7. Examples of business intelligence
Business intelligence is no longer the preserve of data scientists or business analysts. By summarizing, simplifying and visualizing consolidated business data, BI provides ready access to business insights for subject matter experts from all business functions. Here are some common business intelligence use cases.
Marketing and customer experience
Marketing teams orchestrating omnichannel campaigns can use business intelligence solutions to track and visualize customer engagement success metrics across each channel (such as views, clicks, engagements, purchases, survey completions or form fills).
This not only enables marketers to compare return on advertising spend (ROAS) between different channels but also between media suppliers in the same space – such as two rival programmatic demand-side platforms (DSPs) – and even between different creative campaigns. This insight is used to rechannel budgets for current and future campaigns. It also provides greater understanding of customer media and message preferences, helping marketers create more personalized, tailored customer experiences.
Sales
Sales professionals commonly use BI dashboards to access insights on both business-wide KPIs and granular sales performance metrics (by customer or sales personnel). At the macro end of the scale, this might include tracking and analysis of profitability, customer lifetime values or discounts, revenues versus targets, or visualization of the overall sales pipeline. A real BI superpower, however, is to be able to drill down into the company figures to monitor sales performance KPIs per region, team or individual and, where necessary, revise activity targets and training provision.
Supply chain and logistics
BI provides significant insights for both supply chain businesses and supply chain management functions. For logistics businesses (such as air, road, rail or sea freight companies) business intelligence allows close monitoring of customer volumes and profitability metrics – both individually and collectively. These can be segmented and filtered by key data points such as customer type, cargo type or geographical bias.
These insights identify, for example, customer volumes versus contracted commitments, key drivers of profitability, and identification of ideal customer profile sub-segments. For logistics functions, BI reporting also enables close monitoring of stock or raw material inventory levels, supplier compliance metrics, returns volumes and vehicle utilization metrics.
Finance
Business intelligence can be a powerful tool for businesses to monitor – and gain deeper insights into – the financial health of their organization. Finance teams can use interactive dashboards and visualizations to provide a dynamically updated, instant overview of KPIs like revenue, costs, profitability, days sales outstanding (DSO), days payable outstanding (DPO), revenue, and cash flow, in real-time.
Any of these metrics can be sliced and diced within the dashboard by the performance metrics from all business functions. In this way business leaders can see some of the operational drivers of financial performance – for example the degree to which on-time in full deliveries impact repeat customer business.
IT
While typically responsible for the smooth operation of business intelligence software, IT professionals are also among its beneficiaries. This can include visualization of support ticket data to identify consistent infrastructure performance issues or monitoring network traffic patterns and capacity to minimize downtime and spot anomalies. BI also enables IT professionals to identify over-utilized or under-utilized assets and re-allocate resources like servers, storage, and cloud instances more effectively, based on demand patterns.