“Mainstream BI”, “pervasive BI” and “BI for for the masses” have been the rallying cry for BI vendors for nearly a decade now. Some thought Microsoft could do it with an Excel interface. Others think Google will be part of the answer. I am looking to the Fed.
No, it’s not that I am on the bandwagon for the stimulus being the answer to all the world’s woes. However, when President Obama first mentioned a website (recovery.gov) as a way of ensuring full disclosure for stimulus spending, I got as excited as anyone can amid this economic crisis.
My vision for recovery.gov is that it will showcase the best of BI. It will be engaging, simple, and insightful. I’m hoping for a Google-like interface where I can start with a search request such as “education spending in NJ”. An appealing chart (rather than a dense page of numbers) will show me how the money has been spent. It will give me the necessary context, relative to other states, and to prior years. And of course I can drill down to my individual county.
My envisioned recovery.gov will not only provide the monitoring capabilities, but also facilitate insight to action by giving me contact details for whom to appeal to when I think the spending looks unfair, wasteful, or just plain wrong.
Am I visioning too much? Maybe. But I hope the best BI tool vendors and consultancies are aggressively vying for this opportunity. Many eyes will be on recovery.gov, and I can well imagine the marketing bang a “Powered by BI Vendor X” could bring if this site and application are well designed. Of course, if it’s boring, static, and a flop, then the Fed will be in the same situation as many organizations struggling with BI adoption.
Back to the present: I head to Las Vegas this weekend for TDWI’s Winter Conference. The “BI Bake Off” course I facilitate includes Microsoft, SAP BusinessObjects, and MicroStrategy in this round. I expect to get glimpses of some of their latest versions as well as chance to pose the tough questions, “how much of recent downsizing is in the BI business? ... What does Microsoft's change of strategy on performance management mean to BI and to other vendors? ...” The upside to this down economy is that my airfare is an all time low of only $250, 1/3 of the normal price. With travel costs so low, I hope you are taking the opportunity to fulfill your New Year’s resolutions of “investing in you!”
Regards,
Cindi Howson
In response to this blog, a BI expert in the government sent me this comment.
"...Since 1999 the Fed's official recommended Enterprise Architecture has actually been driven by a vision of pervasive BI. Here are two links, first from the current Whitehouse website confirming a continuing commitment to FEA (Federal Enterprise Architecture) and the second a Wiki that is a pretty good overview. Read down a bit to the diagram and discussion on the Performance Reference Model: you'll see that the entire FEA is driven from BI!!!
For the Feds, BI is a starting point, not an afterthought."
http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/e-gov/fea/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Federal_Enterprise_Architecture
Regards,
Cindi
Posted by: Cindi Howson | February 26, 2009 at 11:28 AM