Data is quickly becoming a company’s most important assets. To monetize this asset, organizations leverage analytical tools that generate insights in order to gain a competitive edge in the marketplace. One issue that has plagued corporations for years is the lack of standards and methods around their analytical capabilities, one example of which is deciding which analytical tools to build deep competencies around. How can an organization gain efficiencies, reusability, and build deep common skillsets, if each group is using a different analytical tool?
To make matters more confusing, analytical tools tend to proliferate within organizations at the intersection of market innovation cycles and underserved business groups. As the market innovates with new functionality, the business sees these new capabilities that provide deeper or faster analytical insights as a tool they need to add to their arsenal of tools. Often underserved Business groups go ‘rogue’ and purchase their own analytical tools, which are rarely the corporate standard.
In this latest innovation cycle is creating an environment where analytical tools are proliferating in organizations with little to no oversight into standards. For example, one part of the organization may have a visualization tool, like Tableau, and another group will have a similar tool, like Power BI, creating issues around common methods, reusability, and the need for varied skillsets.
The natural answer to this challenge is to rationalize the varied set of tools and create standards for each new tool purchase or analytical project to adhere to. This is typically performed by a governing body made up of various analytical business constituents and representatives from IT. The governing body provides the team standards and a process by which to perform a tool selection often needs a method for conducting such an exercise. The steps outlined below will provide your organization with a framework for determining how to optimize its analytical tool portfolio and prevent further tool proliferation:
Analytical tools are evolving at a faster pace than ever. Leverage the process outlined above to develop a decision tool that provides clarity on what class of tool (or what specific tool) should be used to solve a specific problem. Running this decision tool against all current and planned analytical projects will likely tease out which tools or tool classes are truly useful within your organization and which may be redundant or obsolete.
Josh Levy is a Manager in the Analytics practice of Aspirent, a management-consulting firm focused on analytics He has spent the past 20 years working in various capacities and industries within the Business Intelligence space.
Andrew Roman Wells is the CEO of Aspirent, a management-consulting firm focused on analytics, and co-author of Monetizing Your Data: A Guide to Turning Data into Profit-Driving Strategies and Solutions. For more information, please visit www.aspirent.com or www.monetizingyourdata.com.
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