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Study Shows Self-Service BI Not Living Up to Expectations
Self-service business intelligence (BI) isn't fulfilling its promise, according to a recent study by Logi Analytics.
The company, which makes tools to bring "analytics everywhere," found that only 22 percent of business users reported having access to self-service BI tools and actually using them.
Self-service BI is part of the "democratizing Big Data" movement, aimed at providing analytics for more users, not just the expensive and hard-to-find specialists.
On the IT side, the percentage of respondents reporting access and use of self-service BI tools is hardly better at 23 percent, according to the recent "State of Self-Service BI" report (registration required) that surveyed more than 600 business and technology professionals in August and September.
According to research firm Gartner Inc., self-service BI is "end users designing and deploying their own reports and analyses within an approved and supported architecture and tools portfolio." According to Logi Analytics, it's "the capabilities of a software tool or application that enables
business users to access data, analyze data, visualize insights, and obtain and share
formatted information in the form of reports and dashboards, without the help of IT."
Microsoft, for one, has been courting these BI end users for more than five years now with various tools, and many others have followed suit. The initiative was described as a "myth" as far back as 2007. But according to the Logi Analytics study, there's much work to be done to get the movement mainstream.
"It's clear that business users are looking to become more self-reliant and less dependent on IT, but are lacking the tools to do so," said Logi exec Steven Schneider. "I believe we'll start to see a shift in the market, where BI tools will focus more on the BI needs of the average business user, which will help drive adoption."
According to the 36-page report, the main factors contributing to the slow adoption are limited budgets and business user skill sets, both reported by 48 percent of the IT respondents.
Yet the vast majority of respondents placed high importance on the idea itself. "Over 90 percent of business and IT users agree that it is important for business users to access data and information without the help of IT," the report stated.
The importance of the burgeoning Big Data movement was also reflected in the study in a section titled "Doubling Down on Big Data." It found that within two years, the industry expects "doubling the adoption of Big Data sources."
Other report highlights include:
- 84 percent of IT organizations plan to invest in self-service BI in the next 12-24 months.
- 24 percent of businesses have already purchased self-service BI tools without IT signoff, and this trend is growing.
- 79 percent of business users say they mostly use spreadsheets versus other tools.
- 31 percent of business users say they can promote a new insight they discover to a standard report delivered by IT.
The study also found some interesting differences of opinion on the part of the business and IT respondents.
"We discovered areas of misalignment and need for improvement," the report stated. "Business users say it is most important for them to not only consume pre-formatted reports, but also be able to analyze data and create reports on their own. On the other hand, IT considers consumption and exporting to spreadsheets as most important to business users. To make matters worse, the most important capabilities for business users were the ones they were least satisfied with."
Logi Analytics last month updated its Logi Info BI platform designed to let users embed self-service capabilities into their applications, and empower business users with the ability to author their own data visualizations, dashboards and reports.
About the Author
David Ramel is an editor and writer at Converge 360.