In-Depth
In ROI we trust
- By Stephen Swoyer
- September 1, 2005
Can one realistically expect to profit from a technology, such as BI, that
some folks say isn’t even a competitive differentiator anymore?
The answer to that question is yes—although as with any IT investment,
the ROI of BI projects isn’t always immediately intelligible, and often
can’t be calculated by means of any standard, tangible metrics. Frequently,
BI practitioners say, you just have to trust that it’s there. Call
it blind faith, of a sort, in a technology that is, for all intents and purposes,
a competitive necessity.
“Usually BI comes down to religion,” says Joe Flynn, assistant
VP of application development with regional insurer PMA Insurance Group. “You
really have to believe that that’s the right thing to do, and that you
will see improvement over time. Any good company is always measuring how they’re
doing. It’s just something that you have to do. But it’s very difficult
to say if you’ve improved your performance— was it because of BI
or 10 or 12 other things?”
That’s a perspective endorsed by Matthew Datillo, CIO of PerkinElmer,
who believes it’s difficult to quantify the impact of his company’s
BI investments. “We use [our BI technology] to make decisions
around product line profitability, and decisions around whether to continue
to invest or not invest in specific areas. It’s always difficult to quantify
the value of those decisions, but clearly without these tools we probably would
not have made as insightful decisions,” he concludes. “The point
is that [quantifying the ROI] isn’t something we worry about. I don’t
know what we would do if we were trying to run this information out of our ERP
systems without [our BI technology]. If you’re a large, complex organization
and you want to have a consistent view of your organization, you need to have
both [ERP and BI].”
In the end, says PMA’s Flynn, it often comes down to what use you make
of your BI investments. Almost all companies use their BI tools to report
against ERP and other systems, to be sure, but many—including Graniterock
and RuffaloCODY—have also developed customerfacing BI-based offerings
to differentiate them from their competitors.
PMA is another example. Notwithstanding Flynn’s claim that organizations
must simply believe their BI investments will generate ROI, PMA had decidedly
concrete ROI expectations when it invested more than $1 million on its next-generation
BI initiative, an enterprise data warehouse with a front-end reporting tool
from Hyperion Solutions. “[This project] required a significant study
of the benefits before it was approved,” Flynn says. “The
project was paid for, not by improving internal intelligence, but by being able
to provide services to our customers, basically new services that the customer
could subscribe to,” he confirms.
Far from being a slam dunk, Flynn argues, his company took some risks. For
starters, PMA, a mainframe shop, had little or no in-house development expertise
in the Microsoft Visual Basic.NET and ASP technologies required by the Hyperion
Intelligence software. The cultivation of that talent, and of other BI development
skills, came at no small expense, he says.
“We had very little experience with that, and we had to develop that
experience, so we trained a number of people on Visual Basic along the way.
We also needed data warehouse design help, because we wanted to go with star
schema [a data warehouse model], and we didn’t have any experience with
that,” he explains. “We also had to develop Ascential ETL
skills because we needed to have the ability to take data from our legacy systems.”
Nevertheless, Flynn says, PMA’s investment could soon pay off. The company
recently unveiled a new customerfacing application, PMA Cinch, that’s
based on Hyperion’s Intelligence reporting tool. PMA Cinch exposes new
revenue-generating services to customers, says Flynn, but it does so in the
context of a low-maintenance, user self-service application. As a result,
PMA hasn’t had to augment its in-house administrative and software development
teams. “It allows [customers] to analyze data, so there’s preset
reports that they can bring up on monthly data, but there’s also the capability
to design their own graphs and pivot charts and that sort of thing,” he
concludes. “If you’re a relatively unsophisticated user, you can
just click on the icons and look at the reports and print them off. But if you’re
a more sophisticated user, you can actually build your own reports.”
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About the Author
Stephen Swoyer is a contributing editor for Enterprise Systems. He can be reached at [email protected].