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			|  | You run a small or midsize business. 
			Maybe it's not rocket science... then again, maybe it is. There's 
			nothing small (or even midsize) about the complexity of managing 
			your own business - it's big-time. On any given moment of any day, 
			you might be working furiously to track the effectiveness of your 
			sales efforts, monitor your inventory, juggle receivables against 
			payables, and reduce inefficiencies in production. 
			You've got all the data - somewhere. 
			It's in this sales report, that stock list, those account ledgers, 
			these production updates. In other words, it's siloed here and 
			siloed there. Wouldn't it be great if it could all be pulled 
			together, so you could analyze it holistically and make truly 
			informed, real-time decisions? Well, here's the good news: You can, 
			thanks to business intelligence. We know what you're thinking: "I 
			can't afford some expensive, complicated technology. Business 
			intelligence? That's for the big guys, companies with armies of IT 
			workers." |  Nothing could be further from the truth. 
	Regardless of the size or type of your business, you're already compiling 
	reams of data and you've no doubt acquired the software that is the 
	foundation of business intelligence. If you have Microsoft Office 2010 and 
	Microsoft SQL Server, you're already on your way to a Business Intelligence 
	solution. (What's that you say? Don't want to invest in another database?) 
	Ever hear of Microsoft SQL Server Express? It's... drum roll... FREE! Let's take a closer look at the process and 
	tools for gleaning insights from your business data. The first step is to pull together a list of 
	the critical reports you need to run your business effectively. Think about 
	the reports you already run today. Could they be made more intuitive? More 
	timely? More readily available? You'll want to get input from all the key 
	people in your business and from any outside vendors who require reports, 
	such as accountants or e-commerce consultants. (When you are talking to 
	vendors about the reports, make sure you understand how they build the 
	metrics to measure their business. There might be differences.) Next, you'll need to determine all the 
	discrete pieces of information -- or, as the geeks like to say, the "data 
	points" - you'll require to generate the reports. Once you've identified the 
	data points, you'll need to establish the sources for the data. Okay, you know what data you require and 
	where it will come from. Now you need to aggregate the information into a 
	database, so it can be sliced, diced and analyzed - in other words, so it 
	can be turned into the reports you identified back in step one. The next steps: Generate the requested 
	reports and review them with all the stakeholders. This means going over the 
	reports in detail with your managers, your vendors, and the folks "in the 
	trenches" - in short, everyone you're expecting to provide insights and act 
	on business data. It's critical that everyone understands how the numbers 
	were generated. Moreover, missing items or errors in data sources often 
	surface during these reviews, so you'll want to listen carefully to all the 
	feedback and make any necessary changes. Now you've determined what information you'll 
	need, where the data will come from, and how the reports will be generated. 
	Next, you'll need to setup systems for sharing the reports with the 
	appropriate employees. This might be efficiently done by publishing the 
	report to your company's intranet portal. By sharing the reports online, 
	you'll be able to track the number of users who access the reports and 
	determine which reports - and subsections of reports - are the most popular. 
	You'll also be able to post updates and revisions in one place and be 
	certain that everyone is viewing the latest version. All that remains is to automate the entire 
	process, so that the reports are generated and shared for anywhere and 
	anytime access. Now your people have the critical information they need to 
	make better, more relevant decisions that fuel productivity, profits, and 
	growth. Let's do a quick recap. We know what we want, 
	the ability to analyze data and spot-meaningful trends, and to make these 
	trends actionable by sharing them with employees. And we know what we need 
	to get there: data software that will help us collect and analyze those 
	reams of information, and collaboration software that will get the 
	information into the hands of employees who can translate the insights into 
	action. Let's take a look at the information 
	technology behind a business intelligence solution a little more closely. It 
	begins with a database that stores all the information. This is the 
	foundation of business intelligence: You need a robust database that will 
	collect all the information about your business and enable you to find those 
	nuggets that can be game-changers. The data infrastructure (to use its fancy 
	IT name) needs to have powerful capabilities for creating reports and 
	providing analysis. Microsoft SQL Server 2008 can help provide that. With 
	SQL Server you get an incredibly powerful means of collecting and storing 
	data, and it also allows your "report jockeys" to perform sophisticated 
	searches, queries and analyses. You might already be using one or more 
	systems or applications to manage day-to-day operations, but getting 
	information out of these systems can be a struggle. When you're suing a SQL 
	Server database, you can use the built-in reporting tools to create standard 
	reports that give you fast, accurate data to help manage the business more 
	efficiently. You can set up access to the database from within SQL Server 
	Reporting Services, and then get started with reports and basic data 
	visualization using familiar Microsoft Office programs, like Microsoft 
	Office Excel. Because everyone in your organization may already have Excel, 
	it brings out the analyst in everybody, by letting them do their own data 
	exploration and strategizing, empowering them to make predictions, to 
	visualize data, and to spot the connections between seemingly disparate 
	pieces of information. All while accessing the same source of the data. And finally, there's one more piece in a 
	comprehensive BI platform - sharing the reports. SQL Server had done the 
	vital work of gathering and analyzing the data, now you need to put that 
	analysis in a form that your employees can easily share and readily 
	understand. You need a way to facilitate collaboration and manage all those 
	great ideas that are bubbling up, a way to generate forms and workflows that 
	are peculiar to your business and to create dashboards and scorecards that 
	are meaningful and intuitive. Your server will handle this part of the BI 
	process and put the insights into the hands of the people who can now do 
	further analysis. It not only gets the information to the "doers," it does 
	so in the Office formats that your employees know so well. No puzzling over 
	arcane reports and fumbling with unfamiliar functions. Microsoft SharePoint 
	makes sharing data a snap *they didn't name it "SharePoint" for nothing), so 
	collaboration across departments and functions is a breeze. This means that your BI deployment reaches 
	throughout the company, rather than being confined to a small cadre of IT 
	mavens. With Microsoft BI fully integrated into your business, everyone has 
	the ability to act on insights that can help drive down costs, boost 
	productivity, and propel the bottom line. Ready to get started? Contact us at Future 
	Systems And Software to speak with an IT specialist to learn more about 
	implementing a full-fledged Microsoft BI solution. In these difficult 
	economic times, BI can be a game-changer, so don't delay. Talk to us now. |