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Business Analytics Tools & Techniques

Business Analytics
Business analytics combine different strategies and tools to improve the performance of an enterprise. These form part of the management system and embody the particular approaches which the company adopts. Business analysts must be well-versed with techniques in business analysis which can be used in addressing current problems. There are numerous methods in quantitative analysis. Yet, there are primary strategies which are recognized as valuable for most business owners.

Business Users & their Challenges


The time to perform the overall cycle of collecting, analyzing, and acting on enterprise data must be reduced Clear business goals & metrics must be defined Analysis results must be distributed to a wider audience Data must be integrated from multiple sources Acceptance criteria of the analytics models must be clearly stated

Difference Between Business Intelligence and Business Analytics


BIvs BA Answers the questions: Business Intelligence What happened? When? Who? How many? Business Analytics Why did it happen? Will it happen again? What will happen if we changex? What else does the data tell us that never thought to ask? Statistical/Quantitati ve Analysis Data Mining Predictive Modeling Multivariate Testing

While the terms business intelligence and business analytics are often used interchangeably, there are some key diff

Includes:

Reporting (KPIs, metrics) Automated Monitoring/Alerting (thresholds) Dashboards Scorecards OLAP (Cubes, Slice & Dice, Drilling)

TECHNIQUES

Business Analytics
The MOST technique is an internal analysis. It contains four attributes that are defined by the business analyst to ensure the project you are working on is aligned and on track. These attributes are as follows:

MOST Technique
Mission or the direction of the business; Objectives referring to the objectives that will help achieve the mission; Strategies or the different options to move forward; Tactics or how different strategies are implemented.

Business Analytics
The PESTLE technique is an external analysis designed to scrutinize the various external elements affecting a business and its operations. It includes six attributes:

PESTLE
Political (present and future political influences) Economic (impact of local, national and global economy) Sociological (various ways society can affect any organization) Technological (effect of new and emerging technologies) Legal (effect of national and world legislation) Environmental (issues on local, national and world environment)

Business Analytics
CATWOE is a technique used to encourage critical thinking about what the business is trying to achieve. There are six different elements included in this technique:

CATWOE
Customers (benefits derived from high-level business process and corresponding effects) Actors (individuals involved in the situation and solutions for success) Transformation Process (processes or systems are affected by the issue) World View (big picture and broader impacts of the issue) Owner (process or situation being investigated and roles in the solutions) Environmental Constraints (limitations that will impact the solution and its success)

Business Analytics
A SWOT analysis provides a complete overview of both internal and external factors affecting a business. There are four attributes to SWOT:

Business Analytics
Five Whys:
This technique is used to get to the root of what is really happening in a single instance. For each answer given a further why is asked.

Application of Business Analytics


Business analytics comprises a great many techniques that deal with statistics. The most commonly used of these are product tracking systems and surveys. When these techniques are applied accurately, they open up numerous avenues of opportunity for organizations to optimize and augment their business model. A few such possibilities are explored in the following slides:

Spectrum of Analytics Applications

Spectrum of Analytics Applications

Application Of Business Analytics

Application Of Business Analytics

Application Of Business Analytics

Business Analytics Tools


SAS R Excel STATISTICA Weka MATLAB Salford Systems

Tools: SAS

Tools: R

Tools: Excel

Key Challenges Of Business Analytics

Challenges
Strategic Alignment: Most organizations today already have some element of business analytics in place, often in the BI/data warehousing area. Unfortunately analytics are often viewed by top executives as esoteric research at best, and irrelevant fringe experiments at worst. The issue surrounds not a lack of appreciation for the usefulness of information but a lack of alignment, availability, and trust.

Challenges
Agility: Typically in the organizations, the analysts are organized by business domains. Findings working with top-tier, information-driven companies demonstrate that domain-based organizations are not the most effective approach for analytics. Analysts often work independently and create models in ad-hoc environments based on a patchwork of extracts and sources. The results, while advanced and valid, are not easily communicated to the business users for whom they would provide the greatest value.

Challenges
Commitment: Analytics software packages often come as prefabricated solution and are not particularly difficult to implement; however they can be costly, and the ROI is not immediate. By their nature, analytical models will improve in accuracy over time as the predicted results are compared with actual events hitting the warehouse. But this is a complex endeavor that requires dedication to the solution during an extended tuning period. Here is where many deployments fail. Business users do not immediately see the promised results and lose interest, and executives lose trust in the solution and refuse to rely on what the models tell them.

Challenges
Information Maturity: Implementations often fail because of the lack or low quality of underlying transactional data. Either data are not available, data sources are too complex, or data are poorly mastered. Even bleeding-edge, sentiment- and context-analysis tools require some level of trust in the data, and for any analytical model the rule is consistent: the more trustworthy the data the more trustworthy the result.

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