
- Understand your enterprise
- Involve key users
- Make sure components of a BI system work together
- Be mindful that different employee groups will want different interfaces
- Consider making applications broadly available
- Create a competency center
A quest to understand things big and small... or how to survive as a Business Analyst and beyond.
This software never crashes. It never needs to be re-booted. This software is bug-free. It is perfect, as perfect as human beings have achieved. Consider these stats: the last three versions of the program -- each 420,000 lines long-had just one error each. The last 11 versions of this software had a total of 17 errors. Commercial programs of equivalent complexity would have 5,000 errors.The piece of software in question runs the NASA space shuttle. The consequences of failure could result in the deaths of the astronauts, the loss of a multi-billion dollar piece of hardware and many years of setbacks to the space program.
A new crop of buzzwords usually sprouts every three to five years, or about the same length of time many top executives have to prove themselves. Some can be useful in swiftly communicating, and spreading, new business concepts. Others are less useful, even devious.Delayering, rightsizing, unsiloing ... What do these terms mean? Step back and think about how much terminology you use each day that an outsider would not be able to understand.