Business Intelligence Gets Speed

Added 15th Jul 2008
By Thomas Wailgum

Article Highlights

  • Casual Male Retail Group is a specialty retailer of big and tall men's apparel with Rs 1,856 crore in annual sales
  • The company also has 520 retail outlets and e-commerce operations
  • A Forrester Research survey of 1,017 technology decision-makers found that adoption of SaaS is now at just 16 percent.
  • Aberdeen Group research showed that just 10 percent of all-sized companies used some form of BI analytics tools

Ask Dennis Hernreich, COO and CFO of Casual Male Retail Group, what his life was like before he switched to an on-demand business intelligence reporting application, and he remembers the frustration all too easily. Casual Male Retail Group, a specialty retailer of big and tall men's apparel with Rs 1,856 crore in annual sales, was using a legacy on-premise reporting application for its catalog operations. (The company also has 520 retail outlets and e-commerce operations.) But the reporting features built into the system were "extremely poor," as Hernreich describes them: "Visibility to the business? Terrible. Real-time information? Doesn't exist. How are we doing with certain styles by size? Don't know." "It was unacceptable," Hernreich says. And viewing those 'canned' BI reports (which lacked features such as exception reporting) could happen only with trips to the printer for a stack of printouts. "It was hundreds of pages," he recalls. "That's just not how you operate today." It's not like Casual Male didn't have all this information; it just didn't have an intuitive and easy way to get at its catalog business's sales and inventory trends in real-time.

 

 

“With on-demand apps, IT's role as gatekeeper is minimized. But even the most enterprising business executives have to realize they need IT's buy-in and support for on-demand BI apps.”

But that changed in 2004, when Casual Male began using a on-demand BI tool from vendor Oco, which takes all of Casual Male's data, builds and maintains a data warehouse for it offsite, and creates "responsive, real-time reporting dashboards that give us and our business users information at their fingertips," Hernreich says. Today, Hernreich and Casual Male's merchandise planners and buyers have access to easy-to-consume dashboards chockfull of catalog data: "What styles are selling today. How much inventory are we selling  today. Where are we short. Where do we need to order. How are we selling by size.  What are we out of stock of," he says. "All of these basic questions, in terms of running the business - that's what we're learning every day from these reports."

On-Demand Fears Linger

Casual Male Retail Group is part of the small (but growing) percentage of businesses using software-as-a-service (SaaS) BI tools, which can be deployed at a much faster pace and with much less initial cost than traditional on-premise software installations. "To go from nothing to a fully automated system in a matter of weeks is an incredible sell for any company - large or small," says Scott Cohenford, a senior analyst at RapidAdvance, a provider of cash advances to small and midsize businesses, who led his company's efforts to purchase Business Object's OnDemand platform. Note that Cohenford is not an IT person by title or pedigree (he has an accounting background): ease of use (setup, integration, training) is a major selling point to on-demand BI customers. "I was tasked with reviewing the different options out there, seeing how quickly we could move forward and do so at a low cost and automate as much as possible," Cohenford says. "And that's what pushed me into the SaaS world's BI tools." But a nagging majority of companies don't share Cohenford's sentiments, despite loads of hype and the success of SaaS pioneer Salesforce.com. A Forrester Research survey of 1,017 technology decision-makers found that adoption of SaaS and on-demand applications in large enterprises is now at just 16 percent. Aberdeen Group research showed that just 10 percent of all-sized companies used some form of BI analytics tools through third-party service provider, says David Hatch, research director of BI at Aberdeen.

 

 

The Forrester survey noted the oft-cited barriers to higher adoption rates, including concerns around integration, customization, security and total cost of ownership. Of course, those concerns don't go away for on-demand BI applications, but several recent macro trends have pushed companies to take another look. One is the long-term effects of software industry consolidation and BI vendor upheaval in 2007, which has affected the plans of more than 100,000 customers of the established BI vendors, according to Hatch's research. "This has opened the door to new, innovative BI technology developers and marketers," Hatch writes in a recent BI report, "who see an opportunity to capture the attention of established BI customers with low-risk offerings that address questions resulting from all of the M&A activity."

  • Page 1 : Business Intelligence Gets Speed
  • Page 2 : The Need for Speed
  • Page 3 : On-Demand Changes IT's Role

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