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Friday, November 12, 2010

Profit Solved - Clarify Your Small Business Objectives


Without clarity your profit picture will be too fuzzy to serve as an accurate guide to making more money in your small business. Sharpen your focus in these four areas to improve your bottom line.

Personal Reasons: Understand your personal reasons for successful small business ownership.

Most small businesses are started for personal reasons. Your motivation might  come from a skill, hobby or passion. The tipping point is often an incident in your life. It might be the threat or reality of losing a job, need for extra income due to a child on the way, insufficient retirement funds or general frustration.

Many times your personal reasons for starting a business of your own are really, "more personal" - they have to do with who you are as a person, the need to have more control over your time and more options in your life.

The greater clarity you have about the "Why" behind your decision to start your small business the greater chance you will be focused and produce a higher level of profitability.

Business Goals: Clearly state your business goals regardless of your personal talents or skills.

You and your business are really two separate entities. You, as the person who owns the business, and the business itself. This is an important distinction because business must stand alone for several reasons.

You need to set goals for the business to achieve to be profitable. These goals are set based on the mission statement of the business rather than the capabilities of its owners. That would be too limiting. Also, for the business to be in the best position to be sold some day it must be capable of operating independently of its ownership.

Without a clear set of goals your business will lack focus and not be able to develop and implement a profitable business plan.

Active Lifestyle: Schedule activities for each lifestyle area: individual, family, spiritual, career, financial.

Small business ownership is generally all consuming. It gobbles up a huge amount of your time, at least mentally if not physically. If you set goals for each core area of your lifestyle you can maintain more balance and, as a consequence, be in a position to accomplish more in your business.

Use a simple system to select one or two goals for each lifestyle area including business ownership. Schedule time for each goal on a weekly basis. The amount of time allocated for each area or goal does not need to be equal. It just needs to be scheduled.

When your business clearly serves your lifestyle and is integrated into your daily life plan you free up time and energy to accomplish more and positively impact your profit potential.

Mandatory Time: Plan your use of time in 30 minute increments with an emphasis on mandatory items.

Time is money, particularly when it come to the business of making money. It has a equal if  or greater value in one's personal life. A month, week or day is too much time to plan with accuracy, but a 30 minute window is not.

Set long-term objectives to create direction. Set short objectives to set actions. Set blocks of 30 minutes to work on or complete actions. Reserve your 30 minute blocks of time for those actions which must done to complete key profit plans.

The technique of scheduling mandatory items within 30 minute blocks of time give you a  clear picture of the steps you're taking to optimize your profitability.

Today is the best time to bring your profit picture into focus and enjoy the benefits that come from clarifying your small business objectives.






Thursday, November 11, 2010

QlikTech announces top placements in BI Survey - IBNLive.com

PTI | 10:09 PM,Sep 29,2010

Hyderabad, Sep 29 (PTI) QlikTech, a global business intelligence provider, has announced its top placements in this year's BI survey, an independent survey of Business Intelligence(BI) and Performance Management(PM) users conducted by the Business Application Research Centre (BARC). The company ranked first in customer loyalty, query performance (least complaints), and inclination to purchase more licenses, continuing to outpace larger rivals SAP (Business Objects), Oracle (Hyperion)and IBM (Cognos), a company release said here. QlikTech ranked high in other key categories, including ease of use, query performance, speed of implementation and intention to buy more licenses. "Its gratifying to see that our disruptive business model of proving our value as we move through an organisation is paying off in terms of customer loyalty, as intended. We hear from customers often who find our approach to be a refreshing change from the traditional enterprise software model that often turns solutions to shelf-ware" Lars Bjork, CEO of QlikTech said. "The fact that this loyalty transcribes into an inclination to buy more licenses reinforces that our 'land and expand' sales model is an effective approach for this customer base," he added.

Business Objective


A company entering the market with a goal to do business shall have the following objectives:


Maximizing the returns on stockholders capital (wealth maximization) & and;
Profit Maximization

Unlike traditional business theories where maximum importance was given to profit maximization, modern theories lays down facts stressing on the maximization of wealth of its stock holders. Which means, maximizing the price of the stock/shares.

Profit maximization is a short term goal mainly for a period of one year or less. A company can maximize its short term profits at the expense of its long term wealth maximization. Stock holders wealth maximization is along term goal as stockholders are investing in a company expecting good-future-returns. Wealth maximization is preferable because it considers (1) wealth for long term, (2) risks, (3) stockholders returns and timing of the returns. Timing of the returns is important, as earlier the return is received, the better. A quick-positive return reduces the risk involved in the investment due to time factor. Also, if you have quick cash in hand you can reinvest the same.

When we are discussing long and short term business objectives, we must keep in mind that very often profit maximization and wealth maximization are conflicting objectives. It is very important for an entrepreneur to decide that what is his priority, longer term business or short term business. Very often you will find business starting off very well but ultimately going down to competition. They never invest in modernization and expansion of their business process. Hence better companies with good technology took over it. A costly investment may create losses in short term but yield substantial profits in long run. A company who wants to show short term profits may continuously postpone its capital repairs or equipment replacement. These postponements will certainly hurt the long term profitability. As an investor, important is to analyze a companies business objective and find out if it is focusing more on short term and long term growth.

The biggest obstacle in the way of long term wealth maximization is our thought process. And if you have overcome your mind then the second obstacle you will face is Financial Risk linked with any investment. Risk refers to the variability of expected returns (sales, earnings etc) and its profitability. Hence risk analysis is very important. Risk analysis is a process if measuring and analyzing the risk associated with financial and investment decisions. It is important to consider risk in making capital investment decisions because of the large amount of capital involved and also because of long term nature of the investment (time factor). Compare rate of return with amount of risk involved. Investor agreeing to take risk must be rewarded with good returns and vise versa. Management of Risk and returns is a key to create a long term wealth Maximization.






Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Latest Version of SAP® Sourcing OnDemand Solution Delivers Sourcing Innovation ... - PR Newswire (press release)

Click to view news release full screen

WALLDORF, Germany, Oct. 7 /PRNewswire/ -- On-demand technologies are continuing to grow as an important facilitator for companies looking for cost effective solutions that can be quickly deployed. To address this increasing adoption and market traction, SAP AG (NYSE: SAP) today announced the latest release of the SAP? Sourcing OnDemand solution, wave 7. The solution delivers the complete sourcing-to-contract process via an on-demand deployment model, enabling rapid time to value. Wave 7 of SAP Sourcing OnDemand includes usability enhancements, mobile device support, integration of business intelligence tools from the SAP? BusinessObjects? portfolio, and new functionalities in the areas of sourcing, contract management and supplier management. SAP Sourcing OnDemand offers flexibility through subscription packages that deliver strategic sourcing, contract life-cycle management and supplier management components integrated with the enterprise resource planning (ERP) application SAP? ERP. This latest release demonstrates how SAP is delivering business innovation and speeding customer time to value by providing new releases of on-demand solutions twice a year.

(Logo: ?http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20050310/SFTH009LOGO-a)

(Logo: ?http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20050310/SFTH009LOGO-a)

In early September 2010, SAP conducted customer workshops in which 25 companies experienced SAP Sourcing OnDemand firsthand. Participating companies responded positively to the usability enhancements and key new capabilities as well as the ease of adoption that they were able to directly experience during the workshop.

"The number one concern of our customers is the price of energy. SAP Sourcing OnDemand helps us improve customer satisfaction," said Gail DeVeau, director of supply chain, We Energies. "We have found that electronic bidding and reverse auctions lead to cost reductions that help us hold the line on energy prices. Our SAP ERP is run by We Energies while the sourcing solution is hosted by SAP. We chose the on-demand solution for sourcing because we were up and running in less than one month."

Wave 7 of SAP Sourcing OnDemand enables faster and more effective strategic sourcing, contract management and supplier management processes for accelerated savings through the following capabilities:

Rapid and more effective sourcing decisions — Wave 7 provides significant enhancement for total cost calculations that support better sourcing decisions, including line item grouping and formula-based pricing, along with new auction types and tools for faster results and enhanced supplier management workflow. It also offers mobile device support for sourcing processes and contract approvals. Key usability enhancements Users now have faster access to content and new ways to evaluate event results through new usability features, including favorites, saved searches, auto-complete, global searches, user reporting, a "Quick Create" tool and enhanced charting features. Users can also now access their most active business documents immediately. Use of SAP BusinessObjects reporting tools such as Xcelsius? software provides report views that can be modified in real time, and supplier performance dashboards provide enhanced supplier performance visibility. ?Faster management of contract documents and enhanced globalization — An enhanced default view of contract documents allows users to quickly access contract documents and attachments, while a quick and fully searchable repository delivers enhanced accessibility to documents in different locations, and can effectively manage contract expirations and audits. The solution also maintains different currencies on master and sub-agreements. Wave 7 also enables the publishing and replication of supplier information between multiple backend ERP systems.

SAP is also providing packaged standard services such as customer success manager, on-boarding and enablement, as well as hosting and training. Additional services such as consulting services, event day support, supplier and contract support, legacy contract migration and supplier management risk profiling are also available.

"Through co-innovation with its customers, SAP is committed to delivering on the promise of on-demand solutions through rapid innovation and adoption of its solutions," said Mark Ellis, senior vice president development, SAP Sourcing OnDemand, SAP AG. "Successful companies have formal sourcing processes, and effective contract management and supplier programs. The enhancements in wave 7 enable superior supplier and contract management while providing sustainable cost savings with the rapid time to value necessary to compete in today's global economy."

Next Major Event: SAP? TechEd 2010 in Berlin, Las Vegas, Bangalore, and Shanghai

More than 14,000 SAP customers, partners and technical experts are expected to convene at SAP? TechEd 2010, the company's largest ecosystem education event series. The conference brings IT managers, software developers, administrators, and business process experts together to see, hear and share how they and their peers can stay one step ahead of business change. Choosing from hundreds of hours of expert-led sessions and hands-on training, attendees can gain the inspiration and skills they need to maximize impact on their organizations. In its 14th year, SAP TechEd 2010 is being held in Berlin, Germany, October 12-14; Las Vegas, Nevada, October 18-22; Bangalore, India, December 1-3; and Shanghai, China, December 1-2. Follow SAP TechEd on Twitter at @sapteched. For announcements, blog posts, videos and other coverage during the event series, visit the SAP TechED newsroom at www.sapteched.com/news.

About SAP

SAP is the world's leading provider of business software(*), offering applications and services that enable companies of all sizes and in more than 25 industries to become best-run businesses. With more than 102,500 customers in over 120 countries, the company is listed on several exchanges, including the Frankfurt stock exchange and NYSE, under the symbol "SAP." For more information, visit www.sap.com.

(*) SAP defines business software as comprising enterprise resource planning, business intelligence, and related applications.

Any statements contained in this document that are not historical facts are forward-looking statements as defined in the U.S. Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Words such as "anticipate," "believe," "estimate," "expect," "forecast," "intend," "may," "plan," "project," "predict," "should" and "will" and similar expressions as they relate to SAP are intended to identify such forward-looking statements. SAP undertakes no obligation to publicly update or revise any forward-looking statements. All forward-looking statements are subject to various risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from expectations. The factors that could affect SAP's future financial results are discussed more fully in SAP's filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC"), including SAP's most recent Annual Report on Form 20-F filed with the SEC. Readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements, which speak only as of their dates.

Copyright ? 2010 SAP AG. All rights reserved.

SAP, R/3, mySAP, mySAP.com, xApps, xApp, SAP NetWeaver and other SAP products and services mentioned herein as well as their respective logos are trademarks or registered trademarks of SAP AG in Germany and in several other countries all over the world. All other product and service names mentioned are the trademarks of their respective companies. Data contained in this document serve informational purposes only. National product specifications may vary.

Follow SAP on Twitter at @sapnews.

For customers interested in learning more about SAP products:

Global Customer Center: +49 180 534-34-24

United States Only: 1 (800) 872-1SAP (1-800-872-1727)

For more information, press only:

SAP Press Office, +49 (6227) 7-46315, CET; +1 (610) 661-3200, EDT; press@sap.com

SOURCE SAP AG

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Monday, November 8, 2010

Crystal Reports XI Professional Edition

Crystal Reports XI Professional EditionItem #: 471560. Crystal Reports - a proven, world standard solution - helps you design, manage, and deliver reports via the web and embedded in enterprise applications.The Professional edition is ideal for report creation from a large variety of personal or enterprise data sources.PRODUCT FEATURES:Powerful Data Access and Report Creation;Enhanced Productivity;Secure Report Management and Delivery.

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Sunday, November 7, 2010

5 Surefire Ways to Bring Your Business Objectives Full Circle with Technology


All small to mid-sized company owners want to know where their dollar is being spent when it comes to computer technology in their organization. The challenge is for them to get the information they need to make the right purchasing decisions. 'Tell me in English why you think we need this technology in our company?' That question goes through every company owner's mind and mouth. Getting the answer that makes sense to them is another story. How can the people in charge of your company understand what the value is of specific technology if their computer support people cannot articulate why it is so important?

This guide will assist every company owner in understanding how to communicate with your technical consultant so technical recommendations are applied, understood and the full potential of technology is realized throughout the company. After all, your technical consultant wants you to appreciate what they do. And you will not be able to appreciate it until you understand how it effectively applies to you.

Company Objectives- Understanding your company objectives is not a one way street. This information cannot be kept with upper management. Share it with your technical consultant. "Give a man a fish and you feed him for a day. Teach a man to fish and you feed him for a lifetime."

Big picture- Your technical consultant must understand how the company functions as a whole. They must understand the duties of the different departments. How else will the company be able to apply technology to the business's everyday processes if those processes are never articulated?

Changing with the times- Just because a technical consultant has worked in an environment for 'a couple years' does not automatically mean they are aware of changes to the intricacies of the company's business functions. Just like technology, business strategies change. It's important to consistently keep them in the know when these changes occur at the business level.

A picture is worth a thousand words- Tell you're technical consultant to chart out why they recommend a specific technology. Managers love colors and charts. After all, a picture is worth a thousand words, right?

Define; Measure; Analyze; Improve; Control. As long as every project is measurably articulated in the following order, upper management will have no issues understanding what is being recommended and how to proceed in the future. None of the steps above should be skipped. This is very important. The clearer the projects are defined quantitatively, the easier it will be to control processes going forward.






Addison Lee deploys SAP business intelligence platform - ComputerworldUK

Addison Lee, London's largest minicab service, is rolling out a new SAP business intelligence system to improve its operations.

Addison Lee will work with IT systems provider Maxima to implement the SAP BusinessObjects EDGE business intelligence platform. The system will provide account teams and sales management staff at Addison Lee with real time visibility of the company's fleet of 3,000 vehicles, and allow them to see the performance levels being achieved for its 10,000 corporate account customers.

Get the latest stories on law, regulation, compliance and patents in the Computerworld UK Law channel.

The system is aimed at helping improve core business processes, as well as providing access to self service tools, business intelligence dashboards and web analytics.

It will be implemented at Addison Lee's London headquarters, with the aim of providing executives and operational managers with role-based real-time dashboards. It will allow them to drill-down for further details, carry out root-cause analysis and generate daily information and alerts on specific operational performance issues.

Peter Ingram, Addison Lee IT Director, said, "Our business is growing rapidly so we needed an enterprise-class business intelligence solution."

Ingram said, "When Maxima introduced us to SAP BusinessObjects Edge we immediately saw that it would be possible for us to secure all the benefits of SAP BusinessObjects in a cost-effective package that was backed by Maxima's own specialist expertise."

As part of the deal Maxima will provide full consultancy, training and support services.

Earlier this month, SAP released a set of real time analytics products that are customised for use in various industry sectors and business functions. The products are based on technologies from the company's 2007 purchase of Business Objects.

They include new tools designed to let enterprises enable mobile access to business intelligence (BI) applications. The new products are customised for companies in the healthcare, consumer products, public sector, financial services, retail and telecommunication sectors.

They are designed to deliver real time analytics capabilities for line of business functions, such as finance, sales, marketing, planning, risk assessment and customer satisfaction.

Saturday, November 6, 2010

Tonys Coffee Shop Business Plan

Business plan to open a coffee shop, written by an experienced shop owner, worker and entrepreneur. Includes many bonuses and extras including email and personal consult.


Check it out!

Friday, November 5, 2010

James Surowiecki: How Netflix beat Blockbuster.

In the nineteen-eighties, a new kind of chain store came to dominate American shopping: the “category killer.” These stores killed off all competition in a category by stocking a near-endless variety of products at prices that small retailers couldn’t match. Across America, independent stores went out of business, and the suburban landscape became freckled with Toys R Us, CompUSA, and Home Depot superstores. But the category killers’ reign turned out to be more fragile than expected. In the past decade, CompUSA and Circuit City have disappeared. Toys R Us has struggled to stay afloat, and Barnes & Noble is in the midst of a boardroom battle prompted by financial woes. And, last month, Blockbuster finally admitted the inevitable and declared Chapter 11.

The obvious reason for all this is the Internet; Blockbuster’s demise, for one, was inextricably linked to the success of Netflix. But this raises a deeper question: why didn’t the category killers colonize the Web the way they colonized suburbia? That was what pundits expected. Companies like Blockbuster, the argument went, had customer expertise, sophisticated inventory management, and strong brands. And, unlike the new Internet companies, they’d be able to offer customers both e-commerce and physical stores—“clicks and mortar.” It seemed like the perfect combination.

The problem—in Blockbuster’s case, at least—was that the very features that people thought were strengths turned out to be weaknesses. Blockbuster’s huge investment, both literally and psychologically, in traditional stores made it slow to recognize the Web’s importance: in 2002, it was still calling the Net a “niche” market. And it wasn’t just the Net. Blockbuster was late on everything—online rentals, Redbox-style kiosks, streaming video. There was a time when customers had few alternatives, so they tolerated the chain’s limited stock, exorbitant late fees (Blockbuster collected about half a billion dollars a year in late fees), and absence of good advice about what to watch. But, once Netflix came along, it became clear that you could have tremendous variety, keep movies as long as you liked, and, thanks to the Netflix recommendation engine, actually get some serviceable advice. (Places like Netflix and Amazon have demonstrated the great irony that computer algorithms can provide a more personalized and engaging customer experience than many physical stores.) Then Redbox delivered the coup de grace, offering new Hollywood releases for just a dollar.

Why didn’t Blockbuster evolve more quickly? In part, it was because of what you could call the “internal constituency” problem: the company was full of people who had been there when bricks-and-mortar stores were hugely profitable, and who couldn’t believe that those days were gone for good. Blockbuster treated its thousands of stores as if they were a protective moat, when in fact they were the business equivalent of the Maginot Line. The familiar sunk-cost fallacy made things worse. Myriad studies have shown that, once decision-makers invest in a project, they’re likely to keep doing so, because of the money already at stake. Rather than dramatically shrinking both the size and the number of its stores, Blockbuster just kept throwing good money after bad.

As for “clicks and mortar,” it’s a nice catchphrase, but there’s not much evidence that consumers really need a company to offer both: Blockbuster tried to make a selling point of the fact that you could rent a movie online and then return it to a store, instead of popping it in the mail, but the allure of this was lost on most people. In practice, “clicks and mortar” just meant that Blockbuster had to spend lots of money and time integrating an entirely new information-technology system into the one its stores already had. Meanwhile, Netflix could focus on making its distribution system bigger and more efficient, in large part because it was starting from scratch. Similarly, in the late nineteenth century, department stores like Macy’s tried to enter the mail-order business that Sears had pioneered, but, since Sears had been designed around the mail-order business, its competitors were unable to catch up.

Unlike Sears, though, Netflix isn’t going to have decades in which to bask in its success. Its domination of the DVD-rental market comes just as people are moving toward streaming and downloadable video. As has already happened with music, the business of renting and selling movies will soon be about moving digital files rather than physical objects. Streaming is already a big part of Netflix’s business, and it has signed up partnerships to let consumers get movies via video-game machines, Blu-Ray players, and so on. But this is a market in which Netflix’s expertise in shipping red envelopes as quickly and efficiently as possible will no longer be a competitive advantage. It’s a market that’s already quite crowded—with Amazon, Apple, the cable companies, and now Google (which just rolled out its own TV product) all competing. And it’s a market that remains wide open technologically—no one really knows how, or on what devices, most people will watch movies in the future. In this environment, it would be easy for Netflix to fall back on its safety cushion, milk the existing DVD business for all it’s worth, and try to slow down customers’ migration into streaming, particularly since a customer who streams movies is less lucrative than one who rents three DVDs a month. But then, a decade from now, we’d be writing Netflix obituaries that sounded just like the ones for Blockbuster. Sometimes you have to destroy your business in order to save it.??

Thursday, November 4, 2010

What Is A Business Plan And How Can It Help You


Starting up your own business can be a very attractive and exciting thing to do. However, the setting up and running of a business is also a very challenging thing to do. It requires lots of commitment, persistence, organisation and planning. It also involves finding a market that will make you money and finding enough capital to get your business set-up and ready to go.

After you have done your market research into finding a potentially profitable market you need to come up with a business plan. A business plan sets out a road map of what your business is about, what it will achieve how it will achieve it and when. Therefore, the plan will include your business aims and objectives, the resources that will be needed to achieve these objectives and evidence that these objectives are achievable. Depending of the situation a business plan can outline the business objectives based on a year or even up to 5 years.

If you are starting up a business you will more or less need starting up capital and loans to help your business get off the ground. Raising capital will be essential for paying rent, buying office equipment and stock. Unless you have a very rich and generous relative the only place that you are going to get the capital you need will be from the banks. Your business plan primary aim is to convince the banks that you have a viable business to lend you the money to start it up.

When using a business plan to raise money from banks you need to ensure that it is comprehensive and well researched. Not only will they be looking at whether the market you are entering is a viable one they will also be interested at looking at the financial side and your future capability of the business paying back the money that will be lent.






Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Qualcomm Releases Augmented Reality SDK

Qualcomm Inc. said this week it is making its Augmented Reality (AR) Software Developer Kit available for the delivery of new interactive 3D apps to Android smartphones.

Augmented reality adds to the immersive experience virtual reality brings to computer-generated environments with features like real-world graphics and sounds, and its development is being driven by video games and cell phones. Qualcomm's QDevNet online developer network will offer the SDK, which can be used to develop 3D experiences for everyday objects like gaming on tabletops and interactive media on product packaging and promotional items, the company said.

"Qualcomm is making it easy for developers to create interactive 3D content for the real world," said Jay Wright, director of business development at Qualcomm, in a statement. "By making the Qualcomm AR SDK available at no charge, we are encouraging all developers to start building innovative applications and services today."

Computer vision technology is incorporated into the AR platform and SDK so that graphics can be tightly aligned with underlying objects, the company said. Unlike current AR applications that use a phone's GPS and compass for mapping applications, Qualcomm said it is leveraging a vision-based AR approach, which "enables a fundamentally different user experience in which graphics appear as if they are anchored to real-world objects."

The vision technology Qualcomm is using "involves superimposing computer-generated content over live images viewed through cameras on a mobile device,'' said Victoria Fodale, senior analyst, Mobile Devices, at ABI Research, in an email. "Vision-based augmented reality allows computer graphics to be tightly aligned with real-world objects. Essentially, the SDK enables developers to incorporate interactive 3D content in their applications."

The SDK's advanced features will enable the augmentation of everyday images on printed media, along with basic 3D objects such as boxes used for product packaging, Qualcomm said. The ability for users to interact with AR applications just by touching real-world surfaces is also supported by the SDK.

There are a number of Android apps that already do augmented reality, such as Google Goggles, which conducts a search for information about an object, said Ken Hyers, senior analyst, Mobile Devices, at Technology Business Research, Inc. The class of apps that use augmented reality is really useful, he said. "It's adding information on top of reality. When I have gone out with my Android phone to do touristy things, I've been able to hold my device up to a building and the phone knows to get the GPS to identify the building and overlays a Wikipedia link so I can get info about what I'm looking at."

AR applications can be used in a variety of different industries, Hyers added; any requiring a layer of information on top of something a user is looking at. "Qualcomm is trying to figure out more ways to layer their Snapdragon processor … it's very powerful and they want to see it in more devices."

The Qualcomm AR SDK is available as a beta release and can be downloaded at developer.qualcomm.com/ar.

Are your star players about to bolt? You need to know before the job market warms up. That story and more in the new, all-digital issue of InformationWeek's Boardroom Journal. Download it now (registration required).

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Monday, November 1, 2010

Matter Management Reporting - A Business Objects Approach


Corporate legal Matter Management systems are implemented through multi-million dollar projects that frequently result in unpopular, underused tools that never provide the expected return on investment. One element, common to many such situations, is the limited utility of the data being captured. The data in the matter management system is either irrelevant or inaccessible to the interested parties. Integrated Matter Management reporting is the solution to this problem.

In the best case, future reporting needs have been considered and included as critical inputs in the design phase of the larger matter management project. In the worst case, reporting was left out of the design entirely, and end users and management are already angry and dissatisfied with what they perceive as a very expensive failure. Once this type of deficiency is identified, Matter Management specialists can correct the design and integrate the key reports into the system that will make it more relevant to day-to-day business and the reporting requirements mandated by management.

The right specialists will be fluent in matter management as well as management reporting and the underlying tools. These subject area experts can upgrade and enhance a successful matter management system, or salvage and improve one that is foundering. Specialty consultants are crucial to a successful matter management implementation because of their unique combination of experience, independence from vendor influence and accountability to the client organization that engages them. The same advantages make them most desirable resources during a project remediation. Skilled resources that rely on the good will of their paying client are highly motivated to comply with customer timelines and expectations.

A good matter management reporting implementation will be flexible, responsive, logical, and user-friendly. The tools most often employed to retrieve and display data from a matter management system are Business Objects (or Crystal Reports), Microsoft Access, Cognos, and Microstrategy. Most of these are Business Intelligence platforms (MS Access is not). Using these tools, a skilled designer creates a metadata layer that interprets complex data for use by end users and report writers (metadata means 'data about data').

In Business Objects, the metadata layer is called a "Universe". Sound universe design is the heart of a successful reporting effort. Poorly designed universes will result in several significant problems, including:


Inaccurate reports
Performance problems (with Reporting, the application and/or the database server)
User dissatisfaction (with usability, results, etc.)
Proper universe design will incorporate the following practices and features:
Custom universes and objects, built to address customer reporting needs.
Consistent, logical universe layout
Clear and friendly naming conventions.
Multiple universes, built around clusters of related data.
Logical, consistent points of interface between universes.
Efficient database joins
In a Business Objects universe design, multiple universes should be created, according to the complexity of the data and business processes involved. The separation of data into multiple universes improves the usability and performance of the reporting environment. Usability is enhanced as the reporting interface presents fewer choices, with more obvious correlations and interactions between fields, so that a report writer can create more accurate reports more quickly. Performance is enhanced as database communications are simplified and streamlined. A matter management reporting environment will use a Matter (Case) universe to anchor the rest of the data. A Finance universe contains everything about invoices and budgets. The Finance universe can be linked to Matters when a more complex report requires details from both universes. A Contacts universe presents all of the details in the "rolodex", encompassing all of the people and companies that are involved in any way with a legal matter in the system. Other universes will link to it whenever additional contact details are required. A Timekeeping universe will present timesheet data and have links to the Matters and Contacts universes. Other universes may be necessary, depending upon the business processes that are part a firm's Matter Management system. These may include an Intellectual Property universe, a Discovery universe, a Risk Management universe, and others.

Once the universes are in place, reports are created through the collaborative efforts of business experts, analysts and report writers. Specialty consultants are a superior resource during this step because they can fill the latter two roles, while conversing fluently with the business experts to maximize reporting results and minimize delivery time.

Summary
A strong reporting implementation is vital to the overall success of any Matter Management system, in many cases driving the benefits that provide the ROI for the entire project. Experienced specialists can contribute dramatically to the success of the effort. The reporting design should be flexible enough to accommodate its ongoing success, as active users will constantly develop new questions for their reports to answer. Good reporting will improve the user experience and management utility of the system, raising both data quality and participation among the user population.

© 2007 Matt Gwilliam






Ways of Ensuring Business Growth Now and in the Future


People invest in big or small businesses for a myriad of reasons such as attaining independence where one becomes his/her own boss. Others enjoy the flexibility to work when and where you want while others get to work at something they enjoy and thus utilize their talents to the maximum.

You will realize that you might actually achieve financial freedom by running your own small business than by working for someone else. As a matter of fact, many engage in business mainly for the financial rewards (profit). Profit is not an absolute concept, but is what an individual defines it as.

Accountants, business people and economists disagree on suitable definitive solution to the problem of defining and measuring profit. Nevertheless, profit is income and it is unlimited, as in the case of monopolies. For a company to realize a profit, it is necessary to make a sale. While it is often thought that the business objective is to maximize profit, in reality the prime business objective is often survival.

Income maximization has been noted as a false objective in many cases. The maximization of income may lead to retention of obsolete equipment, employment of low grade personnel at low pay, purchases of cheap inputs, cut-backs in research and equipment and the like. Due to a policy of low investment in business aspects like marketing, hiring and mechanization, income may be drastically increased in the short run, but in the longer term, the company will be over taken by its competitors and lose its markets share.

Organizations should not have its objectives as maximizing profits only but also take into consideration ways of producing quality products and services and also meet its operating costs. This will ensure its survival and expansion both in the current period and in the future.






Sunday, October 31, 2010

Saturday, October 30, 2010

Quick Guide to Implementing Business Intelligence, Data Warehousing & BPM


Definitions and Overview

Business Performance Management (BPM) establishes a framework to improve business performance by measuring key business characteristics which can be used to feedback into the decision process and guide operations in an attempt to improve strategic organisational performance. Other popular terms for this include; Enterprise PM (EPM), Corporate PM (CPM) Enterprise Information Systems (EIS), Decision Support Systems (DSS), Management Information Systems (MIS).

BPM: Cycle of setting objectives, monitoring performance and feeding back to new objectives.

Business Intelligence (BI) can be defined as the set of tools which allows end-users easy access to relevant information and the facility to analyse this to aid decision making. More widely the 'intelligence' is the insight which is derived from this analysis (eg. trends and correlations).

BI: Tools to Access & Analyse Data

Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) are strategically aligned corporate measures that are used to monitor, predict and anticipate the performance of the organisation. They form the basis of any the BPM solution and in an ideal world it should be possible to relate strategic KPIs to actual operational performance within the BI application.

KPIs provide a quick indication on the health of the organisation and guide management to the operational areas affecting performance.

In many companies analysis of data is complicated by the fact that data is fragmented within the business. This causes problems of duplication, inconsistent definitions, inconsistency, inaccuracy and wasted effort.

Silos of Data: Fragmented, Departmental Data Stores, often aligned with specific business areas.

Data Warehousing (DWH) is often the first step towards BI. A Data Warehouse is a centralised pool of data structured to facilitate access and analysis.

DWH: Centralised/Consolidated Data Store

The DWH will be populated from various sources (heterogeneous) using an ETL (Extract, Transform & Load) or data integration tool. This update may be done in regular periodic batches, as a one off load or even synchronised with the source data (real time).

ETL: The process of extracting data from a source system, transforming (or validating) it and loading it into a structured database.

A reporting (or BI) layer can then be used to analyse the consolidated data and create dashboards and user defined reports. A modelling layer can be used to integrate budgets and forecasting.

As these solutions get more complex, the definitions of the systems and what they are doing becomes more important. This is known as metadata and represents the data defining the actual data and its manipulation. Each part of the system has its own metadata defining what it is doing. Good management & use of metadata reduces development time, makes ongoing maintenance simpler and provides users with information about the source of the data, increasing their trust and understanding of it.

Metadata: Data about data, describing how and where it is being used, where it came from and what changes have been made to it.

Commercial Justifications

There is clear commercial justification to improve the quality of information used for decision making. A survey conducted by IDC found that the mean payback of BI implementation was 1.6 years and that 54% of businesses had a 5 year ROI of >101% and 20% had ROI > 1000%.

ROI on BI > 1000% from 20% of organisations

There are now also regulatory requirements to be considered. Sarbanes-Oxley requires that US listed companies disclose and monitor key risks and relevant performance indicators - both financial and non financial in their annual reports. A robust reporting infrastructure is essential for achieving this.

SarbOx requires disclosure of financial & non-financial KPIs

Poor data quality is a common barrier to accurate reporting and informed decision making. A good data quality strategy, encompassing non system issues such as user training and procedures can have a large impact. Consolidating data into a DWH can help ensure consistency and correct poor data, but it also provides an accurate measure of data quality allowing it to be managed more pro-actively.

Data Quality is vital and a formal data quality strategy is essential to continually manage and improve it.

Recent research (PMP Research) asked a broad cross section of organisations their opinion of their data quality before and after a DWH implementation.

- "Don't know" responses decreased from 17% to 7%

- "Bad" or "Very Bad" decreased from 40% to 9%

- Satisfactory (or better) increased from 43% to 84%

DWH implementations improve Data Quality.

Tools Market Overview

At present BI is seen as a significant IT growth area and as such everyone is trying to get onto the BI bandwagon:

ERP tools have BI solutions e.g SAP BW, Oracle Apps

CRM tools are doing it: Siebel Analytics,

ETL vendors are adding BI capabilities: Informatica

BI vendors are adding ETL tools: Business Objects (BO) Data Integrator (DI), Cognos Decision Stream

Database vendors are extending their BI & ETL tools:

Oracle: Oracle Warehouse Builder, EPM

Microsoft: SQL 2005, Integration Services, Reporting Services, Analytical Services

Improved Tools

Like all maturing markets, consolidation has taken place whereby fewer suppliers now cover more functionality. This is good for customers as more standardisation, better use of metadata and improved functionality is now easily available. BI tools today can now satisfy the most demanding customer's requirements for information.

Thinking and tools have moved on - we can now build rapid, business focussed solutions in small chunks - allowing business to see data, store knowledge, learn capabilities of new tools and refine their requirements during the project! Gone are the days of the massive data warehousing project, which was obsolete before it was completed.

A typical DWH project should provide usable results within 3 - 6 Months.

Advice & Best Practice

Initial Phase

Successful BI projects will never finish. It should perpetually evolve to meet the changing needs of the business. So first 'wins' need to come quickly and tools and techniques need to be flexible, quick to develop and quick to deploy.

Experience is Essential

Often we have been brought in to correct failed projects and it is frightening how many basic mistakes are made through inexperience. A data warehouse is fundamentally different to your operational systems and getting the initial design and infrastructure correct is crucial to satisfying business demands.

Keep Internal Control

We believe that BI is too close to the business and changes too fast to outsource. Expertise is required in the initial stages, to ensure that a solid infrastructure is in place (and use of the best tools and methods.) If sufficient experience is not available internally external resource can be useful in the initial stages but this MUST include skills transfer to internal resources. The DWH can then grow and evolve (with internal resourcing) to meet the changing needs of the business.

Ensure Management and User Buy In

It may sound obvious but internal knowledge and support is essential for the success of a DWH, yet 'Reporting' is often given a low priority and can easily be neglected unless it is supported at a senior business level. It is common to find that there is a limited knowledge of user requirements. It is also true that requirements will change over time both in response to changing business needs and to the findings/outcomes of the DWH implementation and use of new tools.

Strong Project Management

The complex and iterative nature of a data warehouse project requires strong project management. The relatively un-quantifiable risk around data quality needs managing along with changing user requirements. Plan for change and allow extra budget for the unexpected. Using rapid application development techniques (RAD) mitigates some of the risks by exposing them early in the project with the use of proto-types.

Educating the End Users

Do not under estimate the importance of training when implementing a new BI/ DWH solution. Trained users are 60% more successful in realising the benefits of BI than untrained users. But this training needs to consider specific data analysis techniques as well as how to use the BI tools. In the words of Gartner, "it is more critical to train users on how to analyse the data." Gartner goes on to say "... that focusing only on BI tool training can triple the workload of the IT help desk and result in user disillusionment. A user who is trained on the BI tool but does not know how to use it in the context of his or her BI/DWH environment will not be able to get the analytical results he or she needs...". Hence bespoke user training on your BI system and data is essential.

Careful planning of the training needs and making the best use of the different training mediums now available can overcome this issue. Look for training options such as: Structured classroom (on or off site), web based e-learning (CBT), on the job training & skills transfer, bespoke training around your solution & data.

Technical Overview

Information Portal: This allows users to manage & access reports and other information via a corporate web portal. As users create & demand more reports the ability to easily find, manage & distribute them is becoming more important.

Collaboration: The ability for the Information Portal to support communication between relevant people centred around the information in the portal. This could be discussion threads attached to reports or workflow around strategic goal performance.

Guided Analysis: The system guides users where to look next during data analysis. Taking knowledge from people's heads and placing it in the BI system.

Security: Access to system functionality and data (both rows and columns) can be controlled down to user level and based on your network logon.

Dashboards & Scorecards:

Providing management with a high level, graphical view of their business performance (KPIs) with easy drill down to the underlying operational detail.

Ad-hoc Reporting and Data Analysis: End users can easily extract data, analyse it (slice, dice & drill) and formally present it in reports & distribute them.

Formatted/ Standard Reports: Pre-defined, pixel perfect, often complex reports created by IT. The power of end user reporting tools and data warehousing is now making this type of report writing less technical and more business focussed.

Tight MS Office integration: More users depend on MS Office software, therefore the BI tool needs to seamlessly link into these tools.

Write Back: The BI portal should provide access to write back to the database to maintain: reference data, targets, forecasts, workflow.

Business Modelling/ Alerting: around centrally maintained data with pre-defined, end user maintained, business rules.

Real Time: As the source data changes it is instantly passed through to the user. Often via message queues.

Near Real Time: Source data changes are batched up and sent through on a short time period, say every few minutes - this requires special ETL techniques.

Batch Processing: Source Data is captured in bulk, say overnight, whilst the BI system is offline.

Relational Database Vs OLAP (cubes, slice & dice, pivot)

This is a complex argument, but put simply most things performed in an OLAP cube can be achieved in the relational world but may be slower both to execute and develop. As a rule of thumb, if you already work in a relational database environment, OLAP should only be necessary where analysis performance is an issue or you require specialist functionality, such as budgeting, forecasting or 'what if' modelling. The leading BI tools seamlessly provide access to data in either relational or OLAP form, making this primarily a technology decision rather than a business one.

Top Down or Bottom Up Approach?

The top down approach focuses on strategic goals and the business processes and organisational structure to support them. This may produce the ideal company processes but existing systems are unlikely to support them or provide the data necessary to measure them. This can lead to a strategy that is never adopted because there is no physical delivery and strategic goals cannot be measured.

The bottom up approach takes the existing systems and data and presents it to the business for them to measure & analyse. This may not produce the best strategic information due to the limited data available and data quality.

We recommend a compromise of both approaches: Build the pragmatic bottom up solution as a means to get accurate measures of the business and a better understanding of current processes, whilst performing a top down analysis to understand what the business needs strategically. The gap analysis of what can be achieved today and what is desired strategically will then provide the future direction for the solution and if the solution has been designed with change in mind, this should be relatively straight forward, building upon the system foundations already in place.

Advanced Business Intelligence

The following describes some advanced BI requirements that some organisations may want to consider: Delivering an integrated BPM solution which has business rules and workflow built in allowing the system to quickly guide the decision maker to the relevant information.

Collaboration and Guided Analysis to help manage the action required as a result of the information obtained.

More user friendly Data Mining and Predictive Analytics, where the system finds correlations between un-related data sets in order to find the 'golden nugget' of information.

More integration of BI information into the Front Office Systems e.g. a gold rated customer gets VIP treatment when they call in, data profiling to suggest this customer may churn, hence offer them an incentive to stay.

Increased usage of Real Time data.

End to end Data Lineage automatically captured by the tools. Better metadata management of the systems will mean that users can easily see where the data came from and what transformations it has undergone, improving the trust in the data & reports. Systems will also be self documenting providing users with more help information and simplifying ongoing maintenance.

Integrated, real time Data Quality Management as a means to measure accuracy of operational process performance. This would provide cross system validation, and verify business process performance by monitoring data accuracy, leading to better and more dynamic process modelling, business process re-engineering and hence efficiency gains.

Packaged Analytical Applications like finance systems in the 80's and packaged ERP (Enterprise Requirement Planning) in the 90's. Packaged BI may become the standard for this decade. Why build your own data warehouse and suite of reports and dashboards from scratch when your business is similar to many others? Buy packaged elements and use rapid deployment templates and tools to configure them to meet your precise needs. This rapid deployment capability then supports you as your business evolves.



BI for the masses:
As information becomes more critical to manage operational efficiencies, more people need access to that information. Now the BI tools can technically and cost effectively provide more people with access to information, BI for the masses is now reality and can provide significant improvement to a business. The increased presence of Microsoft in the BI space will also increase usage of BI and make it more attractive. BusinessObjects' acquisition of Crystal and recent release of XI will also extend BI to more people, in and outside the organisation - now everyone can be given secure access to information!

Conclusion

The potential benefits from a BI/DWH implementation are huge but far too many companies fail to realise these through: lack of experience, poor design, poor selection and use of tools, poor management of data quality, poor or no project management, limited understanding of the importance of metadata, no realisation that if it is successful it will inevitably evolve and grow, limited awareness of the importance of training..... with all these areas to consider using a specialist consultancy such as IT Performs makes considerable sense.






Profitability - The Primary Business Objective


Profitability: Isn't that what you're in business for?

Businesses that don't make profits don't stay in business long.

How can you improve your bottom line?

The Purpose of Business

It doesn't matter what business you're in: Retail, manufacturing, service, resale, wholesale, etc. You must make $$$$.

The purpose of business is two-fold: Growth and Profitability. Every business wants and needs to make a profit and most, if not all, want to grow. If someone were to ask you "what is the purpose of business?" would you say Growth and Profitability? Let's hope so.

The Organizational Mission

Of course the business purpose, common to all business enterprises, is to grow and prosper. But the purpose should not be confused with the Mission. It is important to make some distinctions. Although the Mission is sometimes referred to as a "Statement of Purpose," in reality it is more a description of "how" you're going to make money.

The Mission is a broad statement which generally refers to the type of business, the products and or services produced, and frequently some indication of quality (e.g., the "best" auto parts supplier in the West). And, the Mission may identify the more specific aspects of the particular firm. Its basic intent is to define why the organization exists, what it hopes to achieve, and perhaps values, essential nature, etc. However, the business has an overriding purpose of making money and growing. Of course it is difficult to rally employees around the profit motive. If you were to say "we're here to make money," instead of "to produce the best tires in America," or "provide top quality healthcare to our patients," it would be inconsistent with a favorable image.

Making Money

Money is the lifeblood of the company. It is essential to survival, growth and well-being.

Businesses make money by selling products and/ or services. Production, quality, customer service, marketing, etc., all have elements of cost and potential savings or profit improvement. The formula is simple: sell more products or services and you have more income. That does not necessarily mean that you make more profit. So the equation must be expanded to include the cost(s) of doing business. Income minus expenses = profit. Management must strategize, and position itself to successfully compete in the marketplace.

Some Considerations

Here are some considerations, or "rules of thumb" to ensure, promote and maintain profitability:

--Keep sales high. (marketing, customer service, production -the 5 P's: Product, Price, Placement, Promotion, People)

--Keep costs low (cost containment, cost reduction, waste reduction, employee involvement).

--Maintain and increase your customer base (customer care, reliability, marketing)

--Protect and enhance your reputation. (dependability, reliability, fair-dealing)

--Be competitive (competitive pricing, product differentiation, state-of-the-art products)

--Consistently improve your products/services (quality assurance, quality control, innovation, benchmarking)

--Increase employee productivity (performance standards, measurement, incentives, efficiency and quality control)

Finally

You may think you already know all of this. And, hopefully you do. But a good refresher is always useful, and it is easy to fall into bad practices. The importance of being cognizant of, and attentive to, your basic business purpose will pay PROFIT dividends (perhaps in more way than one!).






Friday, October 29, 2010

Flex 4 Cookbook: Real-world recipes for developing Rich Internet Applications (Oreilly Cookbooks)

Flex 4 Cookbook: Real-world recipes for developing Rich Internet Applications (Oreilly Cookbooks)

With this collection of proven recipes, you have the ideal problem-solving guide for developing interactive Rich Internet Applications on the Adobe Flash Platform. You'll find answers to hundreds of common problems you may encounter when using Adobe Flex, Flex 4 Framework, or Flash Builder, Adobe's GUI-based development tool.

Flex 4 Cookbook has hands-on recipes for everything from Flex basics to solutions for working with visual components and data access, as well as tips on application development, unit testing, and Adobe AIR. Each recipe provides an explanation of how and why it works, and includes sample code that you can use immediately. You'll get results fast, whether you're a committed Flex developer or still evaluating the technology. It's a great way to jumpstart your next web application.

Topics include:

  • Using Spark Component
  • Text Layout Framework
  • Groups and Layout
  • Spark List and ItemRenderer
  • Images, bitmaps, videos, and sounds
  • CSS, styling, and skinning
  • States and Effects
  • Working with Collections
  • Using DataBinding
  • Validation, formatting, and regular expressions
  • Using Charts
  • Services and Data Access
  • Using RSLs and Modules
  • Working with Adobe AIR 2.0

Price: $49.99


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Thursday, October 28, 2010

SAP to release industry-specific Business Objects applications - Search SAP

Running a hospital is different from running a jeans company. Different operations, different business analytics.

That’s the thinking behind SAP’s announcement Tuesday that it’s adding 10 industry-specific Business Objects applications that SAP says can be deployed in a fraction of the time needed for the traditional Business Objects tools and accessed on mobile devices.

“We’re not only making companies more agile,” said SAP co-CEO Bill McDermott, who started the event demonstrating how applications can be run on an iPad. “We’re changing the behavior of the way companies work.”

SAP contends that business and other organizations can deploy these applications in as little as eight weeks because many of the factors that are specific to that industry have already been factored in, thereby reducing the time needed for customization.

“They’re feeding into a solutions-based approach to BI, rather than being tools focused,” said John Hagerty, analyst with Stamford, Conn.-based Gartner Inc.

The applications can deliver 70% to 80% of what a business needs, right out of the box, according to Keith Costello, executive vice president for business analytics at SAP.

SAP officials stressed they’ve done that by “co-innovating” the products, collaborating with the kinds of companies that would use them.

To emphasize the point, SAP included on stage a handful of executives from those businesses the software maker says it’s worked alongside to create the new applications. ?

Tom Peck, CIO of Levi Strauss & Co., said he’d rather implement something that’s already been thought out with the input of other companies in the same industry. Not only that, Peck said he favored smaller products like the new Business Objects applications, instead of more unwieldy, monolithic solutions that boards tend to hate anyway.

“I’m not a big fan of buying capabilities in big chunks,” he said.

Peck added that the new applications meet today’s need to access business analytics on mobile devices. “We need it on the hip,” he said.

Mark Smith, an analyst from Ventena Consulting in Pleasanton, Calif., wondered before the press event how much customization the applications would need.

He was pleased by what he saw. “They’re fairly narrow,” he said afterward.

Still, Smith and others watching the event wondered why SAP chose to invite only the CIOs from its “co-innovators” when it might have been a good idea to include those that oversaw manufacturing or sales – or others who deal firsthand with business intelligence within those organizations.

Analyst Howard Dresner was less kind, echoing the familiar complaint that SAP put on a good show but provided too few specifics.

“It was high level, abstract stuff,” Dresner said in an email after the event. “It was nice to have marquee customers there, but no ‘lessons learned’ were shared.”

The new Business Objects applications, which SAP contends will work with either structured or unstructured data from any SAP or non-SAP system, include:

????????? Planning and Consolidation for Healthcare

????????? Trade Promotion Effectiveness

????????? Enterprise Risk Reporting for Banking

????????? Readiness Assessment for Defense & Security

????????? On-Shelf Availability Analysis

????????? Planning and Consolidation for Banking

????????? Quality Management for Healthcare

????????? Sales Analysis for Retail

????????? Customer Analysis and Retention for Telecommunications

????????? Planning and Consolidation for Public Sector

According to Costello, the applications are available now and range from $3,000 to $9,000, depending on the specific application. Enhancements to the current applications will be made available on a yearly basis, he added. Additional applications in those same industries are also planned.

Although SAP is making the application available on an “on-premise” basis, the company plans to make it available on a cloud basis in the future.

Maple Business Card Holder

Maple Business Card Holder

With this collection of proven recipes, you have the ideal problem-solving guide for developing interactive Rich Internet Applications on the Adobe Flash Platform. You'll find answers to hundreds of common problems you may encounter when using Adobe Flex, Flex 4 Framework, or Flash Builder, Adobe's GUI-based development tool.

Flex 4 Cookbook has hands-on recipes for everything from Flex basics to solutions for working with visual components and data access, as well as tips on application development, unit testing, and Adobe AIR. Each recipe provides an explanation of how and why it works, and includes sample code that you can use immediately. You'll get results fast, whether you're a committed Flex developer or still evaluating the technology. It's a great way to jumpstart your next web application.

Topics include:

  • Using Spark Component
  • Text Layout Framework
  • Groups and Layout
  • Spark List and ItemRenderer
  • Images, bitmaps, videos, and sounds
  • CSS, styling, and skinning
  • States and Effects
  • Working with Collections
  • Using DataBinding
  • Validation, formatting, and regular expressions
  • Using Charts
  • Services and Data Access
  • Using RSLs and Modules
  • Working with Adobe AIR 2.0

Price:


Click here to buy from Amazon

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Clearly Understanding the Business Objectives


Have you created a formal business plan for the business, which clearly sets out the sales targets and profits that your business is going to achieve? I’m not talking about one of those business plans that people often create when starting a business, which is put on the shelf never to see the light of day again. I’m talking about a useful working document, which you have created to clearly map out where the business is going. One that shows the growth of the business over the coming months and years ahead and one that paints a picture of exactly how the business should look in terms of turnover, staffing numbers, premises, sales per sales person, and so on.

As it’s only by clearly laying out a business plan to this level of detail that you’ll be able to establish how far along your journey you are at any stage, and whether in fact you are on course or not.

If you are serious about business growth, and are looking for some guidance and support in putting your ideas into practice then maybe a visit to www.achievebusinessgrowth.com [http://www.achievebusinessgrowth.com] might be just what you are looking for. This site is designed to help you to achieve More Profit – More Easily - More Often!

With your business, you need to put a clear stake in the ground of where you are today, as well as where you want to get to. Only once you have these points clearly fixed in your mind, and in the mind of your team are you able to create a workable and sustanable business growth strategy.






Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Web Design Business Startup Kit

Our Web Design Business Startup Kit Provides Web Designers With A Complete Turnkey Business In a Box Solution. It Includes a Comprehensive 198 ebook Along With Over 67 Ready To Use Contracts & Document Templates. The Web Industry Is Absolutely Booming.


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Crystal Reports 11 Pro Starter Pack

Crystal Reports 11 Pro Starter Pack
  • Marketing Information:

    Create reports from a large variety of personal and enterprise data sources. Professional Edition is ideal for report designers, database administrators, IT professionals, and power users. Crystal Reports XI Professional Edition provides native, ODBC, OLE DB and JDBC connectivity to relational, OLAP, XML, legacy, and enterprise data.


  • Product Information
  • Software Sub Type: Database Reporting
  • Software Name: Crystal Reports XI Professional Edition Starter Pack - Complete Product
  • Features & Benefits:

    Data access:

  • Access almost any kind of data with more than 35 data drivers and tight control over database connectivity
  • Formatting and design:

  • Design professional-looking, interactive reports using features like the visual report designer and dynamic prompts
  • Report viewing and interaction:

  • Make it easy for people in your organization to view and work with their reports by customizing them to match their needs
  • Security, support, and maintenance:

  • Learn how Crystal Reports can work within your existing security infrastructure and with other Business Objects tools
  • Platform Support: PC

  • License Information
  • License Type: Complete Product
  • License Pricing: Standard
  • License Quantity: 1 User
  • Price: $612.99


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    Monday, October 25, 2010

    Make a Strategic Plan for your business in 7 easy Steps

    Easy follow 7 Step Strategic Plan and Free eBooks to power Your Business to Greater Profit and Personal Freedom. Also Discover the Key skills for Your Business Success - 70+ pages to help make you and your business fly high - includes Resale Rights.


    Check it out!

    Sunday, October 24, 2010

    Crystal Reports 8.5 Professional

    Crystal Reports 8.5 ProfessionalDeliver rich, interactive content from virtually any data source, publish it to the Web, and integrate it within applications with Crystal Reports. The professional edition of Crystal Reports allows you to design interactive, actionable content and deliver it to users across the enterprise. Generate report types like subreports, conditional, summary, cross-tabs, form, drill down, OLAP, top N, multiple details, and mailing labels. Build hyperlinks, charting, mapping, parameters, alerts, add-ins for Excel and Access, sorting, running totals, grouping, top N, and bottom N.

    Crystal Reports Pro includes Crystal Enterprise Standard, which offers report viewers (including DHTML, ActiveX, and Java), a Web-based report management system, a Web server with licensing for five concurrent users, customizable Web desktop, and report delivery regardless of location or platform. Get driver and support for more than 30 SQL-, ODBC-, OLE DB- and PC-based data sources, including XML. Crystal Reports seamlessly integrates with Crystal Enterprise, the powerful, next-generation enterprise reporting solution from Crystal Decisions.

    Price:


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    Everyday Object Lessons

    36 object lessons using everyday items for use in children's ministry to present Christian teaching. Also tips on using ordinary objects to teach extraordinary lessons. Great gospel applications also.


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    Saturday, October 23, 2010

    Printed Mouse Mats Help In Achieving Business Objectives


    Maintaining business relations with your clients and business associates can take you to success easily. It helps you to grow and expand your business and achieve your business objectives easily. Whether your business objective is related to growth or expansion, or aims at profit maximisation, the printed mouse mats can help you to achieve those aims easily and efficiently.

    Use them to advertise your brand and reach out to the target consumers. This would help them to know about the brand and the products or services provided by it. This in turn would attract them to your brand and help you to get good profits. The free promotional mouse mats are one of the most popular promotional items as they are economical and are one of the most practical promotional gifts. Almost everyone owns a personal computer these days and thus, these promotional mouse mats are very useful to everyone.

    They can be a part of your advertisement campaigns and can be used as promotional giveaways so that the target consumers are impressed with it. This helps in creating brand awareness also and promotes your brand efficiently. They are quite good for brand retention and remind everyone about your organisation constantly. The brand name, business logo and additional details are given on these printed mouse mats which are visible to all and help in advertising it. They can easily help you to build a good brand reputation and achieve your business objectives.

    The promotional mouse mats are the best promotional products that can be used as corporate gifts. You can use these printed mouse mats as special gifts for your clients and business associates. Gift these promotional products on special events and occasions which would please the receivers and get you profitable business deals in the future. These promotional items can help you to achieve your business objectives easily and require very little investment. These promotional gifts can be gifted to your employees also. Whenever they would deal with clients, the client would see these promotional mouse mats and would get a good impression. Such personalised promotional products make your company appear more professional and can build the goodwill of the same.

    Use printed mouse mats to suit your brand image. It should remind the users of your brand and then only it would help you to attain your business objectives. The quality of the promotional mouse mats also play a major role in influencing the consumers and in building the goodwill of the company.

    Online you can find a massive collection of them that can help you to attain your business objectives efficiently. Log on to the website to select any stylish and attractive mouse mats that can be used as promotional gifts and can be given to the target clients and consumers.






    Friday, October 22, 2010

    Business with Turkey

    For companies and individuals who need to do business with Turkey


    Check it out!

    Wednesday, October 20, 2010

    Aligning Channel Program Goals to Overall Business Objectives


    Like a good spring cleaning, an economic downturn presents an excellent opportunity to thoroughly reassess and, if necessary, retool existing channel programs. But be careful! Unlike sorting through items in your basement or garage and placing them in junk or "keeper" piles, judgment calls regarding channel programs and partnerships are more complex than the question "Should I Stay or Should I Go?" posed by The Clash in a popular 1980s tune.

    Underperforming distribution channels are a major source of frustration, even though lagging sales during difficult times are slightly easier to understand (but not accept). Before grading your partners' performance, and certainly before you recklessly wield your red pen signifying their failure, take a deep breath and ask yourself the first of many questions: "What was I hoping to achieve through this channel program?"

    While the answer(s) may be highly predictable,-such as, attaining steady incremental revenue, increasing geographic coverage, reaching new groups of end users, or simply achieving greater market coverage without hiring additional internal staff-these objective are essential elements to an effective assessment and possible retooling of your channel program.

    Don't stop there. You may need to convene an all-inclusive meeting of the minds, encouraging open and frank discussion among the top executives and sales personnel from your own company and your channel partners. Just as importantly, you must poll a full spectrum of end-users, from your best, longest standing customers to fledgling buyers who require nurturing to grow.

    Only after everybody weighs in will you be able to accurately and objectively assess original and existing business objectives and determine whether your channel program needs to change-and how. In addition to synergies with your overall business objectives, ask yourself and your partners the following:

    o What is the justification for your existing channel program? Has it needlessly deviated from its original intention or goal? Or have changes in your business or the overall economy dictated change?

    o Are effective yardsticks in place to gauge your program's success? What changes must you make to achieve more meaningful and accurate measurement?

    o Apart from increased product and service sales, what behaviors are you trying to inspire among your channel partners? Are the carrots you provide enticing enough? Or are they snack-sized?

    o Is your product and service suite updated and in demand?

    o Do you have a channel program execution strategy firmly tied to your overall business objectives?

    There's no question your channel program and your partners are the keys to your organization's success. Your encouragement of an open, all-partner dialogue will clear any misconceptions or misunderstandings, providing a level of satisfaction and mutual benefit that far outweigh the temporary good feelings evoked by an uncluttered garage or basement.






    Tuesday, October 19, 2010

    What is a Marketing Strategy and Why Your Business Should Have One


    In this article I will cover off the basics of developing your marketing strategy and how you can regularly check back on it to make sure you are on track.

    Ideally a marketing strategy runs annually but you can start this process at any point in time. Firstly make a realistic set of business objectives based on past performance, budget constraints and competitor analysis. What are you hoping to achieve in the upcoming twelve months. How much can you afford to invest and what resources do you have in place to achieve them.

    The best way to get your staff to buy into your strategy is to involve them in developing it. Have a specific time set aside to brainstorm new ways to market to your customers and bring along customer research to the session. It's really important that you are listening to what your customers are saying as they are your business effectively.

    Once you have your business objectives try and come up with up to five key strategic objectives. These should be measurable, time bound and ultimately focus on your customers or prospects. For example one business objective might be to increase sales by 10%. One strategy could therefore be to focus more energy on a specific niche which you know is profitable. Another might be to launch a new marketing channel to acquire new customers through. At this point you should not be thinking tactically and trying to implement solutions. Try and think more high level than executing campaigns.

    Work through your objectives until you have agreed an overall strategy of how you will achieve them. Bear in mind that this should be a plan to keep you on track so try not to have too many objectives. All your activity going forward should link directly into one of these strategic objectives.

    The next stage will be to build a marketing plan which will link into the marketing strategy. The marketing plan lays down the tactical activity which you will carry out in order to achieve the business objectives and that link into the marketing strategy. For example if you have agreed to launch a new sales channel, you need to document the launch date, the marketing mix and budget. It is beneficial to have an annual marketing plan but you can start this at any point in time.

    Spend time developing your marketing strategy and build a solid document for everyone to refer to. This way everyone knows what you are trying to achieve as a business and how you are going to achieve it. It should ensure that you innovate and stay in line or ahead of your competition rather than being reactive. Present the marketing strategy to all the staff within your business so they know where you are heading and they can buy into it. Make sure everyone has a copy to refer back to through the year.






    Monday, October 18, 2010

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    How Do I Implement Business Intelligence? (Part Two - Get to Know the Kitchen)


    Characterize the Environment

    The following list outlines the items and issues to cover in attempting to characterize the environment within which your challenge is encapsulated.


    Characterize the Environment
    Organizational Scope
    Project Sponsorship
    Business Context
    Business Objectives
    Current Data Landscape
    Solution Objectives
    Technical Environment
    Resources
    Funding

    The topics outlined above may not all be necessary for some smaller organizations and in any case, it is not recommended to take a heavy approach to most of these items. All that is required is that they be given some thought and be documented if there is any useful information to be captured.

    Organizational Scope

    It may be that you are launching a BI initiative that is intended to eventually serve the entire organization. Titles like 'Enterprise Data Warehouse' (EDW) and 'Corporate Information Factory' (CIF) have frequently been given to such initiatives.

    On the other hand, it may be that only a subset of your organization is the intended user and customer of the product. A division of your company, or possibly even a single department.

    An all-too-common practice has been the creation of Data Marts an a virtually ad-hoc basis, resulting in an unknown and uncontrolled proliferation of such entities. It was recently published that Hewlett Packard launched an offensive against such a proliferation when it was discovered that there were more than 750 Data Marts in existence across the organization. This is when Business Intelligence could start to lose its true intended purpose.

    Capturing the details of the organizational scope of your BI Initiative will serve to define the limits of the project.

    Project Sponsorship

    Any project needs to have its sponsors well defined. It is a good strategy to encourage a vibrant relationship between the sponsors and the delivery team. Record who they are and work on that relationship. If you are the sponsor then be prepared to maintain close contact and involvement with the person or team implementing your BI solution.

    Business Context

    Within the organization that is sponsoring or requesting a BI facility, there may any number of business processes, databases, application systems and sub-organizations. Take time to make a record of those for which the solution is to relevant, either as data sources or expected areas of enhancement.

    Business Objectives

    Why do we need a BI solution? Someone in the organization came to the conclusion that this would be beneficial. Someone is aware that the solution will meet one or more needs. What are those needs? What does that person or group expect to achieve? In what way will their aspirations be met? They must have a reason, or many reasons, perhaps for going ahead. Those reasons will indicate and help crystallize the objectives of the BI Initiative.

    Current Data Landscape

    Now that we have organizational scope, project sponsors, a business context and objectives, we should try to define the data sources that need to be leveraged in order to provide the candidate information from which some intelligent business decisions can be derived.

    At this level it is sufficient to speak of this in terms of databases or applications or functional areas covered by an application.

    Additional information about the data sources should be collected. How easy will it be to learn about the data source? Is it well documented? Are there still people available who developed, maintained or supported the database that can contribute inside knowledge? Is the source 'out-of-bounds'? Can we only obtain data from it under some constraint, such as time, frequency, security policy, etc.?

    Solution Objectives

    The information gathered so far will help direct your efforts and maintain control over scope, cost and delivery aspects of the project. They may not, however, define everything we might be able to learn about the nature of the target solution. It is possible that corporate or IT policy may also impact the size and scope of the project.

    It is possible that technical limitations exist or resource availability limitations exist. There may even be limits on funding that prevent all the business objectives from being pursued all at once.

    Sometimes, it makes sense to extend the scope a little because the effort of visiting one or more data sources just to obtain the requested data me be wasting an opportunity to pull more useful (but not yet requested) data, This is a very important consideration because returning to the same source later is far more expensive than picking up data now that may even be in adjacent columns to that which we have come looking for. This is one area where an experienced Dimensional Modeler is able to point to 'easy gains' that could soon satisfy a growing appetite for analytic data.

    Technical Environment

    It will be much easier to estimate the size of the project if we know something about the challenges it may present. One such challenge is dealing with the issues surrounding the way the data is currently hosted. Is it all in the same kind of database? Is it all in the same location? Are there common standards in place governing naming conventions, data type usage, data structure designs, etc?

    Data is not always sitting in a database, nor is it always easily accessible. Sometimes it is necessary to access data that has already been extracted from its original source and stored somewhere else. It may be necessary to reuse the data feed of such a transfer of data from the destination. This can introduce serious issues of data reliability and stability. if the second destination has itself transformed the data or if the data has been summarized to a higher level of granularity or even stored as a periodic snapshot instead of at an atomic level, there will be issues.

    Resources

    Besides the need for resources on the BI project, there is often the need to call on the help of others outside the project. The lack of such resources, or limitations on their availability can cause problems for the BI Initiative.

    Funding

    Large companies tend to be able to fund large projects. Conversely, small companies cannot. However, outside of this fact, there is a need to consider whether a large project is actually the most effective approach to BI. Many initiatives have come to grief because the challenges involved, compounded by the inherent difficulty of coordinating large scale projects, leading to massive over-runs and wasted time.

    One of the key areas for devastating misjudgments is that in which organizations inexperienced in DW and BI take on projects that are too large and too complex for their relatively inexperienced team.

    Regardless of whether funding is easily obtained or not, it is strongly recommended that some kind of 'pilot project' be initiated first, to gain experience and confidence in dealing with the new technologies involved. Then after an initial smaller success, the team (or individual, as is often the case) can move on to take more territory.

    Key to success is knowing how much to attempt rather than how much to fund.

    Establish a Roadmap

    The mode under which the BI Initiative will be conducted is the most important consideration at the start of the project.

    Historically, most software application development projects followed a phased plan that was essentially serial in nature. Often referred to as 'waterfall model' processes, these were so named because the product of the first phase 'poured' into the second phase, the second into the third and so on, regardless of the name or purpose of each phase.

    Eventually, it became obvious that this approach could be responsible for many of the ills that plagued such projects. The fact that any given phase is dependent entirely on the quality, appropriateness and timeliness of the products of its predecessor meant that any single phase had the potential of setting the limit on the overall project success, of being the weakest link.

    Furthermore, the very act of feeding one phase with the documented results of another could introduce defects due to the misunderstandings, ambiguities, lack of clarity, etc., resulting from this form of communication. Surprisingly, the creators of one phase's deliverable were often not available for consultation with the recipients of their efforts in the next phase. Many weaker processes did not mandate a review (or quality gate) at the end of each phase.

    Yet another issue with Waterfall models is that the project is not finished until all phases are complete. As this could extend into years, it would be necessary to 'freeze' requirements until the project was complete. Business changes would have to go unattended to because interrupting this process was too disruptive to be tolerated. Also, any error in delivering against the original requirements may not come to light until the very end of the string of phases, when it is then the most expensive to repair.

    Evolving the Solution

    Avoiding all the above issues is not a trivial task. Splitting the project into 'waves' is sometimes attempted to reduce the work going through the sequence of phases and therefore reducing the time frame of each wave is one, often used approach for very large projects. However, this does not remove the problem-causing imperfections of waterfall models, only 'divides' in order to 'conquer' them.

    The approach that often produces the most successful result is that of 'Iterative' development, or prototyping. The main aim in this method is to work as quickly as possible toward a reduced end-product but one which can still be used, or at least, demonstrated.

    Its advantages are: a quicker end point at which the product can be evaluated; an opportunity to learn from mistakes, misunderstandings or unseen challenges and the availability of a version of the solution that the sponsors can try out to see if their ideas were sound or in need of refinement. Indeed, the all-round learning process afforded by the first iteration is one of the strongest arguments for the approach. This takes us away from the need to 'get everything absolutely correct, at the first and only attempt.

    The virtual impossibility of such an outcome with the waterfall model is certainly what leads to the creation of a 'Phase II' on most projects. Phase II may include new features but it usually includes a lot more in the way of 'rework' of the initial release.

    Establishing a road-map for the project involves the decision to use the appropriate style of process and determining what to deliver by way of a prototype.

    Dividing the project into two or more iterations offers many advantages if that option is available.

    ..to be continued in Part Three of 'How do I Implement Business Intelligence?'.