Three Steps To A Successful IBM Cognos Upgrade
Three Steps to a Successful IBM Cognos Upgrade Priceless advice for the executive managing an upgrade Recently, we thought our kitchen needed updating. First we hired an architect to draw
Three Steps to a Successful IBM Cognos Upgrade Priceless advice for the executive managing an upgrade Recently, we thought our kitchen needed updating. First we hired an architect to draw
Over the years Motio, Inc. has developed “Best Practices” surrounding a Cognos upgrade. We created these by conducting over 500 implementations and listening to what our customers had to say.
If you’re a long time Motio follower, you’ll know that we are no strangers to Cognos upgrades. (If you’re new to Motio, welcome! We’re happy to have you) We’ve been
In this blog post, we are honored to share the knowledge from guest author and analytics expert, Mike Norris, on planning and pitfalls to avoid for your analytics modernization initiative.
You know the drill: IBM announces a new version of their Business Intelligence tool, Cognos. You search the Cognos Blog-o-sphere and attend sneak-preview sessions for information on the newest release.
IBM regularly releases new versions of its business intelligence software platform, IBM Cognos. Companies must upgrade to the latest and greatest version of Cognos in order to reap the benefits
Marketing uses several reports for its campaigns – standard analytic assets often delivered through marketing tools. Finance has very complex reports converted from Excel to BI tools while incorporating different consolidation rules. The marketing reports have a different failure mode than the financial reports. They, therefore, need to be managed differently.
It’s time for the company’s monthly business review. The marketing department proceeds to report on leads acquired per salesperson. Unfortunately, half the team has left the organization, and the data fails to load accurately. While this is an inconvenience for the marketing group, it isn’t detrimental to the business. However, a failure in financial reporting for a human resource consulting firm with 1000s contractors that contains critical and complex calculations about sickness, fees, hours, etc, has major implications and needs to be managed differently.