Archive for the ‘Business Warehouse’ Category

A solution vision for SAP Business Objects BPC v7.5 NetWeaver

Tuesday, January 1st, 2013

With the introduction of SAP BusinessObjects Planning and Consolidation 7.5 version for SAP Netweaver, there is ample opportunity for significant improvements of the workflow and consolidation of data for planning processes and applications. Having had the opportunity to provide a solution for our client using BPC Netweaver version 7.5 along with SAP BW v7.01 we can share the vision and the solution design we implemented. The vision is to provide a common infrastructure for centralized planning, forecasting, and reporting. The new netweaver 7.5 version provided us with the opportunity to migrate from the currently unsupported Microsoft 5.2 version to the NetWeaver technology stack. Here is what our solution looks like and some of the opportunities we took to implement enhanced process improvements and functionality.

Solution for BPC v7.5 and BW v7.01

Why does this solution work? First, by standardizing on a common technology stack you gain leverage of existing knowledge and skillsets. While there is plenty of BPC upskilling needed, BW integration is critical and leveraging known BW skillsets will take you a long way in an implementation. Second, the common technology platform, offers the opportunity of leveraging common reporting tools. While reporting on Plan/Actual data is best served using BPC EVDRe functions–trust me exel is not going away anytime soon–adding BW reporting tools into the information delivery strategy instantly broadens information access across the corporate user base.

Claricent, Inc. Joins With DataVard to Bring SAP Productivity Tools to Mid-Market Enterprises

Friday, August 5th, 2011

BI Consultants Lead the Way Identifying Cost-Effective Solutions to Improve the Performance and Availability of SAP Solutions

ACTON, Mass., Aug. 5, 2011 /PRNewswire/ — Claricent, Inc., a Massachusetts-based provider of SAP® business intelligence (BI) solutions, today announced it has signed an exclusive reseller agreement with DataVard, Ltd. to distribute the company’s innovative SAP NetWeaver BW performance tools in North America. The agreement allows Claricent to add CanaryCode, a performance monitoring tool, and OutBoard, a near-line storage solution, to its suite of tools enabling mid-market enterprises to develop robust, practical, and economically feasible BI solutions.

The joint effort combines Claricent’s expertise in building proven, creative SAP NetWeaver Business Warehouse and SAP BusinessObjects BI solutions with DataVard’s expertise in developing specialized analytic tools for SAP Data Management solutions.

“Until today, mid-market enterprises had few options for managing escalating volumes of data and meeting rising user demands for increasingly fast response times,” reports Dave Fox, President of Claricent. “With CanaryCode and OutBoard, Claricent is providing enterprises with robust and affordable tools to improve operational efficiency, reduce storage costs, and maximize business performance.”

Unlike traditional monitoring tools, which simply diagnose and resolve events, CanaryCode provides the information system managers need to prevent failures – before they impact system performance. CanaryCode monitors all mission-critical SAP systems from a central location, enables customers to customize KPIs, and provides real-time alerts and root-cause analysis. A simple plug-in module, CanaryCode does not require configuration and is implemented by Claricent BI consultants as part of an overall performance enhancement solution.

OutBoard’s near-line storage functionality provides a convenient and cost-efficient means of storing aged data in SAP BW systems. With OutBoard, BW data is readily available for virtually any reporting requirement, without the need for additional databases, software, or cumbersome reloading processes. OutBoard provides a 100% SAP-embedded approach to storage, which keeps the system landscape simple, easy to maintain, and easy to administer.

The OutBoard Kernel implements the SAP NLS interface and all technical functionality required for storing and compressing BW data, making OutBoard fully integrated and usable for standard SAP NetWeaver BW interfaces, reporting, and transactions. OutBoard also offers a unique single-point-of-entry for all OutBoard NLS administrative activities, including analysis and reporting.

“Companies running complex SAP NetWeaver BW landscapes face numerous challenges,” said Gregor Stoeckler, Managing Partner of DataVard. “Claricent’s deep expertise and thought leadership in SAP BI make this partnership a perfect match. It represents not only an extension of our global presence, but also the opportunity to work with an organization that shares our vision and goals. We are very confident that Claricent will further enrich our products and their value to customers in the US.”

CanaryCode and OutBoard are packaged solutions ready for installation by Claricent’s network of BI experts.

About Claricent, Inc.

Headquartered in Acton, MA, Claricent, Inc. is an information management consulting organization focusing on strategic implementations of SAP NetWeaver Business Warehouse (SAP NetWeaver BW), SAP BusinessObjects Business Intelligence (SAP BI), and SAP BusinessObjects Planning and Consolidation (SAP BPC). The company’s team of SAP technology experts and information management specialists provide architecture and design, implementation, staff augmentation, and BI remote support services for clients throughout North America. Claricent also partners with leading-edge hardware and software companies to develop innovative solutions to real-world information management issues and take clients’ business intelligence to the next level.

About DataVard, Ltd

DataVard is a specialized provider of SAP Data Management solutions since 1999. Leveraging its combination of specialized tools and expertise, DataVard has helped organizations of all sizes and industries restructure, convert, and enrich data across their existing IT landscape to align IT with business objectives. With subsidiaries in the UK, Germany, and Slovakia, DataVard serves customers across the globe.

Contact:
David Fox
President
Claricent, Inc.
888-325-6496 x511

SOURCE Claricent, Inc.

Applying Heuristic Principles to Dashboard Design & Evaluation

Wednesday, June 22nd, 2011

Heuristic evaluation is a popular usability inspection method for systematic assessment of a user interface for ease-of-use.

This methodology can be extended to evaluate usability of dashboards with the following set of principles:

 Heuristic Principles of Dashboarding

1. Alignment with Objective(s): The dashboard should meet its objective(s), as defined and understood by the users, on an ongoing basis

This principle elicits a common question – How are Objectives relevant in usability evaluation?

Traditional usability evaluation techniques do not attempt to validate the objectives of the interface or system concerned (i.e. functional compliance). They evaluate the interface only on user-friendliness.

Our rationale behind including objectives while applying heuristic principles is two-fold:

I.)      In the world of dashboards, ignoring the user – as it happens often unintentionally – results in “a beautiful and artistic house with no plumbing”. With no utility for the user, many such dashboards just fail to take off.

II.)      More importantly, understanding the objective provides a solid context to evaluate usability. The evaluator should have this objective in context while attempting to answer whether:

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    • the positioning of components in the screen is optimal;
    • the navigation is intuitive and effective;
    • a particular way of presenting information aids usage

Further, users mature over time and demand changes to features. Usage patterns may change. Businesses undergo modifications as well. For this reason, the provider needs to ensure alignment with objectives on an ongoing basis. Doing this will be key in optimizing costs.

2. Clarity of context : The dashboard should always keep the user informed about the context  of the contents being displayed

Content displayed is of two types – information and visual components. Both types need to aid the user in understanding the context

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    • Information (e.g. Sales Volume) displayed in the dashboard should be accompanied by appropriate context (such as Geography, Fiscal Period, Currency, etc.)
    • Components, especially the ones that allow the user to interact & navigate through drilldowns & selection, should help the user understand and track how the context has changed

3. Match between System and Real World: The dashboard should speak the user’s language, with components, labels, navigation and KPIs familiar to the user. 

Follow real-world conventions, making information appear in a natural and logical order

This sounds obvious than it actually is. A good case in point where this principle is often violated is in the usage of nulls/blanks/zeroes/”n.a”. Does a ‘0’ in the dashboard indicate a lack of transaction, or a transaction with 0 unit of measure? Can the user interpret this correctly every time?

Also, the ‘real world’ is different for each user (typically, user-groups). Users in Sales may have a different view of terminology compared to users in Finance. One has to carefully approach dashboards that claim to cater to multiple user-groups.

4. Consistency and Standards: Users should not have to wonder whether different words, situations or actions mean the same thing. Follow uniform and established convention.

Usage of terms, visual components, images, color schemes, and navigation methods should be consistent within and across dashboards

5. Recognition Rather than Recall: Make context, actions and options visible.  The user should not have to remember these

The user should not have to remember information from one part of the dialogue to another. The dashboard design should facilitate recognition of available options and actions.

6. Metadata & Help:  Information about the dashboard and instructions for its use should be visible or easily retrievable whenever appropriate

Many dashboards fail to do this. It helps to state objectives, KPIs, explanation of business terms, etc. clearly in a separate screen that can be accessed with the click of a button.

7. Default State: Where users have freedom to interact with the dashboard by altering the information and/or  components, the dashboard should allow them to revert to the default state

Having a ‘Home’ state encourages user interaction. It avoids the need for users to remember or recall the original state,  or having to use the less engaging ‘browser refresh’

8. Aesthetics and Engagement : The dashboard should be visually appealing and engaging, without overwhelming the user. The design should be aesthetically pleasing with artistic as well as functional value. 

The Dashboard should engage users immediately and make them feel comfortable. There should be a ‘wow’ factor that extends to as many repeat visits as possible.

Note that user’s maturity may require subtle changes to the design & aesthetics over time.

9. Pleasurable and Respectful User Interaction: The user’s interactions with the dashboard should enhance his/her quality of work-life.  The user should be treated with respect.

Ask yourselves: Does the dashboard deliver results with the least amount of effort from & involvement by the user? Does the dashboard deliver something of value that the user does not already possess?

10. Concise and Minimalist Design: Every extra unit of information in the dashboard competes with the relevant units of information and diminishes their relative visibility

The dashboard, while satisfying all the above principles, should adopt a concise and minimalist design. Avoid information, components, contents and navigation steps that are unnecessary.

Avoid overloading the user with information. If two or more sets of information do not deliver value when viewed together, it is better for the user to view them separately.

After performing an evaluation of the dashboard based on these principles (with the help of a detailed checklist that addresses each of these ten areas), each violation can be categorized on a 5-point scale for usability. The various remedial options are then identified and analyzed to arrive at appropriate recommendations.

For questions related to applying heuristic principles to dashboard design & evaluation, contact solutions@claricent.com