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School of Business




BI:Business Intelligence

   BI toolsin Retail Industryfrom
      Marketing Perspective


              Prepared
              By :
                         Kiran Varghese Jacob   10PG(J)19
                         Sunam Pal              10PG(J)45
Table of Contents


1.Business Intelligence ................................................................................................................. 4
       1.1 Types of business intelligence tools .............................................................................. 5
2. Business Intelligence Tools ...................................................................................................... 5
       2.1 Business operations reporting ....................................................................................... 5
       2.2 Forecasting ..................................................................................................................... 6
       2.3 Dashboard ...................................................................................................................... 7
       2.4 Multidimensional analysis ............................................................................................. 7
       2.5 Finding correlation among different factors ................................................................. 8
       2.6      Predictive Gravity Modelling ...................................................................................... 8
3. Marketing and Business Intelligence ....................................................................................... 9
       3.1 Marketing Scorecard ...................................................................................................... 9
       3.2 Sensitivity Analysis ....................................................................................................... 10
       3.3 Customer Life Time Value ( CLV) ................................................................................. 11
                 3.3.1 Churn rate ...................................................................................................... 11
                 3.3.2 Discount rate ................................................................................................. 12
                 3.3.3 Retention cost ................................................................................................ 12
                 3.3.4 Period ............................................................................................................. 12
                 3.3.5 Periodic Revenue ........................................................................................... 12
                 3.3.6 Profit Margin Profit ........................................................................................ 12
4 . BI & Marketing Reporting ..................................................................................................... 12
       4.1 Excel ............................................................................................................................. 12
       4.2 Reporting tool .............................................................................................................. 13
       4.3 OLAP tool ..................................................................................................................... 14
       4.4 Data mining tool .......................................................................................................... 15
5. BI for Retail Industry             ........................................................................................................... 15
       5.1 Reporting capabilities for key performance metrics such as .................................... 16
       5.2. Performing complex analysis to derive measures for: ............................................ 16
       5.4 Putting Decision Support to Work ............................................................................ 17

                                                                                                                                        Page | 2
Table of Contents



6. Business Intelligence and Management ............................................................................... 18
       6.1 Background .................................................................................................................. 18
       6.2 Why Is BI Useful in Retail Management? .................................................................... 18
7. Some Current Developments ................................................................................................. 19
8. Implications for the future of Retail Management Applications .......................................... 20
9. Conclusion ............................................................................................................................ 20




                                                                                                                                  Page | 3
1.Business Intelligence

Business Intelligence refers to a set of methods and techniques that are used by organizations
for tactical and strategic decision making. It leverages technologies that focus on counts,
statistics and business objectives to improve business performance.

A Data Warehouse (DW) is simply a consolidation of data from a variety of sources that is
designed to support strategic and tactical decision making. Its main purpose is to provide a
coherent picture of the business at a point in time. Using various Data Warehousing toolsets,
users are able to run online queries and 'mine" their data.

Many successful companies have been investing large sums of money in business intelligence
and data warehousing tools and technologies. They believe that up-to-date, accurate and
integrated information about their supply chain, products and customers are critical for their
very survival.




Each BI Scorecard is unique for a particular company based on its own set of:

       BI business drivers
       BI requirements
       Established IT standards
       BI Project history



                                                                                       Page | 4
1.1 Types of business intelligence tools

The key general categories of business intelligence tools are:

   a)   Spreadsheets
   b)   Reporting and querying software: tools that extract, sort, summarize, and present
        selected data
   c)   OLAP: Online analytical processing
   d)   Digital Dashboards
   e)   Data mining
   f)   Decision engineering
   g)   Process mining
   h)   Business performance management
   i)   Local information systems


2. Business Intelligence Tools

 Business intelligence usage can be categorized into the following categories:

 2.1 Business operations reporting

     The most common form of business intelligence is business operations reporting. This
 includes the actuals and how the actuals stack up against the goals. This type of business
 intelligence often manifests itself in the standard weekly or monthly reports that need to be
 produced.




                                                                                        Page | 5
2.2 Forecasting
    Many of you have no doubt run into the needs for forecasting, and all of you would agree
that forecasting is both a science and an art. It is an art because one can never be sure what
the future holds. What if competitors decide to spend a large amount of money in
advertising? What if the price of oil shoots up to $80 a barrel? At the same time, it is also a
science because one can extrapolate from historical data, so it's not a total guess.

It is the process of analyzing current and historical data to determine future trends.



                                    No of Customer
     30,000

     25,000

     20,000

     15,000

     10,000                        y = 1263.5x - 3E+06
      5,000                            R² = 0.9877
          0
          2004       2005       2006          2007        2008        2009      2010          2011
                                                 Axis Title



Projected Figures




                                       No of Customer
     30,000


     25,000


     20,000


     15,000


     10,000


      5,000


          0
          2004      2005    2006       2007     2008          2009   2010    2011      2012      2013




                                                                                                     Page | 6
2.3 Dashboard
   The primary purpose of a dashboard is to convey the information at a glance. For this
audience, there is little, if any, need for drilling down on the data. At the same time,
presentation and ease of use are very important for a dashboard to be useful.




2.4 Multidimensional analysis

      Multidimensional analysis is the "slicing and dicing" of the data. It offers good insight
into the numbers at a more granular level. This requires a solid data warehousing / data mart
backend, as well as business-savvy analysts to get to the necessary data.




                                                                                        Page | 7
2.5 Finding correlation among different factors
    This is diving very deep into business intelligence. Questions asked are like, "How do
different factors correlate to one another?" and "Are there significant time trends that can be
leveraged/anticipated?




2.6   Predictive Gravity Modeling

   The model should be designed to mesh with the data that will be used when the model is
   implemented. In GIS analysis and most other large data analyses, the characteristics of
   individuals are summarized into the neighbourhood’s demographic or psychographic
   profile.Forecast the total potential sales available from each neighborhood in the trade
   area




                                                                                        Page | 8
3. Marketing and Business Intelligence

       Marketing is becoming more analytical as more performance data is available, as best
 practices are established and as better analysis tools come to the market. Business
 intelligence (BI) software is one of the tools that can be used to improve marketing reporting.

 3.1 Marketing Scorecard

      A BI project for marketing often starts with creating a marketing scorecard that contains
 all metrics and KPIs that are relevant for your marketing organization. This scorecard should
 contain metrics for the various aspects of your marketing department, ranging from
 awareness measurements, to leads and lead conversion and marketing ROI.




    A Business Intelligence [BI] Scorecard is a tool to aid the evolution along the BI Maturity
    Lifecycle and increase the strategic business value of the BI Program. A BI Performance
    Scorecard is used to track an organizations business intelligence and data warehouse
    deployments map against BI best practice.

    Scorecards have long been used by organizations as a means of implementing strategy
    down through the enterprise and assessing progress against holistic, enterprise-wide
    performance indicators [KPI's].


                                                                                          Page | 9
A Business Intelligence Scorecard works in exactly the same way. Once BI Opportunities have
 been defined and BI Roadmap developed, the scorecard provides tracking against both the
 roadmap and the BI Maturity Lifecycle.

 A BI Scorecard acts as a performance reality check on whether your BI projects are on track,
 and if not, how to getthem back on track. It acts as a visual connector between the BI Strategy
 and the BI Program

 3.2 Sensitivity Analysis

 Sensitivity analysis (SA) is the study of how the variation (uncertainty) in the output of a
 mathematical model can be apportioned, qualitatively or quantitatively, to different sources
 of variation in the input of the model




In more general terms uncertainty and sensitivity analysis investigate the robustness of a study
when the study includes some form of mathematical modeling. Sensitivity analysis can be
useful to computer modelers for a range of purposes,[3] including:

      support decision making or the development of recommendations for decision makers
      (e.g. testing the robustness of a result);
      enhancing communication from modelers to decision makers (e.g. by making
      recommendations more credible, understandable, compelling or persuasive);
      increased understanding or quantification of the system (e.g. understanding
      relationships between input and output variables); and
      model development (e.g. searching for errors in the model




                                                                                          Page | 10
3.3 Customer Life Time Value ( CLV)

 In marketing, customer lifetime value (CLV), lifetime customer value (LCV), or lifetime value
 (LTV) is the net present value of the cash flows attributed to the relationship with a customer


      CLV =                               to power K
      CLV: Customer Lifetime Value
      PC : Profit Contribution
      d : Discount Rate
      n : Number of years
      k : Time unit




Most models to calculate CLV apply to the contractual or customer retention situation. These
models make several simplifying assumptions and often involve the following inputs:

3.3.1 Churn rate The percentage of customers who end their relationship with a company in a
given period. One minus the churn rate is the retention rate. Most models can be written using
either churn rate or retention rate. If the model uses only one churn rate, the assumption is
that the churn rate is constant across the life of the customer relationship.



                                                                                         Page | 11
3.3.2 Discount ratethe cost of capital used to discount future revenue from a customer.
Discounting is an advanced topic that is frequently ignored in customer lifetime value
calculations. The current interest rate is sometimes used as a simple (but incorrect) proxy for
discount rate.

3.3.3 Retention costthe amount of money a company has to spend in a given period to retain
an existing customer. Retention costs include customer support, billing, promotional
incentives, etc.

3.3.4 PeriodThe unit of time into which a customer relationship is divided for analysis. A year is
the most commonly used period. Customer lifetime value is a multi-period calculation, usually
stretching 3-7 years into the future. In practice, analysis beyond this point is viewed as too
speculative to be reliable. The number of periods used in the calculation is sometimes referred
to as the model horizon.

3.3.5 Periodic Revenue The amount of revenue collected from a customer in the period.

3.3.6 Profit Margin Profit as a percentage of revenue. Depending on circumstances this may be
reflected as a percentage of gross or net profit. For incremental marketing that does not incur
any incremental overhead that would be allocated against profit, gross profit margins are
acceptable.


4 . BI & Marketing Reporting

      Once you have established the scorecard, Business Intelligence software can be set up
 to collect all necessary data and store it in its database. Data snapshots are taken, so you
 have access to the full history. Based on this data warehouse, wealth of reports is available
 that each can be customized to fit each employee’s needs. It often starts with a high-level
 overview, but also provides the opportunity to drill down into more detailed reports.

      The most common tools used for business intelligence are as follows. They are listed in
 the following order: Increasing cost, increasing functionality, increasing business intelligence
 complexity, and decreasing number of total users. The different tools used are

 4.1 Excel
      Take a guess what's the most common business intelligence tool? You might be
 surprised to find out its Microsoft Excel. There are several reasons for this:

       It's relatively cheap.
       It's commonly used. You can easily send an Excel sheet to another person without
       worrying whether the recipient knows how to read the numbers.
       It has most of the functionalities users need to display data.

      In fact, it is still so popular that all third-party reporting / OLAP tools have an "export to
 Excel" functionality. Even for home-built solutions, the ability to export numbers to Excel


                                                                                            Page | 12
usually needs to be built. Excel is best used for business operations reporting and goals
tracking.




4.2 Reporting tool


     In this discussion, I am including both custom-built reporting tools and the commercial
reporting tools together. They provide some flexibility in terms of the ability for each user to
create, schedule, and run their own reports. Business operations reporting and dashboard
are the most common applications for a reporting tool.




                                                                                        Page | 13
4.3 OLAP tool
     OLAP tools are usually used by advanced users. They make it easy for users to look at
the data from multiple dimensions. OLAP tools are used for multidimensional analysis.




                                                                                   Page | 14
4.4 Data mining tool


      Data mining tools are usually only by very specialized users, and in an organization, even
 large ones, there are usually only a handful of users using data mining tools. Data mining
 tools are used for finding correlation among different factors.




5. BI for Retail Industry


As retail markets become increasingly competitive, the ability to react quickly and decisively to
market trends and to tailor products and services to individual clients is more critical than ever.
A business intelligence system can be a very effective means of organizing and analyzing the
vast amount of information generated in a retail business, and help you generate a more
effective business model for keeping your business profitable.
 Retail and Business Intelligence Successful retailers strive to accomplish three basic
objectives:

       to align their business with client needs;
       to differentiate from competitors; and
       To optimize product mix and space utilization.
                                                                                            Page | 15
To achieve these goals, retailers must be able to successfully manage inventory, product mixes,
promotions, supply chain dynamics, and a number of other factors. Furthermore, as retail
markets become increasingly competitive, the ability to react quickly and decisively to market
trends is more critical than ever. Lack of information is not the problem—data to assist in
making these kinds of decisions is readily available from a variety of sources. On the contrary,
the problem is that the volume and complexity of information available to organizations is
overwhelming. Increasingly, successful retailers will be those that can effectively categorize
and utilize these data for category management, client loyalty programs, promotions, etc. in
short, Business Intelligence.

Retail Data Sets These are:
traditional retail information, including point of sale data, gross margins, turns, and gross
margin return on inventory investment (GMROI);

       market data, including market share and competitor pricing;
       promotional data, including special pricing offers and vendor contributions, such as
       promotional allowances and coop advertising fees; and
       Client data, including demographics and various loyalty and client value metrics.

Category management software applications have traditionally focused on the first category of
data, with occasional forays into the second. While these are certainly critical metrics in
determining profitability and product mix, companies are increasingly taking a more client-
centric view of their business, and are looking to the third and fourth categories of data to
provide new insight into marketing and sales.
       Adding Value Through Decision Support


 5.1 Reporting capabilities for key performance metrics such as

        product profitability;
        units sold;
        category management;
        gross revenue; and
        Client frequency and loyalty.

 5.2. Performing complex analysis to derive measures for:

       Evaluating success, timing, and duration of promotion campaigns;
       evaluating shopper buying patterns and products, i.e., market basket analysis;
       determining optimal forward buying opportunities;
       determining optimal assortment mix by category;
       evaluating pricing and promotion strategy by category; and
       Understanding issues and measuring improvements in merchandise flow.




                                                                                            Page | 16
5.3. Developing statistical models that predict client needs and behaviors.

      Buy a new product;
      generate high profitability;
      respond to contacts through specific channels (e.g., direct mail, telemarketing, email, etc.); and
      Remain loyal to products in the face of variables such as price, availability, etc.

5.4 Putting Decision Support to Work

       Now that we have discussed the decision support capabilities that will be crucial to
       surviving in tomorrow’s retail business landscape, let’s take a look at how these
       capabilities align to the classic needs of the business. Consider the case of adding new
       products to the inventory.
       A new product is under consideration for introduction into a chain of grocery stores.
       When introducing a new product, we want to know whether it is expanding the
       category or merely cannibalizing sales of existing, higher margin products.
       Retailers frequently introduce products into one or two markets to gauge their success
       before rolling them out to all of the stores.
       To judge success of the new product, we want to compare sales and margin of the
       entire category in the test store to a control store where no new product was
       introduced.
       This could be accomplished using Business Intelligence.
       We would look at percent changes over a specific time period, and be able to drill
       down to greater detail once we have formulated a hypothesis
       For example, let’s say we introduced the product at a significant discount. Consider
       this scenario: Overall sales in the category did not increase relative to the control store
       (both stores increased absolute sales by about five percent.) Drilling down on product
       suggests that sales of the new product cannibalized sales of existing products, rather
       than driving increased demand and expanding the category.
       Furthermore, the discount on the new product is shrinking the category margin.
       The combined effects of cannibalization and aggressive discounting have seriously hurt
       the bottom line in this category.
       Depending on the goal that has been defined for this category, this may not have been
       a successful product introduction.
       Drilling down to the product level highlights the results of new product introduction
       on the sales and margin of existing products.
       Based on this analysis, we may choose not to introduce the new product at other
       stores. Or, depending on the products that it competes with, we may choose to
       introduce the product but maintain margin by pricing it more competitively.
       Insights from the Business Intelligence system enable us to accurately assess the true
       impact of this business event, and evaluate its effectiveness.




                                                                                                  Page | 17
6. Business Intelligence and Management
      A major theme in 2002 was the increasing use of Business Intelligence (BI) for business
 process management (BPM). BI goes beyond static data snapshots to enable users to identify
 and analyze ongoing business trends and patterns.

 6.1 Background
       In the 1980's, finance and telecommunication companies pioneered BI to support
 financial and market analysis of the large volumes of data that they had begun to accumulate
 electronically. The need for BI capabilities grew in the 80's and 90's in other industries as
 companies began capturing data electronically across the full range of their business
 activities. This need was further compounded by the growing interest in real time data access
 which required effective tools to mine and analyze dramatically increased data volumes.

       To support this growing need, large software and services providers like IBM and Oracle
 launched major initiatives to bring data warehousing capabilities to the marketplace. These
 data warehouses, or data marts, are the most common sources of data for BI applications.
 ERP systems have also been used to capture data and enforce consistency, but they tend to
 be too inflexible to support ad hoc exploration of data. Fortunately, better tools for access
 and analysis have emerged. These tools usually start with flexible query and reporting
 capabilities that are combined with some mix of online analytical processing (OLAP),
 statistical analysis, forecasting and data mining techniques.

 6.2 Why Is BI Useful in Retail Management?

      BI use is expanding from finance to other business functions because it provides a quick
 Return on Investment (ROI). It complements supply chain planning because BI applications
 provide incremental benefits while a business lays the foundation for more sophisticated
 tools and related business process changes.

      To reap some quick returns and support their supply chain projects, some companies
 are using BI tools to:

       Improve data visibility so as to reduceinventory levels by 5% to 15% in some
       businesses.
       Analyze customer service levels to identify specific problem areas.
       Better understand the sources of variability in customer demand to improve forecast
       accuracy.
       Analyze production variability to identify where corrective measures need to be taken.
       Analyze transport performance to reduce costs by using the most efficient transport
       providers.



                                                                                       Page | 18
By providing wider visibility to plans and supporting data, BI tools increase the return on
 existing SCP applications because they help companies understand where and how they
 deviate from their plan objectives. In addition, they provide shared data availability that
 encourages a global perspective on business performance. As a result, people are more likely
 to make decisions based on their global impact.


7. Some Current Developments

    BI capabilities are now being integrated into other products. In fact, Microsoft has vowed
 to bring BI to the workforce with their next release of SQL Server. Not surprisingly, its
 ownership of the desktop work environment gives Microsoft an edge over Oracle and IBM,
 who have also announced enhancements to their OLAP and data mining capabilities. All this
 puts pressure on traditional BI applications providers. The CRM (Customer Relationship
 Management) community has even come up with a name for BI analysis of customer
 behavior (CRM analytics).

    Although SCP vendors are offering BI capabilities as well by adding layers of products from
 the traditional BI vendors, the resulting mix of applications can be cumbersome to implement
 and support. In addition, IT publications report that end users often have difficulty using
 generic tools that were not designed to support specific roles or job functions. New SCP
 products, like Zemeter, have an advantage because these BI capabilities are easily
 incorporated as part of a single offering. These newer tools can also be configured to support
 specific business roles.

     BI applications have become increasingly cost effective because they utilize the
 connectivity provided by the Internet and by intranets and because component-based
 software development speeds implementation. Since implementation consists of installing
 the software and connecting the data feeds, BI tools with good user interfaces can be put
 into use within a few weeks.

      Some companies that haven't developed these capabilities in an organized fashion are
 seeing independent, often underground, local projects popping up in their businesses. While
 it is encouraging to see employees take the initiative in addressing business problems, this
 fragmented approach often produces a series of applications with overlapping functionality
 drawing on a Hodge podge of different technologies. Sustaining these applications becomes a
 headache, and effective support often hinges on the continued presence of a local super
 user.




                                                                                        Page | 19
8. Implications for the future of RetailManagement Applications

        BI applications will become part of the standard technology set used by most
        businesses and will have a synergistic effect on current and future SCP applications.
        The continued evolution of component based software development will lead to
        increased consideration of internal development, particularly around BI applications.
        The option of internal development will put downward pressure on software prices.
        Vendors will move from pricing based on estimates of value added (which are often
        optimistic) to pricing based on development costs.


9. Conclusion


As retail markets become increasingly competitive, the ability to react quickly and decisively to
market trends and to tailor products and services to individual clients is more critical than ever.
Although data volumes continue to increase at an astounding rate, the problem is no longer
simply one of quantity; at the heart of the issue is how companies are using their information.

Increasingly, particularly in the retail industry, it is important to understand client preferences
and behavior. A business intelligence system can be a very effective means of organizing and
analyzing the complex barrage of information generated in our business, and helping us
generate a more effective business model for keeping our client base happy and profitable.




                                                                                             Page | 20

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BI Tools in Retail Industry from Marketing Perspective

  • 1. School of Business BI:Business Intelligence BI toolsin Retail Industryfrom Marketing Perspective Prepared By : Kiran Varghese Jacob 10PG(J)19 Sunam Pal 10PG(J)45
  • 2. Table of Contents 1.Business Intelligence ................................................................................................................. 4 1.1 Types of business intelligence tools .............................................................................. 5 2. Business Intelligence Tools ...................................................................................................... 5 2.1 Business operations reporting ....................................................................................... 5 2.2 Forecasting ..................................................................................................................... 6 2.3 Dashboard ...................................................................................................................... 7 2.4 Multidimensional analysis ............................................................................................. 7 2.5 Finding correlation among different factors ................................................................. 8 2.6 Predictive Gravity Modelling ...................................................................................... 8 3. Marketing and Business Intelligence ....................................................................................... 9 3.1 Marketing Scorecard ...................................................................................................... 9 3.2 Sensitivity Analysis ....................................................................................................... 10 3.3 Customer Life Time Value ( CLV) ................................................................................. 11 3.3.1 Churn rate ...................................................................................................... 11 3.3.2 Discount rate ................................................................................................. 12 3.3.3 Retention cost ................................................................................................ 12 3.3.4 Period ............................................................................................................. 12 3.3.5 Periodic Revenue ........................................................................................... 12 3.3.6 Profit Margin Profit ........................................................................................ 12 4 . BI & Marketing Reporting ..................................................................................................... 12 4.1 Excel ............................................................................................................................. 12 4.2 Reporting tool .............................................................................................................. 13 4.3 OLAP tool ..................................................................................................................... 14 4.4 Data mining tool .......................................................................................................... 15 5. BI for Retail Industry ........................................................................................................... 15 5.1 Reporting capabilities for key performance metrics such as .................................... 16 5.2. Performing complex analysis to derive measures for: ............................................ 16 5.4 Putting Decision Support to Work ............................................................................ 17 Page | 2
  • 3. Table of Contents 6. Business Intelligence and Management ............................................................................... 18 6.1 Background .................................................................................................................. 18 6.2 Why Is BI Useful in Retail Management? .................................................................... 18 7. Some Current Developments ................................................................................................. 19 8. Implications for the future of Retail Management Applications .......................................... 20 9. Conclusion ............................................................................................................................ 20 Page | 3
  • 4. 1.Business Intelligence Business Intelligence refers to a set of methods and techniques that are used by organizations for tactical and strategic decision making. It leverages technologies that focus on counts, statistics and business objectives to improve business performance. A Data Warehouse (DW) is simply a consolidation of data from a variety of sources that is designed to support strategic and tactical decision making. Its main purpose is to provide a coherent picture of the business at a point in time. Using various Data Warehousing toolsets, users are able to run online queries and 'mine" their data. Many successful companies have been investing large sums of money in business intelligence and data warehousing tools and technologies. They believe that up-to-date, accurate and integrated information about their supply chain, products and customers are critical for their very survival. Each BI Scorecard is unique for a particular company based on its own set of: BI business drivers BI requirements Established IT standards BI Project history Page | 4
  • 5. 1.1 Types of business intelligence tools The key general categories of business intelligence tools are: a) Spreadsheets b) Reporting and querying software: tools that extract, sort, summarize, and present selected data c) OLAP: Online analytical processing d) Digital Dashboards e) Data mining f) Decision engineering g) Process mining h) Business performance management i) Local information systems 2. Business Intelligence Tools Business intelligence usage can be categorized into the following categories: 2.1 Business operations reporting The most common form of business intelligence is business operations reporting. This includes the actuals and how the actuals stack up against the goals. This type of business intelligence often manifests itself in the standard weekly or monthly reports that need to be produced. Page | 5
  • 6. 2.2 Forecasting Many of you have no doubt run into the needs for forecasting, and all of you would agree that forecasting is both a science and an art. It is an art because one can never be sure what the future holds. What if competitors decide to spend a large amount of money in advertising? What if the price of oil shoots up to $80 a barrel? At the same time, it is also a science because one can extrapolate from historical data, so it's not a total guess. It is the process of analyzing current and historical data to determine future trends. No of Customer 30,000 25,000 20,000 15,000 10,000 y = 1263.5x - 3E+06 5,000 R² = 0.9877 0 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 Axis Title Projected Figures No of Customer 30,000 25,000 20,000 15,000 10,000 5,000 0 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 Page | 6
  • 7. 2.3 Dashboard The primary purpose of a dashboard is to convey the information at a glance. For this audience, there is little, if any, need for drilling down on the data. At the same time, presentation and ease of use are very important for a dashboard to be useful. 2.4 Multidimensional analysis Multidimensional analysis is the "slicing and dicing" of the data. It offers good insight into the numbers at a more granular level. This requires a solid data warehousing / data mart backend, as well as business-savvy analysts to get to the necessary data. Page | 7
  • 8. 2.5 Finding correlation among different factors This is diving very deep into business intelligence. Questions asked are like, "How do different factors correlate to one another?" and "Are there significant time trends that can be leveraged/anticipated? 2.6 Predictive Gravity Modeling The model should be designed to mesh with the data that will be used when the model is implemented. In GIS analysis and most other large data analyses, the characteristics of individuals are summarized into the neighbourhood’s demographic or psychographic profile.Forecast the total potential sales available from each neighborhood in the trade area Page | 8
  • 9. 3. Marketing and Business Intelligence Marketing is becoming more analytical as more performance data is available, as best practices are established and as better analysis tools come to the market. Business intelligence (BI) software is one of the tools that can be used to improve marketing reporting. 3.1 Marketing Scorecard A BI project for marketing often starts with creating a marketing scorecard that contains all metrics and KPIs that are relevant for your marketing organization. This scorecard should contain metrics for the various aspects of your marketing department, ranging from awareness measurements, to leads and lead conversion and marketing ROI. A Business Intelligence [BI] Scorecard is a tool to aid the evolution along the BI Maturity Lifecycle and increase the strategic business value of the BI Program. A BI Performance Scorecard is used to track an organizations business intelligence and data warehouse deployments map against BI best practice. Scorecards have long been used by organizations as a means of implementing strategy down through the enterprise and assessing progress against holistic, enterprise-wide performance indicators [KPI's]. Page | 9
  • 10. A Business Intelligence Scorecard works in exactly the same way. Once BI Opportunities have been defined and BI Roadmap developed, the scorecard provides tracking against both the roadmap and the BI Maturity Lifecycle. A BI Scorecard acts as a performance reality check on whether your BI projects are on track, and if not, how to getthem back on track. It acts as a visual connector between the BI Strategy and the BI Program 3.2 Sensitivity Analysis Sensitivity analysis (SA) is the study of how the variation (uncertainty) in the output of a mathematical model can be apportioned, qualitatively or quantitatively, to different sources of variation in the input of the model In more general terms uncertainty and sensitivity analysis investigate the robustness of a study when the study includes some form of mathematical modeling. Sensitivity analysis can be useful to computer modelers for a range of purposes,[3] including: support decision making or the development of recommendations for decision makers (e.g. testing the robustness of a result); enhancing communication from modelers to decision makers (e.g. by making recommendations more credible, understandable, compelling or persuasive); increased understanding or quantification of the system (e.g. understanding relationships between input and output variables); and model development (e.g. searching for errors in the model Page | 10
  • 11. 3.3 Customer Life Time Value ( CLV) In marketing, customer lifetime value (CLV), lifetime customer value (LCV), or lifetime value (LTV) is the net present value of the cash flows attributed to the relationship with a customer CLV = to power K CLV: Customer Lifetime Value PC : Profit Contribution d : Discount Rate n : Number of years k : Time unit Most models to calculate CLV apply to the contractual or customer retention situation. These models make several simplifying assumptions and often involve the following inputs: 3.3.1 Churn rate The percentage of customers who end their relationship with a company in a given period. One minus the churn rate is the retention rate. Most models can be written using either churn rate or retention rate. If the model uses only one churn rate, the assumption is that the churn rate is constant across the life of the customer relationship. Page | 11
  • 12. 3.3.2 Discount ratethe cost of capital used to discount future revenue from a customer. Discounting is an advanced topic that is frequently ignored in customer lifetime value calculations. The current interest rate is sometimes used as a simple (but incorrect) proxy for discount rate. 3.3.3 Retention costthe amount of money a company has to spend in a given period to retain an existing customer. Retention costs include customer support, billing, promotional incentives, etc. 3.3.4 PeriodThe unit of time into which a customer relationship is divided for analysis. A year is the most commonly used period. Customer lifetime value is a multi-period calculation, usually stretching 3-7 years into the future. In practice, analysis beyond this point is viewed as too speculative to be reliable. The number of periods used in the calculation is sometimes referred to as the model horizon. 3.3.5 Periodic Revenue The amount of revenue collected from a customer in the period. 3.3.6 Profit Margin Profit as a percentage of revenue. Depending on circumstances this may be reflected as a percentage of gross or net profit. For incremental marketing that does not incur any incremental overhead that would be allocated against profit, gross profit margins are acceptable. 4 . BI & Marketing Reporting Once you have established the scorecard, Business Intelligence software can be set up to collect all necessary data and store it in its database. Data snapshots are taken, so you have access to the full history. Based on this data warehouse, wealth of reports is available that each can be customized to fit each employee’s needs. It often starts with a high-level overview, but also provides the opportunity to drill down into more detailed reports. The most common tools used for business intelligence are as follows. They are listed in the following order: Increasing cost, increasing functionality, increasing business intelligence complexity, and decreasing number of total users. The different tools used are 4.1 Excel Take a guess what's the most common business intelligence tool? You might be surprised to find out its Microsoft Excel. There are several reasons for this: It's relatively cheap. It's commonly used. You can easily send an Excel sheet to another person without worrying whether the recipient knows how to read the numbers. It has most of the functionalities users need to display data. In fact, it is still so popular that all third-party reporting / OLAP tools have an "export to Excel" functionality. Even for home-built solutions, the ability to export numbers to Excel Page | 12
  • 13. usually needs to be built. Excel is best used for business operations reporting and goals tracking. 4.2 Reporting tool In this discussion, I am including both custom-built reporting tools and the commercial reporting tools together. They provide some flexibility in terms of the ability for each user to create, schedule, and run their own reports. Business operations reporting and dashboard are the most common applications for a reporting tool. Page | 13
  • 14. 4.3 OLAP tool OLAP tools are usually used by advanced users. They make it easy for users to look at the data from multiple dimensions. OLAP tools are used for multidimensional analysis. Page | 14
  • 15. 4.4 Data mining tool Data mining tools are usually only by very specialized users, and in an organization, even large ones, there are usually only a handful of users using data mining tools. Data mining tools are used for finding correlation among different factors. 5. BI for Retail Industry As retail markets become increasingly competitive, the ability to react quickly and decisively to market trends and to tailor products and services to individual clients is more critical than ever. A business intelligence system can be a very effective means of organizing and analyzing the vast amount of information generated in a retail business, and help you generate a more effective business model for keeping your business profitable. Retail and Business Intelligence Successful retailers strive to accomplish three basic objectives: to align their business with client needs; to differentiate from competitors; and To optimize product mix and space utilization. Page | 15
  • 16. To achieve these goals, retailers must be able to successfully manage inventory, product mixes, promotions, supply chain dynamics, and a number of other factors. Furthermore, as retail markets become increasingly competitive, the ability to react quickly and decisively to market trends is more critical than ever. Lack of information is not the problem—data to assist in making these kinds of decisions is readily available from a variety of sources. On the contrary, the problem is that the volume and complexity of information available to organizations is overwhelming. Increasingly, successful retailers will be those that can effectively categorize and utilize these data for category management, client loyalty programs, promotions, etc. in short, Business Intelligence. Retail Data Sets These are: traditional retail information, including point of sale data, gross margins, turns, and gross margin return on inventory investment (GMROI); market data, including market share and competitor pricing; promotional data, including special pricing offers and vendor contributions, such as promotional allowances and coop advertising fees; and Client data, including demographics and various loyalty and client value metrics. Category management software applications have traditionally focused on the first category of data, with occasional forays into the second. While these are certainly critical metrics in determining profitability and product mix, companies are increasingly taking a more client- centric view of their business, and are looking to the third and fourth categories of data to provide new insight into marketing and sales. Adding Value Through Decision Support 5.1 Reporting capabilities for key performance metrics such as product profitability; units sold; category management; gross revenue; and Client frequency and loyalty. 5.2. Performing complex analysis to derive measures for: Evaluating success, timing, and duration of promotion campaigns; evaluating shopper buying patterns and products, i.e., market basket analysis; determining optimal forward buying opportunities; determining optimal assortment mix by category; evaluating pricing and promotion strategy by category; and Understanding issues and measuring improvements in merchandise flow. Page | 16
  • 17. 5.3. Developing statistical models that predict client needs and behaviors. Buy a new product; generate high profitability; respond to contacts through specific channels (e.g., direct mail, telemarketing, email, etc.); and Remain loyal to products in the face of variables such as price, availability, etc. 5.4 Putting Decision Support to Work Now that we have discussed the decision support capabilities that will be crucial to surviving in tomorrow’s retail business landscape, let’s take a look at how these capabilities align to the classic needs of the business. Consider the case of adding new products to the inventory. A new product is under consideration for introduction into a chain of grocery stores. When introducing a new product, we want to know whether it is expanding the category or merely cannibalizing sales of existing, higher margin products. Retailers frequently introduce products into one or two markets to gauge their success before rolling them out to all of the stores. To judge success of the new product, we want to compare sales and margin of the entire category in the test store to a control store where no new product was introduced. This could be accomplished using Business Intelligence. We would look at percent changes over a specific time period, and be able to drill down to greater detail once we have formulated a hypothesis For example, let’s say we introduced the product at a significant discount. Consider this scenario: Overall sales in the category did not increase relative to the control store (both stores increased absolute sales by about five percent.) Drilling down on product suggests that sales of the new product cannibalized sales of existing products, rather than driving increased demand and expanding the category. Furthermore, the discount on the new product is shrinking the category margin. The combined effects of cannibalization and aggressive discounting have seriously hurt the bottom line in this category. Depending on the goal that has been defined for this category, this may not have been a successful product introduction. Drilling down to the product level highlights the results of new product introduction on the sales and margin of existing products. Based on this analysis, we may choose not to introduce the new product at other stores. Or, depending on the products that it competes with, we may choose to introduce the product but maintain margin by pricing it more competitively. Insights from the Business Intelligence system enable us to accurately assess the true impact of this business event, and evaluate its effectiveness. Page | 17
  • 18. 6. Business Intelligence and Management A major theme in 2002 was the increasing use of Business Intelligence (BI) for business process management (BPM). BI goes beyond static data snapshots to enable users to identify and analyze ongoing business trends and patterns. 6.1 Background In the 1980's, finance and telecommunication companies pioneered BI to support financial and market analysis of the large volumes of data that they had begun to accumulate electronically. The need for BI capabilities grew in the 80's and 90's in other industries as companies began capturing data electronically across the full range of their business activities. This need was further compounded by the growing interest in real time data access which required effective tools to mine and analyze dramatically increased data volumes. To support this growing need, large software and services providers like IBM and Oracle launched major initiatives to bring data warehousing capabilities to the marketplace. These data warehouses, or data marts, are the most common sources of data for BI applications. ERP systems have also been used to capture data and enforce consistency, but they tend to be too inflexible to support ad hoc exploration of data. Fortunately, better tools for access and analysis have emerged. These tools usually start with flexible query and reporting capabilities that are combined with some mix of online analytical processing (OLAP), statistical analysis, forecasting and data mining techniques. 6.2 Why Is BI Useful in Retail Management? BI use is expanding from finance to other business functions because it provides a quick Return on Investment (ROI). It complements supply chain planning because BI applications provide incremental benefits while a business lays the foundation for more sophisticated tools and related business process changes. To reap some quick returns and support their supply chain projects, some companies are using BI tools to: Improve data visibility so as to reduceinventory levels by 5% to 15% in some businesses. Analyze customer service levels to identify specific problem areas. Better understand the sources of variability in customer demand to improve forecast accuracy. Analyze production variability to identify where corrective measures need to be taken. Analyze transport performance to reduce costs by using the most efficient transport providers. Page | 18
  • 19. By providing wider visibility to plans and supporting data, BI tools increase the return on existing SCP applications because they help companies understand where and how they deviate from their plan objectives. In addition, they provide shared data availability that encourages a global perspective on business performance. As a result, people are more likely to make decisions based on their global impact. 7. Some Current Developments BI capabilities are now being integrated into other products. In fact, Microsoft has vowed to bring BI to the workforce with their next release of SQL Server. Not surprisingly, its ownership of the desktop work environment gives Microsoft an edge over Oracle and IBM, who have also announced enhancements to their OLAP and data mining capabilities. All this puts pressure on traditional BI applications providers. The CRM (Customer Relationship Management) community has even come up with a name for BI analysis of customer behavior (CRM analytics). Although SCP vendors are offering BI capabilities as well by adding layers of products from the traditional BI vendors, the resulting mix of applications can be cumbersome to implement and support. In addition, IT publications report that end users often have difficulty using generic tools that were not designed to support specific roles or job functions. New SCP products, like Zemeter, have an advantage because these BI capabilities are easily incorporated as part of a single offering. These newer tools can also be configured to support specific business roles. BI applications have become increasingly cost effective because they utilize the connectivity provided by the Internet and by intranets and because component-based software development speeds implementation. Since implementation consists of installing the software and connecting the data feeds, BI tools with good user interfaces can be put into use within a few weeks. Some companies that haven't developed these capabilities in an organized fashion are seeing independent, often underground, local projects popping up in their businesses. While it is encouraging to see employees take the initiative in addressing business problems, this fragmented approach often produces a series of applications with overlapping functionality drawing on a Hodge podge of different technologies. Sustaining these applications becomes a headache, and effective support often hinges on the continued presence of a local super user. Page | 19
  • 20. 8. Implications for the future of RetailManagement Applications BI applications will become part of the standard technology set used by most businesses and will have a synergistic effect on current and future SCP applications. The continued evolution of component based software development will lead to increased consideration of internal development, particularly around BI applications. The option of internal development will put downward pressure on software prices. Vendors will move from pricing based on estimates of value added (which are often optimistic) to pricing based on development costs. 9. Conclusion As retail markets become increasingly competitive, the ability to react quickly and decisively to market trends and to tailor products and services to individual clients is more critical than ever. Although data volumes continue to increase at an astounding rate, the problem is no longer simply one of quantity; at the heart of the issue is how companies are using their information. Increasingly, particularly in the retail industry, it is important to understand client preferences and behavior. A business intelligence system can be a very effective means of organizing and analyzing the complex barrage of information generated in our business, and helping us generate a more effective business model for keeping our client base happy and profitable. Page | 20