Demand for business intelligence technology set to
soar.
Demand for business intelligence technology is set for further
growth as enterprises globally look to derive further value from the
enterprise applications they've already invested in and the growing
volume of data generated by them. The report 'Economic Outlook:
Business Intelligence,' estimates the global BI market in 2006 was
worth just under US$4bn in license revenue alone, and predicts it will
double by year end 2012, growing by a compound annual growth rate of
12.5%. Datamonitor attributes this growth to two main factors which it
says are shaping the BI market and account for both the underlying
growth and principal market trends: the rise of the digital enterprise
and the commoditization of BI functionality. BI is a broad category of
application programs and technologies for gathering, storing, analyzing,
and providing access to data to help enterprise users make better
business decisions.It is often deployed in order to analyze information
captured through such enterprise applications. Although BI is becoming
an increasingly elusive technology to delineate, it can be defined as an
analytical approach to information captured within an organization
including extracting, collating, analyzing and distributing data, in
order to support its operations. Across all enterprise size-bands,
financial analytics are consistently the most ubiquitous.
Enterprises are generating increasing volumes of transactional data
which in turn is fuelling market growth of BI technologies.
Declining prices of storage, ubiquity of computing and the drive
towards data access and corporate accountability are all causing
enterprises to track, monitor and capture increasing volumes of data.
This can be processed further by BI technologies in order to optimize
the core business processes.
According to Datamonitor the sectors generating high volumes of
transactional data, such as Financial Services (account for a third of
BI spend), Telecommunications, Retail and Manufacturing, will continue
to lead BI spending. The Public Sector and Utilities are also expected
to grow by an accelerated rate compared to other sectors.
Commoditization of BI technology is having a profound impact on the
competitive landscape.
Much of a BI technology is becoming a commodity. Ongoing
technological development has transformed large swathes of BI
functionality into commodity products. Reporting and querying in
particular have been rendered generic and functionally equivalent. The
increasing number of database vendors integrating BI functionality into
the database stack, with the intent to differentiate and strengthen
their database offering, is only amplifying the trend further.
This means that the scope for differentiation between BI vendors
has shifted higher up the stack, towards issues such as predictive
analytics and real-time BI. It has also moved lower down the stack,
towards more pervasive BI and client BI applications. Other
differentiation strategies may focus on strategic issues such as ease of
deployment, on-demand offering, industry-specific packages, enterprise
application integration or go-to-market approaches. In fact Datamonitor
perceives that the competitive landscape is breaking out into a group of
vendors pushing for the advanced analytics agenda including predictive
modeling and automated real-time analysis and others attempting to embed
analytics into every-day work processes though facilitating BI
functionality in office-productivity suites or enterprise application
suites, often in the guise of business performance management.
www.datamonitor.com
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