Uses of visualization in business analytics include market segmentation analysis and factor analysis to define new audience segments based on psychographics. Visualization is often also used for pricing analysis to determine how elasticity can vary by product and area being sold into.
6. What are the steps involved in effective decision making and how can business intelligence assist in helping executive and managers make better strategic and operational decisions?
Effective decision making inherently must take into account many factors that range from the highly quantifiable to the qualitative if risk is to be minimized and the best possible alternative chosen. BI-based applications, tools and technologies have been designed specifically with these needs in mind of business decision makers. The steps involved in effective decision making include problem rationalization or the defining of the problem parameters, the definition of boundary conditions of the decision, selection of the alternative, execution of the strategy and finally, gaining feedback on how well the decision matched with the anticipated result. BI provides insights and guidance into each of these steps by providing greater clarity and insight into problem rationalization, more precisely defining boundary conditions and seeking to optimize the selection of the best possible strategy. From a problem rationalization standpoint, BI applications are often used for determining the probability of a given series of anticipated events taking place or not, and also putting qualitative factors into context. Companies also use BI applications to monitor the progress of a strategy over time, often using real-time analytics to measure performance using company-wide KPIs and metrics. Finally BI plays a very critical role in decision making as it provides insights and feedback into what areas of the strategy succeeded or failed, and why. The use of BI to analyze the effectiveness and execution of any decision is possible if KPIs and metrics of performance are first defined at the outset of the process. Often companies will post the results of their strategies on scorecards accessible from their Internet sites to provide employees with an update on how process is being made. This is an invaluable aspect of BI as it provides companies an opportunity to inform their employees quickly about the impact of decisions.
7. The book No Place to Hide discusses several privacy issues related to the collection of data on individuals. Do you think that the environment described in the book reflects a good balance of the government" need to know" and individual privacy? Why or why not?
The balance of the government's "need to know" and the fundamental right of citizens for individual privacy is well discussed in the book No Place to Hide and highlights how through data mining, data warehouses and BI tools, the government has unrivaled access into everyone's life today whether they like it or not. With the terrorist attacks of 2001 serving as a horrible catalyst for many surveillance and tracking activities, it seems from the book that the U.S. intelligence community is at times overcompensating for missing the cues of activities that led to those attacks. The book paints a grim portrait of what life is like for many Americans who have names that are identical or even comparable to criminals and terrorists. Most chilling about this book is the potential is shows for mistaken identity to completely change a person's life. Given the fact that America is being increasingly infiltrated by extremists from other nations and also the growing threat of internal terrorism, the activities of the government are justified. Where the ethical line gets crossed however is how companies are using this data to penalize a person for speeding in a rental car, attempting to charge them for additional costs due to where a rental car is taken, and attempting to unethically charge them more based on using this data. The fact that Americans are more watched than ever before may well have averted more terrorist attacks; no one can know for certain except those given the responsibility of managing that area of national defense. it's necessary in these times, yet the use of this data for unethical and often unscrupulous financial gain is not. The companies attempting to use data at that level to literally steal from customers need to be heavily fined and the data taken away from them to avert future use.
8. What is the difference between Business Intelligence and Business Performance Management? Describe the BPM process that links strategy to execution and provide an example of how the process would work in a real world business.
In many respects Business...
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