A
Structured Approach to the BI Business Plan
Capturing business opportunities,
risks, and financial value in addition to technology total
cost of ownership
One of Baseline’s core principles is to incorporate
performance metrics into every data-enabled solution –
to define success and evaluate results. There is no better
place to start than with a solid business intelligence (BI)
business case.
Baseline is often tapped by managers on both the business
and IT side to develop a business plan, determine costs,
evaluate benefits, and analyze Return on Investment (ROI).
The BI Business Case delivers a rigorous agenda and financial
assessment of the opportunities, technology costs, and incremental
and ongoing resource requirements for development and maintenance
of your BI program.
» Your Challenges
» The Problem
» The Baseline Approach
» Your Value
» Why Baseline
Your
Challenges
- High risk, high reward for BI investments
- Keen competition for scare corporate
resources
- Understanding the complete value and
cost model—both a business and IT view
- Measuring and proving the post-investment
value and benefits
» Back to top of page
The
Problem
Making the investment decision—monitoring
the return
When it comes to business intelligence (BI) and data warehousing,
many companies have one or more failures under their corporate
belts. BI or data warehouse development projects constantly
start and stop; someone is always questioning the value;
and, one or more BI initiatives have been “de-scoped”
or cancelled.
With investments in BI initiatives in the tens of millions
of dollars, and competition keen for scare corporate resources,
executives are demanding solid business plans before they
approve new capital expenditures or maintain existing budget
levels. They seek assurance of business value in pro-forma
statements, staffing estimates, and cost and payback analysis.
They expect a business plan to lay out a deliverable timetable
that clearly addresses business opportunities, identifies
risks, and shows value.
A structured approach to business case development can also
help you address the following needs:
- Data warehouse project costs that exceed
the perceived business value.
- Business sponsors who are unsure of
appropriate investment levels for BI.
- BI development teams who never get
funding because their projects are low on the IT priority
list.
- Stakeholders who go outside the company
for BI delivery because IT cannot fulfill their requests.
- Different organizations with conflicting
objectives for BI and the data warehouse.
- Business users who complain that IT
doesn’t understand their needs, but aren’t
able to clearly communicate their business plans or strategies
to provide IT with requirements.
ROI Survey Results

» Back to top of page
The
Baseline Approach
Cost/benefit analysis of discrete
BI applications using both business and IT costs
BI Business Case Development is usually an outgrowth of
Baseline’s Business Discovery and BI Application Portfolio
offerings. It quantifies the ROI of discrete BI application
opportunities, generating a richer business plan and providing
a clear roadmap for execution.
Using the business planning project as a backdrop, Baseline
can secure time to interview business people—a luxury
not always granted to IT staff. These interviews include
structured questions for different “levels”
of stakeholder, ensuring a comprehensive picture of needs
and priorities in the business case. Baseline uses weighted
metrics to prioritize and quantify one or more “opportunities”
in terms of both “hard” and “soft”
ROI.
The BI Business Case deliverable includes the following:
- Executive summary.
- Description of business needs, objectives,
implementation roadmap, targeted users, architecture requirements,
and key performance indicators.
- Staffing and resource requirements.
- Benefits including both qualitative
factors and financial analysis – using client’s
preferred evaluation measures, such as NPV, ROI, or break-even.
- Pro-form budget including revenue,
capital, and expense projections.
- Plan risks.
- Key assumptions and dependencies.
» Back to top of page
Your Value
A unit of decision-making for
program sponsorship
The BI Business Case identifies your business opportunities
in terms of benefits and financial impact. The BI Business
Case can serve as an educational tool to highlight the importance
of BI to reduce costs and increase revenues. As such, it
becomes the unit of decision making for moving forward with
BI. The rigorous analysis outlines benefits, costs and payback
details, answers objections, and secures program sponsorship.
» Back to top of page
Why Baseline
A business-driven approach to
predicting and measuring ROI
Because Baseline considers BI to be a business solution,
we approach business planning with a requirements-driven
focus – a sharp contrast to other consultants or vendors
who often take a technology-focused approach to ROI.
Moreover, our business case analysis doesn’t just
concentrate on IT-centric Total Cost of Ownership (TCO).
We include business-centric costs and revenue generation.
By focusing on both “hard” and “soft”
ROI, we ensure that business intelligence is proactive and
strategic—not merely focusing on incremental cost
savings, but focusing on new business initiatives that support
your company’s evolution.
» Back to top of page
|