Oct
16
2008
0

Process Optimization Bound To Fail?

A recent survey from consultants Logica and the Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) reveals that about one in three projects to improve business processes fails. The expenses of businesses have run at a hefty $10bn.

The findings also show that winners tend to be more ambitious in their planning and to run cross-regional and cross-departmental projects as opposed to their less successful counterparts. They also show a more proactive approach towards possible problems and involve customers and partners in their planning.

The survey was conducted among 380 managers from nine European countries.

Written by michael in: Business, Technology | Tags: ,
Oct
13
2008
0

BI: How Intelligent Is It?

As we all know, most of the household concepts in IT are very much talked about and very little understood and the marketing hacks seize the opportunity to promise everything to everybody and the big players are poaching for innovation among specialized vendors, mostly in a rush to fill their game pockets faster than the competition before actually asserting the benefits of the acquisition for themselves or their customers.

In today’s enterprise there is a lot of messy data, duplicate or plain wrong information scattered around in ERPs, custom applications and user-generated spreadsheets across all departments. The resulting silo effect is worsened by quick changes across the board and even timely and accurate information soon becomes a rare luxury item. Worse still, most BI tools are far from intelligent in the sense of smart like this article (in German) of revised profit expectations of ERP (and BI) vendor SAP illustrates.

What is the problem?

The problem of most current BI tools is that they are limited to aggregate data in a warehouse-like manner without being able to show proper connections and run current analytics because of limited metrics. The result is usually incomplete information that is delivered too late and therefore provides no reliable input for real-time decision-making.

BI: Downward Bound

BI: Downward Bound

Written by michael in: Business, Technology | Tags: , , ,
Oct
06
2008
0

D?ja-Vu

For its tenth anniversary Google has brought up its oldest index dating back to 2001. Check it out how the internet could be searched back then.

Written by michael in: Technology | Tags: ,
Oct
02
2008
0

Cloud Computing Unveiled

As you may probably know from my previous writing I unveil very little, especially when there is nothing to unveil. As with many other hypes, Cloud Computing can be everything to everybody as long as it promises sales opportunities and increasing profit margins. But still to this day there are people making serious attempts to navigate their way through the seemingly endless buzz clouds that evaporate from heated marketing departments.

Marketing Hype Beyond Stupidity

At least, that’s the way Richard Stallman sees it. In a recent interview the founder of the Free Software Foundation continues to say among other things:

Somebody is saying this is inevitable ? and whenever you hear somebody saying that, it’s very likely to be a set of businesses campaigning to make it true.

It seems obvious that Stallman then goes on to warn of proprietary systems but it’s just as obvious that any proprietary vendor rebuffs his opinion as biased. Ha! With the sole exception of Oracle CEO Larry Ellison that is, who was cited as vigorously opposing the notion of Cloud Computing as such, but nevertheless insisting that he would accept it anyway as long as he can sell it. But even this rare bluntness has seen him falling from other people’s grace who dismiss it as Oracle’s failure to deliver the “real thing” and maintaining the cloud is the future of IT. The future of IT, my god, how many similar claims have we heard already! And aren’t we currently in the umpteenth of these futures that haven’t materialized?

Small wonder that with all the attention on another would-be next big thing, Microsoft has come up with their version of the cloud. And may I say so, we are all lucky this happens because it indicates that the heat might go down again pretty soon, at least for a short while. Maybe.

Oct
02
2008
0

Management and Innovation

If people are not required doing chore jobs that require eternally the same routine it is always worthwhile from time to time to think how they go about it. Do they stick their heads out risking more work in return or do they comply with their duties for the sake of not being bothered with anything else? Goth Sedin has illustrated the range between these attitudes in a recent post. In response Lisa Junker has come up with more details and a warning that what might me considered as innovative at a given moment may turn into obfuscation in a different situation. Obviously, it is good from a common sense point-of-view to see both the big picture and the nitty-gritty details of how to put it all together. But then again, isn’t it like eating the pie and having it?

Written by michael in: Management | Tags: ,
Oct
01
2008
0

Google: It’s Not Only the Ads

Here is some news about the most recent step in Google’s bid to diversify its business model. Apart from the casual snubs in the article, CMS Watch also provides the following excerpt from their in-depth report:

Even Google’s marketing won’t go so far as to call their implementation “enterprise-class security,” instead favoring to highlight single sign-on (which the Appliance supports quite well). Document-level security is handled late-binding - the result sets are filtered for hits a searcher is allowed to see, which requires the system to fire off separate requests for each hit to see if it may be displayed. This has only one advantage - the authorization will be up-to-date to the second - but, certainly in Google’s implementation, several drawbacks.

More insights can also be found in this knowledgeable comment.

Written by michael in: Business, Technology | Tags: , ,

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