Business Intelligence 2.0

Business Intelligence 2.0 (BI 2.0) is a development of the existing business intelligence model that began in the mid-2000s. The process allows for the querying of real-time corporate data by employees, but approaches the data with a more web/browser based solution. This is opposed to previous proprietary querying tools that had characterized previous business intelligence software.

The growth in service-oriented architectures (SOA) is one of the main factors for this happening. Some state that it is a more flexible and adaptive solution than normal business intelligence. The process of data exchange also differs, with XBRL (Extensible Business Reporting Language), Web Services and various Semantic Web ontologies enable using data external to an organization, such as benchmarking type information.

Business Intelligence 2.0 is believed to have been named after Web 2.0, although it takes elements from both Web 2.0 (a focus on user empowerment and community collaboration, technologies like RSS and the concept of mashups), and the Semantic Web, sometimes called "Web 3.0" (semantic integration through shared ontologies to enable easier exchange of data).[1]

In a nutshell BI 2.0 is about the future where data can be obtained from many sources.

According to analytics expert Neil Raden, BI 2.0 also implies a move away from the standard data warehouse that business intelligence tools have used, which "will give way to context, contingency and the need to relate information quickly from many sources."[2]

See also

People

References

  1. Raden, Neil (2005). "Start Making Sense: Get From Data To Semantic Integration". intelligententerprise.com.
  2. Raden, Neil (2007). "Business Intelligence 2.0: Simpler, More Accessible, Inevitable". intelligententerprise.com.

Further reading

Interviews

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