Description
BI is unlike any other enterprise soft ware in that it exhibits a paradox: Th e more BI requirements you implement, the more new ones pile up. Relying too heavily on IT-centric BI support models is not sustainable.
Forrester Research, Inc., 60 Acorn Park Drive, Cambridge, MA 02140 USA
Tel: +1 617.613.6000 | Fax: +1 617.613.5000 | www.forrester.com
The Forrester Wave™: Self-Service
Business Intelligence Platforms, Q2 2012
by Boris Evelson, June 12, 2012 | Updated: July 11, 2012
FOR: Application
Development
& Delivery
Professionals
KEY TAKEAWAYS
IT Can No Longer Support The Majority Of BI Requirements
BI is unlike any other enterprise sofware in that it exhibits a paradox: Te more BI
requirements you implement, the more new ones pile up. Relying too heavily on
IT-centric BI support models is not sustainable.
Self-Service BI Features Are Key To Empowering Business Users
Self-service BI capabilities go well beyond user friendly or intuitive interfaces.
Forrester recommends examining all the product features evaluated in this report
to ensure a well-rounded self-service capability.
Your Enterprise BI Platform May Already Provide Most Of The Self-
Service Features
Before plunging into full-blown evaluations of separate BI tools for self-service,
leverage fndings in this report to make sure that your current enterprise BI
platform doesn’t already have many of the self-service features you need.
© 2012, Forrester Research, Inc. All rights reserved. Unauthorized reproduction is strictly prohibited. Information is based on best available
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FOR APPLICATION DEVELOPMENT & DELIVERY PROFESSIONALS
WHY READ THIS REPORT
In Forrester’s 31-criteria evaluation of self-service business intelligence (BI) vendors, we found that IBM,
Microsof, SAP, SAS, Tibco Sofware, and MicroStrategy led the pack due to the breadth of their self-
service BI functionality oferings. Information Builders, Tableau Sofware, Actuate, Oracle, QlikTech,
and Panorama Sofware were close on the heels of the Leaders, also ofering solid functionality to enable
business users to self-serve most of their BI requirements.
Table Of Contents
BI Support Moves Beyond Just IT-Centric
Models
Business-Owned Self-Service BI Applications
Are Crucial To BI Success
Self-Service Business Intelligence Platforms
Evaluation Overview
Evaluation Criteria: Current Offering, Strategy,
And Market Presence
Evaluated Vendors Have Rich Self-Service BI
Functionality And Strong Market Presence
Lack Of BI Platform Features Is No Longer
An Excuse For IT Overload
Vendor Pro?les
Leaders Demonstrate Signifcant Capabilities
And Good Balance
Strong Performers Offer Highly Competitive
Options
Supplemental Material
Notes & Resources
Forrester conducted demo-based
evaluations in Q4 2011 and interviewed 11
vendor companies: Actuate, IBM, Information
Builders, Microsoft, MicroStrategy,
Panorama Software, QlikTech, SAP, SAS,
Tableau Software, and Tibco Software.
Related Research Documents
Trends 2011 And Beyond: Business
Intelligence
March 31, 2011
Empower BI HEROes With Self-Service Tools
October 26, 2010
The Forrester Wave™: Enterprise Business
Intelligence Platforms, Q4 2010
October 20, 2010
The Forrester Wave™: Self-Service Business
Intelligence Platforms, Q2 2012
Six Leaders And Six Strong Performers Compete For A Share Of The
End User BI Market
by Boris Evelson
with Stephen Powers, Holger Kisker, Ph.D., Noel Yuhanna, and Shannon Coyne
2
5
10
13
8
JUNE 12, 2012 | UPDATED: JULY 11, 2012
FOR APPLICATION DEVELOPMENT & DELIVERY PROFESSIONALS
The Forrester Wave™: Self-Service Business Intelligence Platforms, Q2 2012 2
© 2012, Forrester Research, Inc. Reproduction Prohibited June 12, 2012 | Updated: July 11, 2012
BI SUPPORT MOVES BEYOND JUST IT-CENTRIC MODELS
Traditional BI approaches and technologies — even when using the latest technology, best practices,
and architectures — almost always have a serious side efect: a constant backlog of BI requests.
Enterprises where IT addresses more than 20% of BI requirements will continue to see the snowball
efect of an ever-growing BI requests backlog. Why? Because:
? BI requirements change faster than an IT-centric support model can keep up. Even with
by-the-book BI applications, frms still struggle to turn BI applications on a dime to meet
frequently changing business requirements. Enterprises can expect a life span of at least several
years out of enterprise resource planning (ERP), customer relationship management (CRM),
human resources (HR), and fnancial applications, but a BI application can become outdated
the day it is rolled out. Even within implementation times of just a few weeks, the world may
have changed completely due to a sudden mergers and acquisitions (M&A) event, a new
competitive threat, new management structure, or new regulatory reporting requirements.
? Conventional waterfall SDLC approaches are poorly suited for BI. Te traditional waterfall
methodology for the sofware development life cycle (SDLC) calls for collecting user
requirements, transforming them into specifcations, and then turning these specifcations
over to developers. While this approach is ofen successful for traditional enterprise
application implementations, it won’t work for the majority of BI requirements. Te “build
it, and they will come” model is directly applicable — and recommended — for BI, as only
once an end user sees something she can touch and feel and play around with will the real
requirements materialize. “What are the key requirements that your BI application must
address?” is a typical IT question. “It must address everything, because I don’t know what
kinds of reports I’ll have to produce and what kinds of analysis I’ll have to perform tomorrow,”
is, unfortunately, a typical answer.
? Business and IT do not always see eye to eye on BI applications and projects. In the eyes of
business executives, managers, and individual contributors, nothing is more important than
business requirements. Furthermore, they want their BI business requirements addressed
according to their, not IT’s, schedule so that they can continually address their clients’ needs
and avoid falling behind the competition. IT, on the other hand, is charged with maintaining
law and order and insists on sticking to standard BI tools and following approved sofware
development and project methodologies.
Forrester by no means advocates that frms transfer complex, mission-critical, enterprise wide BI
applications — especially those that carry external exposure or other operational risk — into the
hands of non-IT professionals. However, anecdotal evidence leads us to believe that with the proper
BI application portfolio classifcation, no more than 20% of all BI applications should fall into this
restricted category. We maintain that in an ideal BI environment, 80% of all BI requirements should
be carried out by the business users themselves.
FOR APPLICATION DEVELOPMENT & DELIVERY PROFESSIONALS
The Forrester Wave™: Self-Service Business Intelligence Platforms, Q2 2012 3
© 2012, Forrester Research, Inc. Reproduction Prohibited June 12, 2012 | Updated: July 11, 2012
Business-Owned Self-Service BI Applications Are Crucial To BI Success
But what does it take for a BI tool or application to enable all types of users (casual users, power users,
and executives) to self-serve for new queries, reports, analytics, and dashboards? “Intuitive” and “user
friendly” are subjective terms. A point-and-click and drag-and-drop graphical user interface (GUI)
may be a nirvana of intuitiveness to an information management pro who started his computer career
working with punch cards or green-screen terminals, but to a younger generation of knowledge
workers brought up on search GUI from Google and social media GUI from Facebook, a point-and-
click GUI may not be as obvious or natural. When evaluating BI tools’ business user self-service
capabilities, Forrester recommends considering features and capabilities including:
? Automodeling. Not every business user is an experienced data modeler, so look for the BI
tool to autosuggest a best data model (star schema) based on input data types and content.
Some BI tools can only identify data types, such as dates, numbers, or text, while others can
automatically suggest star schemas with the initial set of facts and dimensions. More-advanced
tools even identify and build hierarchies and automatically geocode attributes such as ZIP
codes, countries, regions, cities, and states.
? Calculated measures. IT developers can’t possibly foresee and prebuild every single measure
and metric into enterprise data warehouses (EDWs) and data marts. So enterprises must ask
these questions: Can the end users add new calculated measures without IT involvement? Are
these calculations mostly simple, as in A+B=C, or do they allow if/then/else conditions and
other full programming scripting logic for a calculation? How many prebuilt algebraic, text,
business, fnancial, and advanced analytical functions are available out of the box to be used in
these calculations?
? Collaboration. No one works in isolation from the rest of the teams in the organization these
days, so look for the BI tool to include user-to-user and user-to-developer collaboration
functionality. What are the tool’s own collaboration capabilities, and what are its capabilities
to integrate with other popular enterprise and social collaboration platforms such as Microsof
SharePoint, IBM Connections, and Novell Teaming?
? Data virtualization and drill anywhere. In today’s world of big data, no one can aford to put
anywhere close to 100% of their enterprise data and information content into a structured
database. Terefore, capabilities to virtually link multiple data sources and drill anywhere
within these sources becomes important, unless one can aford to wait for days, weeks, or
months for these new data sources to be loaded into an EDW.
? Prompt for columns. Creating standardized reports with prompted lists (for values such as
time periods, geographic regions, or business units) reduces the number of canned reports IT
professionals have to produce. Firms should take it to the next level and create a few standard
enterprise report templates with placeholders where a trained business user can place any
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The Forrester Wave™: Self-Service Business Intelligence Platforms, Q2 2012 4
© 2012, Forrester Research, Inc. Reproduction Prohibited June 12, 2012 | Updated: July 11, 2012
appropriate column from the database and runtime. Combined with “drill anywhere,” this can
theoretically reduce the number of canned reports in an enterprise to a handful.
? Search-like GUI. A Google-like GUI achieves several important objectives in the quest for
the ultimate self-service BI tool. First, it requires little to no training; hardly any knowledge
workers in the modern world can’t use a web-based search tool. Tis is a beneft, as every hour
of BI training for a salesperson is an hour away from customers. Second, a point-and-click
GUI assumes that you know exactly what you are looking for, while very ofen you don’t, and
a search-like GUI is especially handy in you-don’t-know-what-you-don’t-know scenarios. Last
but not least, search-like GUI enables faceted navigation, which is ofen the best way to drill
up/down/across hierarchies that are ragged and unbalanced.
? Application sandboxes. What happens when an urgent and critical business need calls for a
completely new BI application today but your IT partners tell you that you are not at the top of
their priority list? Te ability to download and install a new BI tool on your desktop or laptop
computer is one way to handle this. If an urgent business requirement calls for analyzing
terabytes of data, creating a BI sandbox in a cloud with computing resources constrained only
by budget may be the way to go.
? Write back. Creating multiple what-if scenarios based on existing data is a commodity feature
of most BI and online analytical processing (OLAP) tools. As long as one can cut the report
by diferent dimensions, one can analyze multiple cause-and-efect scenarios. But building
what-if scenarios based on new data (creating new budgeting scenarios, for example) requires
“write back” capabilities or updating the underlying database or an OLAP cube in real time.
Firms should understand whether a BI tool can update aggregate or individual values, generate
completely new transactions, or write back new transactions to operational applications as well
as how much or how little custom programming that involves.
? Exploration and discovery. Reporting, analyzing, and slicing and dicing information based on
an existing data model is another commoditized feature of most BI tools. Tis approach is ofen
referred to as prediscovery, as all requirements for future reporting and analysis need to be
prediscovered and built into a data model. But analyzing information based on a new hierarchy
not already built into the data model or based on entities and attributes whose relationships are
not defned in a data model falls within the realm of specialized tools. Tese tools are ofen
based on nonrelational or nondimensional data models (such as an associative index, for
example). Tey are also great at addressing the I-don’t-know-what-I-don’t-know quagmire.
? Migration to production. Last but not least, say you did create a great BI application using all
or most of the features described. Now what? How can you share it with your colleagues, your
team, or the rest of the enterprise? Is it back to the “I have to call IT” game, or does your BI
tool allow you to publish what you created to a shared environment? It shouldn’t be that simple,
FOR APPLICATION DEVELOPMENT & DELIVERY PROFESSIONALS
The Forrester Wave™: Self-Service Business Intelligence Platforms, Q2 2012 5
© 2012, Forrester Research, Inc. Reproduction Prohibited June 12, 2012 | Updated: July 11, 2012
however, because in many cases these self-built BI applications need to be “productionalized”
frst. Te right approach? A publishing action that kicks into motion a “move to production”
workfow or at least automatically notifes the appropriate IT resources.
SELF-SERVICE BUSINESS INTELLIGENCE PLATFORMS EVALUATION OVERVIEW
To assess the state of the self-service business intelligence platforms market and see how the vendors
stack up against each other, Forrester evaluated the strengths and weaknesses of top self-service
business intelligence platform vendors.
Evaluation Criteria: Current Offering, Strategy, And Market Presence
Afer examining past research, user needs assessments, and vendor and expert interviews, we
developed a comprehensive set of evaluation criteria. We evaluated vendors against 31 criteria,
which we grouped into three high-level buckets:
? Current ofering. Tese criteria include the evaluation results of all of the features and
capabilities reviewed in this document. Tey also incorporate the result of a short build-to-
specs test (where each vendor had to build a small BI application based on a Forrester-supplied
data set) as well as the results from a survey of four to 32 customers per vendor.
? Strategy. We reviewed each vendor’s strategy and considered how well each vendor’s plans
for product enhancement position it to meet future customer demands. We also looked at the
fnancial and human resources the company has available to support its strategy as well as each
vendor’s go-to-market pricing and licensing strategy.
? Market presence. To establish a product’s market presence, we combined information about
each vendor’s fnancial performance, installed customer base, and number of employees across
major geographical regions; its partnership ecosystem; as well as its horizontal and vertical
industry applications.
Evaluated Vendors Have Rich Self-Service BI Functionality And Strong Market
Presence
Forrester included 12 vendors in the assessment: Actuate, IBM, Information Builders, Microsof,
MicroStrategy, Oracle, Panorama Sofware, QlikTech, SAP, SAS, Tableau Sofware, and Tibco
Sofware. Oracle was included as a nonparticipating vendor. Each of these vendors has (see Figure 1):
? Self-service BI functionality. We included vendors that could demonstrate the signifcant
majority of self-service features described in this report.
FOR APPLICATION DEVELOPMENT & DELIVERY PROFESSIONALS
The Forrester Wave™: Self-Service Business Intelligence Platforms, Q2 2012 6
© 2012, Forrester Research, Inc. Reproduction Prohibited June 12, 2012 | Updated: July 11, 2012
? Te ability to query databases using SQL and MDX. While other querying technologies such
as XQuery and DMX are available, SQL and MDX are the most widely used technologies in
large enterprises.
? A self-contained, complete, fully functioning BI environment. We focused on BI tools not
technologically or functionally tied or limited to particular functional/horizontal applications
(ERP, supply chain management [SCM], etc.). Tese tools must be self-contained, complete BI
environments or platforms that do not necessarily have to be embedded in other applications.
? Sufcient market presence and interest from Forrester clients. We included vendors with at
least 100 in-production customers present in more than one major geographical region. We
also focused on vendors that Forrester clients frequently mentioned or asked about in the
context of business intelligence (measured as more 25 inquiries over the past 12 months).
FOR APPLICATION DEVELOPMENT & DELIVERY PROFESSIONALS
The Forrester Wave™: Self-Service Business Intelligence Platforms, Q2 2012 7
© 2012, Forrester Research, Inc. Reproduction Prohibited June 12, 2012 | Updated: July 11, 2012
Figure 1 Evaluated Vendors: Product Information And Selection Criteria
Source: Forrester Research, Inc.
Vendor
Actuate
IBM
Information Builders
Microsoft
MicroStrategy
Oracle
Panorama Software
QlikTech
SAP
SAS
Tableau Software
Tibco Software
Product name
ActuateOne
IBM Cognos Insight
WebFOCUS
• Power View
• PowerPivot
• Excel
• SharePoint
MicroStrategy
Oracle Business
Intelligence Suite
Enterprise Edition
Necto
QlikView
SAP BusinessObjects
SAS Enterprise Business
Intelligence
• Tableau Desktop
• Tableau Server
Tibco Spot?re Analytics
Version
11 SP4
v10.1
7.7.03
• SQL Server 2012
• Microsoft O?ce 2010
• SharePoint Server 2010
9.2.1A
11g
11
11
4.0 Feature Pack 3
4.31
7
v4.0
Release date
Q2 2012
February 2012
November 2011
April 2012
September 2011
Q4 2011
May 2011
November 2011
April 2012
July 2011
January 2012
November 2011
Vendor selection criteria
Self-service BI functionality. We included vendors that could demonstrate the signi?cant majority of
self-service features described in this report.
The ability to query databases using SQL and MDX. While other querying technologies such as XQuery
and DMX are available, SQL and MDX are the most widely used technologies in large enterprises.
A self-contained, complete, fully functioning BI environment. We focused on BI tools not
technologically or functionally tied or limited to particular functional/horizontal applications (enterprise
resource planning [ERP], supply chain management [SCM], etc.). These tools must be self-contained,
complete BI environments or platforms that do not necessarily have to be embedded in other
applications.
Su?cient market presence and interest from Forrester clients. We included vendors with at least 100
in-production customers present in more than one major geographical region. We also focused on
vendors that Forrester clients frequently mentioned or asked about in the context of business intelligence
(measured as more 25 inquiries over the past 12 months).
FOR APPLICATION DEVELOPMENT & DELIVERY PROFESSIONALS
The Forrester Wave™: Self-Service Business Intelligence Platforms, Q2 2012 8
© 2012, Forrester Research, Inc. Reproduction Prohibited June 12, 2012 | Updated: July 11, 2012
LACK OF BI PLATFORM FEATURES IS NO LONGER AN EXCUSE FOR IT OVERLOAD
Te evaluation uncovered a market in which (see Figure 2):
? IBM, Microsof, SAP, SAS, Tibco Sofware, and MicroStrategy lead the pack. Tese vendors
demonstrate signifcant capabilities and a good balance of self-service BI features across most
requirements. If a vendor from this list is already an enterprise’s preferred BI platform provider,
there’s ofen little to no reason to look elsewhere for another specialized BI tool.
? Te six Strong Performers ofer competitive options. Vendors in the Leaders category can
by no means sit on their laurels — Strong Performers Information Builders, Tableau Sofware,
Actuate, Oracle, QlikTech, and Panorama Sofware are hot on their heels.
1
In many specialized
situations where certain features have specifc importance, these vendors can even outshine
and outperform the Leaders.
Tis evaluation of the self-service business intelligence platforms market is intended to be a starting
point only. We encourage readers to view detailed product evaluations and adapt the criteria weightings
to ft their individual needs through the Forrester Wave™ Excel-based vendor comparison tool.
Figure 2 Forrester Wave™: Self-Service Business Intelligence Platforms, Q2 ’12
Source: Forrester Research, Inc.
Go online to download
the Forrester Wave tool
for more detailed product
evaluations, feature
comparisons, and
customizable rankings.
Risky
Bets Contenders Leaders
Strong
Performers
Strategy Weak Strong
Current
ofering
Weak
Strong
Market presence
Full vendor participation
Incomplete vendor participation
Tibco Software
Information
Builders
QlikTech
Panorama Software
MicroStrategy
Actuate
Tableau Software
IBM
Microsoft
SAP
SAS
Oracle
FOR APPLICATION DEVELOPMENT & DELIVERY PROFESSIONALS
The Forrester Wave™: Self-Service Business Intelligence Platforms, Q2 2012 9
© 2012, Forrester Research, Inc. Reproduction Prohibited June 12, 2012 | Updated: July 11, 2012
Figure 2 Forrester Wave™: Self-Service Business Intelligence Platforms, Q2 ’12 (Cont.)
Source: Forrester Research, Inc.
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All scores are based on a scale of 0 (weak) to 5 (strong).
FOR APPLICATION DEVELOPMENT & DELIVERY PROFESSIONALS
The Forrester Wave™: Self-Service Business Intelligence Platforms, Q2 2012 10
© 2012, Forrester Research, Inc. Reproduction Prohibited June 12, 2012 | Updated: July 11, 2012
VENDOR PROFILES
Leaders Demonstrate Signi?cant Capabilities And Good Balance
? IBM (Cognos) ofers the broadest and the most balanced set of self-service features. With
the recent rollout of Cognos Insight, IBM is now front and center in the self-service BI market.
Te new product is based on the popular in-memory OLAP TM1 engine. It still lacks some
of the more advanced data exploration and discovery features that are mostly the realm
of associative database management systems (DBMSes). But for most of the business user
self-service functions, it will do a fne job, and it really shines at what-if scenario modeling
and planning use cases where write-back capabilities are essential. Cognos Insight can also
consume and analyze predictive analytics output from SPSS Modeler — an advanced analytics
product from IBM — allowing users to add another dimension of insight to their work.
? Microsof enables business users to look no further than Excel for self-service BI. Microsof
has built on its broad, omnipresent, SQL Server-based BI functionality, which already includes
Integration Services, Reporting Services, and Analysis Services. It now ofers a very respectable
PowerPivot and Power View in-memory data analysis and discovery engine. Tink of this as
Excel on steroids. If you are already using Excel (and who isn’t?) look no further for your self-
service BI platform — especially when you already have it anyway, as most likely it’s already
part of your Enterprise SQL Server and/or SharePoint license. Microsof may only ofer around
80% of advanced BI functionality as compared with other leading vendors, but what it lacks in
features it more than makes up for in cost/benefts ratios.
? SAP BusinessObjects ofers excellent self-service functionality on big data. In-memory is
the name of the self-service BI game these days when one is looking for answers at the speed
of thought. Most in-memory DBMS engines, however, have practical limitations of analyzing
no more than a few hundred GBs at a time. To address this limitation, SAP now ofers a highly
diferentiated combination of BusinessObjects Explorer with its top exploration and discovery
capabilities and the SAP HANA in-memory appliance. Today’s largest production in-memory
model is approximately 7 to 8 TBs compressed to approximately 1 TB, and SAP has tested its
ofering in its labs to scale up to approximately 80 to 100 TBs compressed to approximately 16
to 20 TBs. Beyond self-service, SAP still needs to tighten its product-to-product integration to
close several integration gaps in its vast BI product portfolio, for example, its need for a more
common UI and improved reusability of components.
? SAS ofers one of the top self-service BI choices for power users. Even though SAS has a
broad BI platform that supports most BI use cases, it is mostly known for its advanced analytics.
If you are already a user of SAS BI, look no further than the self-service advanced analytics
features of Enterprise Guide. SAS’s new Visual Analytics product also empowers users with
visual self-service for big data exploration techniques and approachable analytics. SAS may not
be going afer the BI platform market as forcefully as the other leading vendors — Forrester sees
SAS more ofen in advanced analytics deals — but it defnitely has all the tools and components.
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© 2012, Forrester Research, Inc. Reproduction Prohibited June 12, 2012 | Updated: July 11, 2012
? Tibco Spotfre shines with its highly visual self-service, in-memory engine. Tibco Spotfre
received the highest current ofering score in the evaluation based on its self-service BI
features. Tese features include a highly graphical, associative, in-memory engine that allows
for intuitive data discovery and exploration as well as a free-for-a-year Tibco Silver Spotfre
cloud ofering. Unlike other vendors with broad BI platform oferings, Tibco Spotfre should
not be viewed as a direct competitor in this space (one would not use Spotfre to create pixel-
perfect complex reports) but rather as complementary technology to those BI platforms that
lack leading discovery and exploration capabilities.
? MicroStrategy ofers self-service BI on an unlimited number of data sources. For most
organizations, a neatly modeled EDW with all the enterprise’s data already loaded and ready
is not reality, so the ability to self-serve one’s BI needs across multiple heterogeneous data
sources is a top requirement. Tis is where MicroStrategy shines with the multisourcing
capability of its battle-proven ROLAP engine. ROLAP engine has an additional beneft as
well — many Forrester clients cite lower long-term cost of BI ownership due to a reduction
in the number of cubes or reports they have to build. Furthermore, MicroStrategy’s Visual
Insight tool enables businesspeople to visually explore data and generate insights, whether with
enterprise data or a simple import of a local fle on the user’s desktop. ROLAP engine, however,
carries a price: Te initial setup required to take advantage of all of its powerful features can be
complex and time consuming.
Strong Performers Offer Highly Competitive Options
? Information Builders delivers self-service BI functionality based on its robust BI platform.
While Information Builders is mostly known for its large-scale BI deployments — experience
and expertise that came from its mainframe roots — WebFOCUS also ofers highly competitive
BI functionality for business users. Tese capabilities include intuitive InfoAssist query builder
and highly interactive Active Reports. Tere’s also a hidden gem inside WebFOCUS: the Visual
Discovery product, which ofers a respectable in-memory data exploration and discovery
alternative to oferings from other, well-known in-memory BI vendors. While this may not
come up or be an issue in most self-service scenarios, under the covers, WebFOCUS is based on
the FOCUS fourth-generation programming language. In extreme situations — and
Information Builders addresses these as they come up — some advanced routines may still need
to be tweaked and optimized using FOCUS programming.
? Tableau Sofware continues to set the standards for self-service advanced data
visualization. Self-service and intuitive data visualizations go hand in hand, and Tableau
has been the vanguard of advanced data visualization for years. Late last year, Tableau closed
a functionality gap with the introduction of an in-memory engine for data discovery and
exploration. Te new capability gives two important options for business users: the ability to
load the entire data set into memory and perform highly responsive data exploration or, if the
data set is too big, leave data where it is — in a relational or multidimensional DBMS — and
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© 2012, Forrester Research, Inc. Reproduction Prohibited June 12, 2012 | Updated: July 11, 2012
analyze it with Tableau’s patented and intuitive VisualSQL. Unlike other vendors with broad
BI platform oferings, Tableau should not be viewed as a direct competitor in this space (one
would not use Tableau to create pixel-perfect complex reports) but rather as complementary
technology to those BI platforms that lack advanced data visualization capabilities.
? Actuate ofers one of the top open source self-service BI platforms. Conventionally known
for its highly scalable mass-report-distribution and complex-report-writer development
platform, Actuate’s open source BIRT engine has the critical mass of business-user-friendly
features required to stand its ground as a respectable self-service BI platform. While
traditionally not known for analytics, Actuate ofers new features including in-memory data
objects for OLAP-like analysis as well as some data exploration and discovery. Afcionados of
open source can also use BIRT onDemand for instant provisioning of a BI sandbox in the cloud.
? Oracle persistently and successfully closes gaps in its self-service BI portfolio. While Oracle
BI Server (an OBIEE component) continues to be a leading, enterprise-grade ROLAP engine
with heterogeneous data sourcing capability, Oracle Business Intelligence Enterprise Edition
(OBIEE) also successfully addresses many other self-service BI needs. Oracle’s recent
introduction of Exalytics “engineered system” closes one of the gaps in Oracle’s BI portfolio
with in-memory data analysis capabilities with a highly visual interface. Oracle’s recent
acquisition of Endeca (not evaluated in the current Forrester Wave), with its inverted-index
DBMS and highly intuitive faceted navigation for data discovery and exploration, has the
potential to signifcantly boost Oracle’s overall position in the self-service BI market.
? QlikTech remains a pervasive and omnipresent self-service BI platform of choice. QlikTech
frequently turns up in conversations with Forrester clients regarding their shortlists for BI
platforms, and rightfully so. While we did not perform benchmark testing in this evaluation,
our clients tell us that more ofen than not they prefer QlikTech over other in-memory engines
for memory compression and speed of analysis benchmarks. QlikTech is also focusing on
the collaboration features of its platform — we especially like its real-time BI whiteboarding
feature, which is unique to QlikTech. Unlike other vendors with broad BI platform oferings,
QlikTech should not be viewed as a direct competitor in this space (one would not use
QlikTech to create pixel-perfect complex reports) but rather as complementary technology to
those BI platforms that lack leading discovery and exploration capabilities.
? Panorama Sofware leapfrogs its competition with self-service BI collaboration functionality.
Teamwork is essential to achieving successful BI processes and results. While most other BI
vendors only scratch the surface of collaboration features with report annotations, Panorama’s
Necto release ofers true social media collaboration with features including friending, following,
and workgroup circles. Panorama by itself does not ofer data exploration and discovery
capabilities but rather works as a diferent UI on top of other exploration engines, such as
Microsof PowerPivot. Also, if your choice for ofce productivity tools is Google, Panorama has
years of experience with OLAP (Google PivotTables) on data stored in Google spreadsheets.
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© 2012, Forrester Research, Inc. Reproduction Prohibited June 12, 2012 | Updated: July 11, 2012
SUPPLEMENTAL MATERIAL
Online Resource
Te online version of Figure 2 is an Excel-based vendor comparison tool that provides detailed product
evaluations and customizable rankings. Because Oracle chose not to provide full information for its
Self-Service BI solution (Oracle Business Intelligence Enterprise Edition), we have not included a
detailed spreadsheet summarizing its product in the Wave tool associated with this document.
Data Sources Used In This Forrester Wave
Forrester used a combination of four data sources to assess the strengths and weaknesses of each
solution:
? Hands-on lab evaluations. Vendors spent 30 minutes with a team of analysts who supervised
a demo-based evaluation of the product using a scenario-based testing methodology. We
evaluated each product using the same scenario(s), creating a level playing feld by evaluating
every product on the same criteria.
? Vendor surveys. Forrester surveyed vendors on their capabilities as they relate to the
evaluation criteria. Once we analyzed the completed vendor surveys, we conducted vendor
calls where necessary to gather details of vendor qualifcations.
? Product demos. We asked vendors to conduct demonstrations of their product’s functionality.
We used fndings from these product demos to validate details of each vendor’s product
capabilities.
? Customer reference survey. To validate product and vendor qualifcations, Forrester also
conducted a survey of each vendor’s current customers.
The Forrester Wave Methodology
We conduct primary research to develop a list of vendors that meet our criteria to be evaluated
in this market. From that initial pool of vendors, we then narrow our fnal list. We choose these
vendors based on: 1) product ft; 2) customer success; and 3) Forrester client demand. We eliminate
vendors that have limited customer references and products that don’t ft the scope of our evaluation.
Afer examining past research, user need assessments, and vendor and expert interviews, we develop
the initial evaluation criteria. To evaluate the vendors and their products against our set of criteria, we
gather details of product qualifcations through a combination of lab evaluations, questionnaires,
demos, and/or discussions with client references. We send evaluations to the vendors for their review,
and we adjust the evaluations to provide the most accurate view of vendor oferings and strategies.
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The Forrester Wave™: Self-Service Business Intelligence Platforms, Q2 2012 14
© 2012, Forrester Research, Inc. Reproduction Prohibited June 12, 2012 | Updated: July 11, 2012
We set default weightings to refect our analysis of the needs of large user companies — and/or
other scenarios as outlined in the Forrester Wave document — and then score the vendors based
on a clearly defned scale. Tese default weightings are intended only as a starting point, and we
encourage readers to adapt the weightings to ft their individual needs through the Excel-based
tool. Te fnal scores generate the graphical depiction of the market based on current ofering,
strategy, and market presence. Forrester intends to update vendor evaluations regularly as product
capabilities and vendor strategies evolve.
ENDNOTES
1
Information Builders’ and Tableau Sofware’s overall scores are higher than some of the Leaders’ overall
scores, but they did not end up in the Leaders’ category because, although they both scored very well in the
strategy portion of the evaluation, their current ofering scores were relatively low. Final scores are a simple
average of current ofering and strategy scores, but in order to end up in the Leaders’ category, the vendor
must receive strong scores for both attributes.
Forrester Research, Inc. (Nasdaq: FORR) is an independent research company that provides pragmatic and forward-thinking advice to
global leaders in business and technology. Forrester works with professionals in 19 key roles at major companies providing proprietary
research, customer insight, consulting, events, and peer-to-peer executive programs. For more than 28 years, Forrester has been making
IT, marketing, and technology industry leaders successful every day. For more information, visit www.forrester.com. 71902
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doc_305532721.pdf
BI is unlike any other enterprise soft ware in that it exhibits a paradox: Th e more BI requirements you implement, the more new ones pile up. Relying too heavily on IT-centric BI support models is not sustainable.
Forrester Research, Inc., 60 Acorn Park Drive, Cambridge, MA 02140 USA
Tel: +1 617.613.6000 | Fax: +1 617.613.5000 | www.forrester.com
The Forrester Wave™: Self-Service
Business Intelligence Platforms, Q2 2012
by Boris Evelson, June 12, 2012 | Updated: July 11, 2012
FOR: Application
Development
& Delivery
Professionals
KEY TAKEAWAYS
IT Can No Longer Support The Majority Of BI Requirements
BI is unlike any other enterprise sofware in that it exhibits a paradox: Te more BI
requirements you implement, the more new ones pile up. Relying too heavily on
IT-centric BI support models is not sustainable.
Self-Service BI Features Are Key To Empowering Business Users
Self-service BI capabilities go well beyond user friendly or intuitive interfaces.
Forrester recommends examining all the product features evaluated in this report
to ensure a well-rounded self-service capability.
Your Enterprise BI Platform May Already Provide Most Of The Self-
Service Features
Before plunging into full-blown evaluations of separate BI tools for self-service,
leverage fndings in this report to make sure that your current enterprise BI
platform doesn’t already have many of the self-service features you need.
© 2012, Forrester Research, Inc. All rights reserved. Unauthorized reproduction is strictly prohibited. Information is based on best available
resources. Opinions refect judgment at the time and are subject to change. Forrester
®
, Technographics
®
, Forrester Wave, RoleView, TechRadar,
and Total Economic Impact are trademarks of Forrester Research, Inc. All other trademarks are the property of their respective companies. To
purchase reprints of this document, please email [email protected]. For additional information, go to www.forrester.com.
FOR APPLICATION DEVELOPMENT & DELIVERY PROFESSIONALS
WHY READ THIS REPORT
In Forrester’s 31-criteria evaluation of self-service business intelligence (BI) vendors, we found that IBM,
Microsof, SAP, SAS, Tibco Sofware, and MicroStrategy led the pack due to the breadth of their self-
service BI functionality oferings. Information Builders, Tableau Sofware, Actuate, Oracle, QlikTech,
and Panorama Sofware were close on the heels of the Leaders, also ofering solid functionality to enable
business users to self-serve most of their BI requirements.
Table Of Contents
BI Support Moves Beyond Just IT-Centric
Models
Business-Owned Self-Service BI Applications
Are Crucial To BI Success
Self-Service Business Intelligence Platforms
Evaluation Overview
Evaluation Criteria: Current Offering, Strategy,
And Market Presence
Evaluated Vendors Have Rich Self-Service BI
Functionality And Strong Market Presence
Lack Of BI Platform Features Is No Longer
An Excuse For IT Overload
Vendor Pro?les
Leaders Demonstrate Signifcant Capabilities
And Good Balance
Strong Performers Offer Highly Competitive
Options
Supplemental Material
Notes & Resources
Forrester conducted demo-based
evaluations in Q4 2011 and interviewed 11
vendor companies: Actuate, IBM, Information
Builders, Microsoft, MicroStrategy,
Panorama Software, QlikTech, SAP, SAS,
Tableau Software, and Tibco Software.
Related Research Documents
Trends 2011 And Beyond: Business
Intelligence
March 31, 2011
Empower BI HEROes With Self-Service Tools
October 26, 2010
The Forrester Wave™: Enterprise Business
Intelligence Platforms, Q4 2010
October 20, 2010
The Forrester Wave™: Self-Service Business
Intelligence Platforms, Q2 2012
Six Leaders And Six Strong Performers Compete For A Share Of The
End User BI Market
by Boris Evelson
with Stephen Powers, Holger Kisker, Ph.D., Noel Yuhanna, and Shannon Coyne
2
5
10
13
8
JUNE 12, 2012 | UPDATED: JULY 11, 2012
FOR APPLICATION DEVELOPMENT & DELIVERY PROFESSIONALS
The Forrester Wave™: Self-Service Business Intelligence Platforms, Q2 2012 2
© 2012, Forrester Research, Inc. Reproduction Prohibited June 12, 2012 | Updated: July 11, 2012
BI SUPPORT MOVES BEYOND JUST IT-CENTRIC MODELS
Traditional BI approaches and technologies — even when using the latest technology, best practices,
and architectures — almost always have a serious side efect: a constant backlog of BI requests.
Enterprises where IT addresses more than 20% of BI requirements will continue to see the snowball
efect of an ever-growing BI requests backlog. Why? Because:
? BI requirements change faster than an IT-centric support model can keep up. Even with
by-the-book BI applications, frms still struggle to turn BI applications on a dime to meet
frequently changing business requirements. Enterprises can expect a life span of at least several
years out of enterprise resource planning (ERP), customer relationship management (CRM),
human resources (HR), and fnancial applications, but a BI application can become outdated
the day it is rolled out. Even within implementation times of just a few weeks, the world may
have changed completely due to a sudden mergers and acquisitions (M&A) event, a new
competitive threat, new management structure, or new regulatory reporting requirements.
? Conventional waterfall SDLC approaches are poorly suited for BI. Te traditional waterfall
methodology for the sofware development life cycle (SDLC) calls for collecting user
requirements, transforming them into specifcations, and then turning these specifcations
over to developers. While this approach is ofen successful for traditional enterprise
application implementations, it won’t work for the majority of BI requirements. Te “build
it, and they will come” model is directly applicable — and recommended — for BI, as only
once an end user sees something she can touch and feel and play around with will the real
requirements materialize. “What are the key requirements that your BI application must
address?” is a typical IT question. “It must address everything, because I don’t know what
kinds of reports I’ll have to produce and what kinds of analysis I’ll have to perform tomorrow,”
is, unfortunately, a typical answer.
? Business and IT do not always see eye to eye on BI applications and projects. In the eyes of
business executives, managers, and individual contributors, nothing is more important than
business requirements. Furthermore, they want their BI business requirements addressed
according to their, not IT’s, schedule so that they can continually address their clients’ needs
and avoid falling behind the competition. IT, on the other hand, is charged with maintaining
law and order and insists on sticking to standard BI tools and following approved sofware
development and project methodologies.
Forrester by no means advocates that frms transfer complex, mission-critical, enterprise wide BI
applications — especially those that carry external exposure or other operational risk — into the
hands of non-IT professionals. However, anecdotal evidence leads us to believe that with the proper
BI application portfolio classifcation, no more than 20% of all BI applications should fall into this
restricted category. We maintain that in an ideal BI environment, 80% of all BI requirements should
be carried out by the business users themselves.
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© 2012, Forrester Research, Inc. Reproduction Prohibited June 12, 2012 | Updated: July 11, 2012
Business-Owned Self-Service BI Applications Are Crucial To BI Success
But what does it take for a BI tool or application to enable all types of users (casual users, power users,
and executives) to self-serve for new queries, reports, analytics, and dashboards? “Intuitive” and “user
friendly” are subjective terms. A point-and-click and drag-and-drop graphical user interface (GUI)
may be a nirvana of intuitiveness to an information management pro who started his computer career
working with punch cards or green-screen terminals, but to a younger generation of knowledge
workers brought up on search GUI from Google and social media GUI from Facebook, a point-and-
click GUI may not be as obvious or natural. When evaluating BI tools’ business user self-service
capabilities, Forrester recommends considering features and capabilities including:
? Automodeling. Not every business user is an experienced data modeler, so look for the BI
tool to autosuggest a best data model (star schema) based on input data types and content.
Some BI tools can only identify data types, such as dates, numbers, or text, while others can
automatically suggest star schemas with the initial set of facts and dimensions. More-advanced
tools even identify and build hierarchies and automatically geocode attributes such as ZIP
codes, countries, regions, cities, and states.
? Calculated measures. IT developers can’t possibly foresee and prebuild every single measure
and metric into enterprise data warehouses (EDWs) and data marts. So enterprises must ask
these questions: Can the end users add new calculated measures without IT involvement? Are
these calculations mostly simple, as in A+B=C, or do they allow if/then/else conditions and
other full programming scripting logic for a calculation? How many prebuilt algebraic, text,
business, fnancial, and advanced analytical functions are available out of the box to be used in
these calculations?
? Collaboration. No one works in isolation from the rest of the teams in the organization these
days, so look for the BI tool to include user-to-user and user-to-developer collaboration
functionality. What are the tool’s own collaboration capabilities, and what are its capabilities
to integrate with other popular enterprise and social collaboration platforms such as Microsof
SharePoint, IBM Connections, and Novell Teaming?
? Data virtualization and drill anywhere. In today’s world of big data, no one can aford to put
anywhere close to 100% of their enterprise data and information content into a structured
database. Terefore, capabilities to virtually link multiple data sources and drill anywhere
within these sources becomes important, unless one can aford to wait for days, weeks, or
months for these new data sources to be loaded into an EDW.
? Prompt for columns. Creating standardized reports with prompted lists (for values such as
time periods, geographic regions, or business units) reduces the number of canned reports IT
professionals have to produce. Firms should take it to the next level and create a few standard
enterprise report templates with placeholders where a trained business user can place any
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© 2012, Forrester Research, Inc. Reproduction Prohibited June 12, 2012 | Updated: July 11, 2012
appropriate column from the database and runtime. Combined with “drill anywhere,” this can
theoretically reduce the number of canned reports in an enterprise to a handful.
? Search-like GUI. A Google-like GUI achieves several important objectives in the quest for
the ultimate self-service BI tool. First, it requires little to no training; hardly any knowledge
workers in the modern world can’t use a web-based search tool. Tis is a beneft, as every hour
of BI training for a salesperson is an hour away from customers. Second, a point-and-click
GUI assumes that you know exactly what you are looking for, while very ofen you don’t, and
a search-like GUI is especially handy in you-don’t-know-what-you-don’t-know scenarios. Last
but not least, search-like GUI enables faceted navigation, which is ofen the best way to drill
up/down/across hierarchies that are ragged and unbalanced.
? Application sandboxes. What happens when an urgent and critical business need calls for a
completely new BI application today but your IT partners tell you that you are not at the top of
their priority list? Te ability to download and install a new BI tool on your desktop or laptop
computer is one way to handle this. If an urgent business requirement calls for analyzing
terabytes of data, creating a BI sandbox in a cloud with computing resources constrained only
by budget may be the way to go.
? Write back. Creating multiple what-if scenarios based on existing data is a commodity feature
of most BI and online analytical processing (OLAP) tools. As long as one can cut the report
by diferent dimensions, one can analyze multiple cause-and-efect scenarios. But building
what-if scenarios based on new data (creating new budgeting scenarios, for example) requires
“write back” capabilities or updating the underlying database or an OLAP cube in real time.
Firms should understand whether a BI tool can update aggregate or individual values, generate
completely new transactions, or write back new transactions to operational applications as well
as how much or how little custom programming that involves.
? Exploration and discovery. Reporting, analyzing, and slicing and dicing information based on
an existing data model is another commoditized feature of most BI tools. Tis approach is ofen
referred to as prediscovery, as all requirements for future reporting and analysis need to be
prediscovered and built into a data model. But analyzing information based on a new hierarchy
not already built into the data model or based on entities and attributes whose relationships are
not defned in a data model falls within the realm of specialized tools. Tese tools are ofen
based on nonrelational or nondimensional data models (such as an associative index, for
example). Tey are also great at addressing the I-don’t-know-what-I-don’t-know quagmire.
? Migration to production. Last but not least, say you did create a great BI application using all
or most of the features described. Now what? How can you share it with your colleagues, your
team, or the rest of the enterprise? Is it back to the “I have to call IT” game, or does your BI
tool allow you to publish what you created to a shared environment? It shouldn’t be that simple,
FOR APPLICATION DEVELOPMENT & DELIVERY PROFESSIONALS
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© 2012, Forrester Research, Inc. Reproduction Prohibited June 12, 2012 | Updated: July 11, 2012
however, because in many cases these self-built BI applications need to be “productionalized”
frst. Te right approach? A publishing action that kicks into motion a “move to production”
workfow or at least automatically notifes the appropriate IT resources.
SELF-SERVICE BUSINESS INTELLIGENCE PLATFORMS EVALUATION OVERVIEW
To assess the state of the self-service business intelligence platforms market and see how the vendors
stack up against each other, Forrester evaluated the strengths and weaknesses of top self-service
business intelligence platform vendors.
Evaluation Criteria: Current Offering, Strategy, And Market Presence
Afer examining past research, user needs assessments, and vendor and expert interviews, we
developed a comprehensive set of evaluation criteria. We evaluated vendors against 31 criteria,
which we grouped into three high-level buckets:
? Current ofering. Tese criteria include the evaluation results of all of the features and
capabilities reviewed in this document. Tey also incorporate the result of a short build-to-
specs test (where each vendor had to build a small BI application based on a Forrester-supplied
data set) as well as the results from a survey of four to 32 customers per vendor.
? Strategy. We reviewed each vendor’s strategy and considered how well each vendor’s plans
for product enhancement position it to meet future customer demands. We also looked at the
fnancial and human resources the company has available to support its strategy as well as each
vendor’s go-to-market pricing and licensing strategy.
? Market presence. To establish a product’s market presence, we combined information about
each vendor’s fnancial performance, installed customer base, and number of employees across
major geographical regions; its partnership ecosystem; as well as its horizontal and vertical
industry applications.
Evaluated Vendors Have Rich Self-Service BI Functionality And Strong Market
Presence
Forrester included 12 vendors in the assessment: Actuate, IBM, Information Builders, Microsof,
MicroStrategy, Oracle, Panorama Sofware, QlikTech, SAP, SAS, Tableau Sofware, and Tibco
Sofware. Oracle was included as a nonparticipating vendor. Each of these vendors has (see Figure 1):
? Self-service BI functionality. We included vendors that could demonstrate the signifcant
majority of self-service features described in this report.
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© 2012, Forrester Research, Inc. Reproduction Prohibited June 12, 2012 | Updated: July 11, 2012
? Te ability to query databases using SQL and MDX. While other querying technologies such
as XQuery and DMX are available, SQL and MDX are the most widely used technologies in
large enterprises.
? A self-contained, complete, fully functioning BI environment. We focused on BI tools not
technologically or functionally tied or limited to particular functional/horizontal applications
(ERP, supply chain management [SCM], etc.). Tese tools must be self-contained, complete BI
environments or platforms that do not necessarily have to be embedded in other applications.
? Sufcient market presence and interest from Forrester clients. We included vendors with at
least 100 in-production customers present in more than one major geographical region. We
also focused on vendors that Forrester clients frequently mentioned or asked about in the
context of business intelligence (measured as more 25 inquiries over the past 12 months).
FOR APPLICATION DEVELOPMENT & DELIVERY PROFESSIONALS
The Forrester Wave™: Self-Service Business Intelligence Platforms, Q2 2012 7
© 2012, Forrester Research, Inc. Reproduction Prohibited June 12, 2012 | Updated: July 11, 2012
Figure 1 Evaluated Vendors: Product Information And Selection Criteria
Source: Forrester Research, Inc.
Vendor
Actuate
IBM
Information Builders
Microsoft
MicroStrategy
Oracle
Panorama Software
QlikTech
SAP
SAS
Tableau Software
Tibco Software
Product name
ActuateOne
IBM Cognos Insight
WebFOCUS
• Power View
• PowerPivot
• Excel
• SharePoint
MicroStrategy
Oracle Business
Intelligence Suite
Enterprise Edition
Necto
QlikView
SAP BusinessObjects
SAS Enterprise Business
Intelligence
• Tableau Desktop
• Tableau Server
Tibco Spot?re Analytics
Version
11 SP4
v10.1
7.7.03
• SQL Server 2012
• Microsoft O?ce 2010
• SharePoint Server 2010
9.2.1A
11g
11
11
4.0 Feature Pack 3
4.31
7
v4.0
Release date
Q2 2012
February 2012
November 2011
April 2012
September 2011
Q4 2011
May 2011
November 2011
April 2012
July 2011
January 2012
November 2011
Vendor selection criteria
Self-service BI functionality. We included vendors that could demonstrate the signi?cant majority of
self-service features described in this report.
The ability to query databases using SQL and MDX. While other querying technologies such as XQuery
and DMX are available, SQL and MDX are the most widely used technologies in large enterprises.
A self-contained, complete, fully functioning BI environment. We focused on BI tools not
technologically or functionally tied or limited to particular functional/horizontal applications (enterprise
resource planning [ERP], supply chain management [SCM], etc.). These tools must be self-contained,
complete BI environments or platforms that do not necessarily have to be embedded in other
applications.
Su?cient market presence and interest from Forrester clients. We included vendors with at least 100
in-production customers present in more than one major geographical region. We also focused on
vendors that Forrester clients frequently mentioned or asked about in the context of business intelligence
(measured as more 25 inquiries over the past 12 months).
FOR APPLICATION DEVELOPMENT & DELIVERY PROFESSIONALS
The Forrester Wave™: Self-Service Business Intelligence Platforms, Q2 2012 8
© 2012, Forrester Research, Inc. Reproduction Prohibited June 12, 2012 | Updated: July 11, 2012
LACK OF BI PLATFORM FEATURES IS NO LONGER AN EXCUSE FOR IT OVERLOAD
Te evaluation uncovered a market in which (see Figure 2):
? IBM, Microsof, SAP, SAS, Tibco Sofware, and MicroStrategy lead the pack. Tese vendors
demonstrate signifcant capabilities and a good balance of self-service BI features across most
requirements. If a vendor from this list is already an enterprise’s preferred BI platform provider,
there’s ofen little to no reason to look elsewhere for another specialized BI tool.
? Te six Strong Performers ofer competitive options. Vendors in the Leaders category can
by no means sit on their laurels — Strong Performers Information Builders, Tableau Sofware,
Actuate, Oracle, QlikTech, and Panorama Sofware are hot on their heels.
1
In many specialized
situations where certain features have specifc importance, these vendors can even outshine
and outperform the Leaders.
Tis evaluation of the self-service business intelligence platforms market is intended to be a starting
point only. We encourage readers to view detailed product evaluations and adapt the criteria weightings
to ft their individual needs through the Forrester Wave™ Excel-based vendor comparison tool.
Figure 2 Forrester Wave™: Self-Service Business Intelligence Platforms, Q2 ’12
Source: Forrester Research, Inc.
Go online to download
the Forrester Wave tool
for more detailed product
evaluations, feature
comparisons, and
customizable rankings.
Risky
Bets Contenders Leaders
Strong
Performers
Strategy Weak Strong
Current
ofering
Weak
Strong
Market presence
Full vendor participation
Incomplete vendor participation
Tibco Software
Information
Builders
QlikTech
Panorama Software
MicroStrategy
Actuate
Tableau Software
IBM
Microsoft
SAP
SAS
Oracle
FOR APPLICATION DEVELOPMENT & DELIVERY PROFESSIONALS
The Forrester Wave™: Self-Service Business Intelligence Platforms, Q2 2012 9
© 2012, Forrester Research, Inc. Reproduction Prohibited June 12, 2012 | Updated: July 11, 2012
Figure 2 Forrester Wave™: Self-Service Business Intelligence Platforms, Q2 ’12 (Cont.)
Source: Forrester Research, Inc.
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All scores are based on a scale of 0 (weak) to 5 (strong).
FOR APPLICATION DEVELOPMENT & DELIVERY PROFESSIONALS
The Forrester Wave™: Self-Service Business Intelligence Platforms, Q2 2012 10
© 2012, Forrester Research, Inc. Reproduction Prohibited June 12, 2012 | Updated: July 11, 2012
VENDOR PROFILES
Leaders Demonstrate Signi?cant Capabilities And Good Balance
? IBM (Cognos) ofers the broadest and the most balanced set of self-service features. With
the recent rollout of Cognos Insight, IBM is now front and center in the self-service BI market.
Te new product is based on the popular in-memory OLAP TM1 engine. It still lacks some
of the more advanced data exploration and discovery features that are mostly the realm
of associative database management systems (DBMSes). But for most of the business user
self-service functions, it will do a fne job, and it really shines at what-if scenario modeling
and planning use cases where write-back capabilities are essential. Cognos Insight can also
consume and analyze predictive analytics output from SPSS Modeler — an advanced analytics
product from IBM — allowing users to add another dimension of insight to their work.
? Microsof enables business users to look no further than Excel for self-service BI. Microsof
has built on its broad, omnipresent, SQL Server-based BI functionality, which already includes
Integration Services, Reporting Services, and Analysis Services. It now ofers a very respectable
PowerPivot and Power View in-memory data analysis and discovery engine. Tink of this as
Excel on steroids. If you are already using Excel (and who isn’t?) look no further for your self-
service BI platform — especially when you already have it anyway, as most likely it’s already
part of your Enterprise SQL Server and/or SharePoint license. Microsof may only ofer around
80% of advanced BI functionality as compared with other leading vendors, but what it lacks in
features it more than makes up for in cost/benefts ratios.
? SAP BusinessObjects ofers excellent self-service functionality on big data. In-memory is
the name of the self-service BI game these days when one is looking for answers at the speed
of thought. Most in-memory DBMS engines, however, have practical limitations of analyzing
no more than a few hundred GBs at a time. To address this limitation, SAP now ofers a highly
diferentiated combination of BusinessObjects Explorer with its top exploration and discovery
capabilities and the SAP HANA in-memory appliance. Today’s largest production in-memory
model is approximately 7 to 8 TBs compressed to approximately 1 TB, and SAP has tested its
ofering in its labs to scale up to approximately 80 to 100 TBs compressed to approximately 16
to 20 TBs. Beyond self-service, SAP still needs to tighten its product-to-product integration to
close several integration gaps in its vast BI product portfolio, for example, its need for a more
common UI and improved reusability of components.
? SAS ofers one of the top self-service BI choices for power users. Even though SAS has a
broad BI platform that supports most BI use cases, it is mostly known for its advanced analytics.
If you are already a user of SAS BI, look no further than the self-service advanced analytics
features of Enterprise Guide. SAS’s new Visual Analytics product also empowers users with
visual self-service for big data exploration techniques and approachable analytics. SAS may not
be going afer the BI platform market as forcefully as the other leading vendors — Forrester sees
SAS more ofen in advanced analytics deals — but it defnitely has all the tools and components.
FOR APPLICATION DEVELOPMENT & DELIVERY PROFESSIONALS
The Forrester Wave™: Self-Service Business Intelligence Platforms, Q2 2012 11
© 2012, Forrester Research, Inc. Reproduction Prohibited June 12, 2012 | Updated: July 11, 2012
? Tibco Spotfre shines with its highly visual self-service, in-memory engine. Tibco Spotfre
received the highest current ofering score in the evaluation based on its self-service BI
features. Tese features include a highly graphical, associative, in-memory engine that allows
for intuitive data discovery and exploration as well as a free-for-a-year Tibco Silver Spotfre
cloud ofering. Unlike other vendors with broad BI platform oferings, Tibco Spotfre should
not be viewed as a direct competitor in this space (one would not use Spotfre to create pixel-
perfect complex reports) but rather as complementary technology to those BI platforms that
lack leading discovery and exploration capabilities.
? MicroStrategy ofers self-service BI on an unlimited number of data sources. For most
organizations, a neatly modeled EDW with all the enterprise’s data already loaded and ready
is not reality, so the ability to self-serve one’s BI needs across multiple heterogeneous data
sources is a top requirement. Tis is where MicroStrategy shines with the multisourcing
capability of its battle-proven ROLAP engine. ROLAP engine has an additional beneft as
well — many Forrester clients cite lower long-term cost of BI ownership due to a reduction
in the number of cubes or reports they have to build. Furthermore, MicroStrategy’s Visual
Insight tool enables businesspeople to visually explore data and generate insights, whether with
enterprise data or a simple import of a local fle on the user’s desktop. ROLAP engine, however,
carries a price: Te initial setup required to take advantage of all of its powerful features can be
complex and time consuming.
Strong Performers Offer Highly Competitive Options
? Information Builders delivers self-service BI functionality based on its robust BI platform.
While Information Builders is mostly known for its large-scale BI deployments — experience
and expertise that came from its mainframe roots — WebFOCUS also ofers highly competitive
BI functionality for business users. Tese capabilities include intuitive InfoAssist query builder
and highly interactive Active Reports. Tere’s also a hidden gem inside WebFOCUS: the Visual
Discovery product, which ofers a respectable in-memory data exploration and discovery
alternative to oferings from other, well-known in-memory BI vendors. While this may not
come up or be an issue in most self-service scenarios, under the covers, WebFOCUS is based on
the FOCUS fourth-generation programming language. In extreme situations — and
Information Builders addresses these as they come up — some advanced routines may still need
to be tweaked and optimized using FOCUS programming.
? Tableau Sofware continues to set the standards for self-service advanced data
visualization. Self-service and intuitive data visualizations go hand in hand, and Tableau
has been the vanguard of advanced data visualization for years. Late last year, Tableau closed
a functionality gap with the introduction of an in-memory engine for data discovery and
exploration. Te new capability gives two important options for business users: the ability to
load the entire data set into memory and perform highly responsive data exploration or, if the
data set is too big, leave data where it is — in a relational or multidimensional DBMS — and
FOR APPLICATION DEVELOPMENT & DELIVERY PROFESSIONALS
The Forrester Wave™: Self-Service Business Intelligence Platforms, Q2 2012 12
© 2012, Forrester Research, Inc. Reproduction Prohibited June 12, 2012 | Updated: July 11, 2012
analyze it with Tableau’s patented and intuitive VisualSQL. Unlike other vendors with broad
BI platform oferings, Tableau should not be viewed as a direct competitor in this space (one
would not use Tableau to create pixel-perfect complex reports) but rather as complementary
technology to those BI platforms that lack advanced data visualization capabilities.
? Actuate ofers one of the top open source self-service BI platforms. Conventionally known
for its highly scalable mass-report-distribution and complex-report-writer development
platform, Actuate’s open source BIRT engine has the critical mass of business-user-friendly
features required to stand its ground as a respectable self-service BI platform. While
traditionally not known for analytics, Actuate ofers new features including in-memory data
objects for OLAP-like analysis as well as some data exploration and discovery. Afcionados of
open source can also use BIRT onDemand for instant provisioning of a BI sandbox in the cloud.
? Oracle persistently and successfully closes gaps in its self-service BI portfolio. While Oracle
BI Server (an OBIEE component) continues to be a leading, enterprise-grade ROLAP engine
with heterogeneous data sourcing capability, Oracle Business Intelligence Enterprise Edition
(OBIEE) also successfully addresses many other self-service BI needs. Oracle’s recent
introduction of Exalytics “engineered system” closes one of the gaps in Oracle’s BI portfolio
with in-memory data analysis capabilities with a highly visual interface. Oracle’s recent
acquisition of Endeca (not evaluated in the current Forrester Wave), with its inverted-index
DBMS and highly intuitive faceted navigation for data discovery and exploration, has the
potential to signifcantly boost Oracle’s overall position in the self-service BI market.
? QlikTech remains a pervasive and omnipresent self-service BI platform of choice. QlikTech
frequently turns up in conversations with Forrester clients regarding their shortlists for BI
platforms, and rightfully so. While we did not perform benchmark testing in this evaluation,
our clients tell us that more ofen than not they prefer QlikTech over other in-memory engines
for memory compression and speed of analysis benchmarks. QlikTech is also focusing on
the collaboration features of its platform — we especially like its real-time BI whiteboarding
feature, which is unique to QlikTech. Unlike other vendors with broad BI platform oferings,
QlikTech should not be viewed as a direct competitor in this space (one would not use
QlikTech to create pixel-perfect complex reports) but rather as complementary technology to
those BI platforms that lack leading discovery and exploration capabilities.
? Panorama Sofware leapfrogs its competition with self-service BI collaboration functionality.
Teamwork is essential to achieving successful BI processes and results. While most other BI
vendors only scratch the surface of collaboration features with report annotations, Panorama’s
Necto release ofers true social media collaboration with features including friending, following,
and workgroup circles. Panorama by itself does not ofer data exploration and discovery
capabilities but rather works as a diferent UI on top of other exploration engines, such as
Microsof PowerPivot. Also, if your choice for ofce productivity tools is Google, Panorama has
years of experience with OLAP (Google PivotTables) on data stored in Google spreadsheets.
FOR APPLICATION DEVELOPMENT & DELIVERY PROFESSIONALS
The Forrester Wave™: Self-Service Business Intelligence Platforms, Q2 2012 13
© 2012, Forrester Research, Inc. Reproduction Prohibited June 12, 2012 | Updated: July 11, 2012
SUPPLEMENTAL MATERIAL
Online Resource
Te online version of Figure 2 is an Excel-based vendor comparison tool that provides detailed product
evaluations and customizable rankings. Because Oracle chose not to provide full information for its
Self-Service BI solution (Oracle Business Intelligence Enterprise Edition), we have not included a
detailed spreadsheet summarizing its product in the Wave tool associated with this document.
Data Sources Used In This Forrester Wave
Forrester used a combination of four data sources to assess the strengths and weaknesses of each
solution:
? Hands-on lab evaluations. Vendors spent 30 minutes with a team of analysts who supervised
a demo-based evaluation of the product using a scenario-based testing methodology. We
evaluated each product using the same scenario(s), creating a level playing feld by evaluating
every product on the same criteria.
? Vendor surveys. Forrester surveyed vendors on their capabilities as they relate to the
evaluation criteria. Once we analyzed the completed vendor surveys, we conducted vendor
calls where necessary to gather details of vendor qualifcations.
? Product demos. We asked vendors to conduct demonstrations of their product’s functionality.
We used fndings from these product demos to validate details of each vendor’s product
capabilities.
? Customer reference survey. To validate product and vendor qualifcations, Forrester also
conducted a survey of each vendor’s current customers.
The Forrester Wave Methodology
We conduct primary research to develop a list of vendors that meet our criteria to be evaluated
in this market. From that initial pool of vendors, we then narrow our fnal list. We choose these
vendors based on: 1) product ft; 2) customer success; and 3) Forrester client demand. We eliminate
vendors that have limited customer references and products that don’t ft the scope of our evaluation.
Afer examining past research, user need assessments, and vendor and expert interviews, we develop
the initial evaluation criteria. To evaluate the vendors and their products against our set of criteria, we
gather details of product qualifcations through a combination of lab evaluations, questionnaires,
demos, and/or discussions with client references. We send evaluations to the vendors for their review,
and we adjust the evaluations to provide the most accurate view of vendor oferings and strategies.
FOR APPLICATION DEVELOPMENT & DELIVERY PROFESSIONALS
The Forrester Wave™: Self-Service Business Intelligence Platforms, Q2 2012 14
© 2012, Forrester Research, Inc. Reproduction Prohibited June 12, 2012 | Updated: July 11, 2012
We set default weightings to refect our analysis of the needs of large user companies — and/or
other scenarios as outlined in the Forrester Wave document — and then score the vendors based
on a clearly defned scale. Tese default weightings are intended only as a starting point, and we
encourage readers to adapt the weightings to ft their individual needs through the Excel-based
tool. Te fnal scores generate the graphical depiction of the market based on current ofering,
strategy, and market presence. Forrester intends to update vendor evaluations regularly as product
capabilities and vendor strategies evolve.
ENDNOTES
1
Information Builders’ and Tableau Sofware’s overall scores are higher than some of the Leaders’ overall
scores, but they did not end up in the Leaders’ category because, although they both scored very well in the
strategy portion of the evaluation, their current ofering scores were relatively low. Final scores are a simple
average of current ofering and strategy scores, but in order to end up in the Leaders’ category, the vendor
must receive strong scores for both attributes.
Forrester Research, Inc. (Nasdaq: FORR) is an independent research company that provides pragmatic and forward-thinking advice to
global leaders in business and technology. Forrester works with professionals in 19 key roles at major companies providing proprietary
research, customer insight, consulting, events, and peer-to-peer executive programs. For more than 28 years, Forrester has been making
IT, marketing, and technology industry leaders successful every day. For more information, visit www.forrester.com. 71902
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