Business Intelligence Meeting Questions



It would appear that IT agencies have been holding onto knowledge, keeping it in cold-storage, realizing that there will come a time when it will undoubtedly be of benefit. This really is related to the hopefuls who upon departing that world, have their head frozen, awaiting the emergence of systems that could bring it back to life, perhaps by having an artificial body. Business Intelligence may be the technology which allows businesses to unfreeze their knowledge resources, bringing them back again to a much more of use life than before. A New Era for Data Usage?

Early in the eighteenth century, inventors were creating new discoveries about temperature, energy and motion. There quickly developed coal-fired, steam-driven locomotion (railways) and working engines (for the mines) and big energy crops in making every equipment in a manufacturer turn and churn incessantly. Spinning cotton, weaving cloth, chopping and surrounding metal and then steel. The Industrial Innovation was born. Mills and factories jumped up all across the coal-rich fields of Upper Britain (this writer's birthplace - although only a little later).

From their extended history of back-breaking land function, persons seeking to earn a regular (monetary) revenue flocked to understand the many new (but equally back-breaking) factory careers that emanated from the urban sprawl of gleaming red-bricked labyrinths, that stored these great machines. Professional empires were spawning throughout and wealthy (already) magnates-to-be, moved around spend, construct and rule around them.

What did they think of Business Intelligence? Obviously, it seems impossible that the definition of could ever have already been uttered in those days but, business empires had to managed somehow. If you could see those monolithic structures and enjoy the experience of visiting them, however churning and clunking, you could notice that nearly every sq foot of factory space was handed over to manufacturing or storage of natural products and completed goods. No room for desks and filing units and, needless to say, no data technology; not really a phone!

In one single part of the huge generator, you might find a well appointed office (where the dog owner will be found the majority of the time) and 1 or 2 regional, less auspicious parts, being the workplaces of a couple of clerks, whose work was to history all the transactions of the business. Owners of good leather-bound sizes of hand-written fiscal issues, devoted to parchment but seldom revisited. So wherever was the "Decision Help Process"? Where were the "Government Data Systems" and "Healthy Score Cards"? cyber intelligence

It absolutely was all there; all that was needed in those horse-drawn days, where actual organization took place between the many well-heeled mill owners over a cup of espresso or a mulled ale at some local tavern, gentlemen's club or city-based mercantile collecting hall. The mill owner was kept educated of the production problems, inside his work-house, by trips from the foreman and held his business information up to scratch by his time spent over the tablecloths of his privileged meeting places. Intelligence was handled by "word of mouth ".Business deals were a handshake, followed by a letter, times or days later.

After the initial gold rush of mechanization, small transformed for quite a long time; at the least in terms of administration methods. Just after having a slow but gradual increase in the amount of non-production employees and the (mostly) record-keeping tasks they performed, might still another unannounced "huge leap forward" arise, to irreversibly revamp the company world after again.

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