you know what’s already in place?
Carefully document the business processes and rules currently in place and which of those are
supported by any type of analytics system, even if it’s just exported reports to Excel.
Is the business ready for analytics?
Successful analytics implementation often requires accompanying business process changes to
take advantage of new insight. Management must get used to making data-driven decisions
as opposed to those driven by “gut feeling.”
Technology Readiness
Have you identified the right tools and technology?
Depending on the objectives, new tools and technologies exist, especially in the visualization
area. Write up an assessment of your technology inventory as part of the assessment process,
and indicate the need for further technology evaluations as part of the final roadmap. The
assessment should also outline the compatibility of these tools with what is currently used in the
organization. It is often best to align any new tools with existing platforms in order to reduce any
barrier to implementation.
Are infrastructure and security in place?
Analytics systems require significant infrastructure capabilities including sophisticated security,
increased network traffic, and additional data storage and data crunching capabilities.
Underestimating the need in this area could cause roadblocks and derail your roadmap
implementation.
Do we have the right implementation partner identified?
In almost all cases, it is a good idea to bring in outside partners and consultants to help with
specific pieces, or perhaps the entire project. If partners are needed, do you have some go-to
resources in mind?
Data Readiness
Are the source systems mature?
A common cause of analytics failure is relying on source systems that are in a constant state of
flux. Source system frequent changes will cause downstream rework and potential failures.
Make sure you take into account the state of your source systems in your analytics roadmap
plan.
Do you have sufficient data coverage?
A major roadblock to successfully implementing analytics is the lack of data elements required
for providing comprehensive metrics. Don’t fool yourself; this is a problem in most organizations.
Make sure you understand the gap between what is available from your source systems, and
what is required by business and design your metrics to take this into account.
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Business Analytics Strategy
The assessment effort should provide some clear deliverables. Below are several important ones that
should be considered.
Deliverable Description
Assessment Report Final presentation that provides the results of the assessment
activities. The report includes conclusions and
recommended next steps.
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Business Analytics Strategy
The roadmap will have multiple milestones and will require diligent work and digging to uncover the
objectives, obstacles, and steps to put the end result of the analysis on the roadmap document.
Comprehensive Review
Covers the various aspects of the business
For a roadmap to be successful it must address the analytics needs of the various aspects of the
business. Make sure all the areas have representation in the roadmap to get a comprehensive
picture early on.
Properly identifies risk and outlines mitigation plans
There are risks involved in most business ventures and implementing analytics is not an exception
to the rule. Make sure that your analytics roadmap takes into account the major risks and
roadblocks to successful implementation, and outlines steps that could help you avoid those
pitfalls.
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Business Analytics Strategy
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Business Analytics Strategy
Summary
When designing and implementing your analytics system, it is often most effective to start small. Start
with some projects that are less complex but of relatively high value. Focus on early wins for the users
and the analysts. One good way to do this is with prototypes, often called “proof of concept,” to show
those early successes.
Company directions and strategy change. Technology improves and changes. The strategy needs to be
communicated, discussed, negotiated, and then implemented, in an ongoing manner. The roadmap is
a living document that needs to be kept up to date and includes a library of documents that go with it
to support the project over the long term and the projects that follow. What you will discover is a path
that shows ongoing maturity, inter-relationships to multiple disciplines within the company, and many
critical questions and answers.
Does it sound complex? Yes, business analytics can be complex, especially if you don’t have a
roadmap and a strategy. But, if executed well, analytics systems can have enormous positive impact on
your organization.
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Business Analytics Strategy
Appendix A
Understanding these types of analytics is helpful in improving the overall value of your business
analytics platform. Review them as part of your overall needs assessment and in building your
analytics roadmap.
Monitoring Analytics. This type of analytics is all about answering questions, for example: What
happened? Why did it happen? What do I know? It is a widely-broadcast view of key metrics that are
happening right at the moment. It’s a fairly straight forward “push” data platform where data is
visualized to the right people.
Predictive Analytics. This type of analytics uses statistical techniques to predict outcomes. It can
help answer questions like: What is likely to happen in the future? What is likely correct about
customer behaviors? What do the forecasts show based on historical relevance?
Drill-down Analytics. This type of analytics focuses on business users who want to move through a
hierarchy of data structures as a method of exploring data and finding key metrics, including ROI and
other measures of profitability. It often uses visualizations with OLAP or Pivot Table style technologies
to view the business from the top level all the way down. Many dashboard tools now provide a near-
infinite amount of drill-down capability if the analytics architecture has been done correctly.
Correlation Analytics. This type of analytics tends to be heavy-duty number crunching focusing on
more machine-driven analyses using platforms like data mining.
Comparative Analytics. This type of analytics takes high volumes of past data and compares it over
time to see key similarities or differences in data patterns. What has changed recently? Is there outside
industry data available where I can compare my metrics against industry standards and benchmarks?
Real-Time Analytics. What is happening right at this moment? What are the analytics I could use
right now to make a difference in the business? I see the issue/problem/concern but what can I do right
now to affect it?
Subject Matter Analytics. This type of analytics gets very specific within a business discipline and
allows you to immerse deeply into specific types of information, e.g. sales, cash flow, credit, fraud,
marketing, and pricing.
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Business Analytics Strategy
Ad-hoc Analytics. Ad-hoc analysis is designed to answer a single, specific business question. The
product of ad-hoc analysis is typically a statistical model, analytics report, or other type of data
summary. Ad-hoc analytics can be used to drill deeper to get details about accounts, transactions, or
records. The process often involves the use of dashboards, OLAP models, and other tools by power
business users.
Operational Reporting. Operational reporting supports the detailed day-to-day activities of the
corporation at the transaction level. It is typically used by the front-line operations personnel. Very
short-term, detailed decisions are made from operational reports.
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Business Analytics Strategy
About StatSlice
StatSlice is a strategic data services consulting firm headquartered in Dallas, Texas, specializing in data
warehousing, business intelligence, and business analytics. Strategic data services include the skills,
processes, technologies, applications, and practices used to support business intelligence and corporate
decision-making. StatSlice has a highly dedicated consulting organization with a reputation for
excellent customer service and measurable success in implementation. They promote an environment
of resourcefulness, innovation, and creativity without sacrificing measurable results. They continually
stay on the cutting edge of the latest business intelligence and analytics challenges and principles, and
as a result, they are a “go-to” team for your most challenging projects.
© 2013 StatSlice Systems. All rights reserved. This white paper is for informational purposes only. StatSlice makes no warranties, express or implied, in this document.
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