2007-10-08

Microsoft BI conference in Stockholm 5 October 2007.

Conclusion

  1. Great interest – 1250 persons
  2. Steve Ballmer same message as in Seattle.
  3. Announcement of PerformencePoint Server – to be tested.

The story.

Living in the south of Sweden meant I had to start off this day early, so my wife was not too happy when the alarm started at a quarter to five. Using SAS and the Arlanda Express I arrived 8.30 at the entrance of Berns where the conference was held, half an hour before they promised to close the doors. Security this day meant we were not supposed to carry our outdoor jackets or any suitcases of any kind. A lot of people with high expectations had already gathered and I managed to get some breakfast and a cup of coffee before I decided to get a seat quite close to the scene.

At nine prompt the scene was entered by Thomas Andersson and Marcus Gullberg, who were our hosts today. They told us that they were very happy, that we were so many, 1250 persons, which is impressive and really gives the feeling that this is a serious effort on Microsoft's behave of getting into the marketplace of BI and trying to change it into a more democratic approach. We were also told that the total Swedish market for 2007 was expected to be 7 billion SEK. I always wonder were these figures come from?? I have no clue, but they always tell them in a very convincing way? I mean, if we split them on 1250 we would each get more than 5 million SEK 2007. I am happy if I in my company reach 900'. So? Who gets the rest? They also told us that Gartner has estimated BI to be the hottest investment in IT followed by security, they opposite of BI, I mean lock in all information and hide it so it won't harm you. They left the scene for Lars Backhans, Business & Marketing Officer of Microsoft Sweden.

I have seen Lars a lot in his career and some 12-14 years ago, when he was newly arrived from Borland into Microsoft, he was the guy convincing me that JET, the database engine of Access, was a full blown replacement of DB2 on mainframe which was my reference of a relational database at that time. Since I have been able to make living on his advice my confidence in him might be to high, which could be a reason for my view on him being biased. Today his role was to be the warm-up for Steve Ballmer. His presentation was to convince us by telling us how he is eating his own dog food, which I think is the English way of saying eating your own medicine which is the saying used in Swedish. So he described one part of his current job were BI is used. It is in the planning of where to put emphasize, when deciding which of Microsoft's products that should be supported and how much resources different products and markets are worth. To estimate how big the market is, Microsoft collects information by using outside marketing analysis, interviewing potential customers asking two questions 'How much will you invest in ….?' and 'Who is your preferred supplier?' These two questions give an estimate of the 'potential' and the 'reach'. These figures are compared with sales figures picked up in the internal systems, which gives the URP, unrealised potential. The URP then gives you advice on what and where to put in resources to reach your goals and to best use of our resources. In theory this seems wise and very rational, and he really gave me a very convincing feeling as always. Is this the secret behind Microsoft's tremendous success? Is this the way they do it in practice? Who knows? In the middle of his presentation he got the sign that Steve has arrived. He told us the true story why he still after fifteen years loved Microsoft. It was two reasons, Bill Gates and ….., the American who best knew how to pronounce his last name in Swedish – Mr Steve Ballmer.

And there he was!! As in Seattle he told us what an honour it was for him to meet us, and we all felt warm heartened by his comment. We were told that the agenda was 'Role of BI in Business', the dog food story and Microsoft's future plan in BI. He started with a big view of history; on the left side was the story about the information worker looking for a more effective way to solve his/her problem on the right hand side was the IT-department and the desire from the company of solving it's processes in a cheaper and more efficient way. In between there was a cloud of confusion as there always has been. If I understood Steve's picture right this was the new mission of Microsoft, clearing out this cloud. I don't think this is history today or maybe it is. I am convinced that in the history book some hundred years from now there might be statements telling the story about the two different approaches of how computers should be utilized in the society. But, who knows?

(My thoughts) : The structured business information today governed by ERP-systems like SAP is hidden for those who need it. The truth is that still today many people don't get the information they need to make fact based decisions on their business problems, I know because I meet them every day. They wish they could, but there is some small obstacles making it impossible…. It is bureaucracy and misplaced security around the business information of the company that make up most of these problems. But there are also technical and political issues. Many of the people I meet use Excel to do the calculations they need to make sound business decisions, but many of the figures they need are known by their ERP-system, but still they have to do their best estimates. Is this mission new for Microsoft, no I don't think so. ODBC was their first effort of trying to break this barrier, and they almost succeeded. But then came the Internet-cloud and the mystery cloud of security. So for about ten years nothing has actually happened in this area. All of us who has been working in this arena welcome Microsoft back to the origin in their business, making facts from figures. We all know that the competitors of Microsoft have been trying to do their best to defeat them in this aspect, but I think in the long run they will lose. Most people working in an office for a company knows what type of information they need to make sound business decisions, and they should of course get the information they need for those purposes. Anyhow, that is not what is happening today, but with the support from Microsoft it might be possible to get there.

After this initial message Steve stressed how much money Microsoft has put into R/D in the BI-area, very impressive figures as always. Still one wonders, are money spent a true picture of the impact that will reach the market. The truth is that I think Microsoft have to invest ten times the money they spent ten years ago to get the same market impact. If this is due to internal inefficiencies in Microsoft or if it depends on a more demanding market, could of course be discussed. I think it could be 80% due to the inefficiencies of a bigger organisation and 20% on market demands, but any figure might be right, it only depends on your religion. Innovation is and will always be cheaper in smaller organizations, where less effort is spent on dependencies to earlier investments. The backpack you carry isn't cheap!

After the initial presentation Steve went into his interviewing role of truth witnesses. On guy from Sandvik and one from SSAB were introduced, covering traditional Swedish manufacturing business. I think this was the most convincing part of the whole day. I got the message that these guys where happy and convinced that the solutions offered by Microsoft were good enough to make the difference. I got the feeling that Steve was impressed that BI was used in manufacturing and not only in finance as in the US. We are in the frontline in Sweden was the message brought to me. If it was just theatre I don't know, but I believed it was realty…

Then Steve told the dog food story about how much BI was used inside Microsoft. As in Seattle he stressed the importance of Kevin Turner from Wal-Mart and how he has been working since arriving in Microsoft of making it happen. As a partner of Microsoft I have got the feeling that something has happened. A year ago I was struggling about a bug with support, and just two days after I was asked to fill in a quiz about my satisfaction, if this was pure coincidence I don't know, anyhow it made me go to Microsoft.com to realize that two new outsiders now have reached top management, Kevin and Ray the crown princes of Microsoft. I felt relived, now could anything happen… If the dog food story is true I don't know. I think if it was, some more stories would have been told during the day. My believe is that Microsoft as most companies today have a good view of their sales performance, and for this they use BI in one way or the other. I don't think that Microsoft is head of their competitors (if they exist) in using BI for managing the company, to much bias is produced to convince me of that. To conclude I think the dog food story is half way true and half way wishes.

After this Steve went into the future business, telling the same story as in Seattle. They have asked the best brains they know about the future and any ideas about how to make profitable software for the next ten years. They, I don't know if it was Bill and Steve or who 'they' were, has gotten 35 ideas about it, they have expected five. One of them was 'BI for the masses' and it was high on the priority in Redmond. One of the ideas was in interface and expression. How will I as a user express what I want? He used the example of how he expressed him self in preparation of his Europe-tourney. The only thing he said was 'Give me my preparation for the journey' and his assistant delivered all what he needed and wanted. I think this vision could be too tough for any computer to handle though. He used the word to get the computer to understand 'My intent'. The other thing he stressed was self-service, which will reduce costs a lot in the BI-area. The idea was that I as a user could do it myself. But he also confessed that many reports he asked for inside Microsoft he was unable to produce. The last point mentioned was about models of business processes. They should in the future be good enough to do recommendation to line of business (LOB). I think this vision also have some years before it will arrive. Conclusion is Microsoft have the intention to make the computer to understand my intention, if it is expressed through the keyboard or by speech. Will they manage to do it? Speech recognition has been in Office since 2000 and in Sweden at least it not used at all. The last sentence about the future was 'Software as a service', which I also think is essential for Microsoft's survival.

At the end he also mentioned that he was on scene to tell us about the new product announced today 'Performance Point Server'. He told us about all the money spent on this major investment from Microsoft. As far as I have understood this is an application developed with .net as the platform. So I mean it has to be great…. OR

After the presentation it was time for the questions from the 'audience'. This trick is too simple. I have been asked to send in questions as many others, but using the filter of an internal from Microsoft doing the quiz doesn't convince me. (I just say the Shah of Iran, what did he know about Khomeini.. ) To be truthful you must handle the microphone to the audience, else it won't be convincing. I have to comment one question though, which could be worth mentioning. 'Which is the most intelligent use of BI that you have heard of?' The answer given by Steve was thoughtful, because what he mentioned was the Wal-Mart story, created by Kevin Turner, now at his office. I think the idea of giving the suppliers all the information and probably more than they needed in a way they could use and interpret is one of many factors about the tremendous story about the Wal-Mart phenomena, mentioned in many American business books. The information given about you and your competitor's performance at the cashier's desk has given a great impact on how to deliver the right goods to a reasonable price to the consumer. Coming from the south of Sweden though, I don't see the big difference from what we call the IKEA phenomena. 'Same, same but different…'

After Steve Ballmer, Marcus was given the opportunity of his life. I mean talk about warm-up…. Most of the time you feel that people from Microsoft are comfortable in their role of presentation, but I do understand if you are feeling a little nervous after having Steve Ballmer as warm-up. I think Marcus and Simon did a tremendous work in convincing us that BI with Microsoft is good enough and much easier to understand than most others. We were also taught that half of the BI market in 2007 in Sweden is in manufacturing and government.

Then they told us that Sharepoint is meant to expose the result from our analysis to others, I mean forget the G-disk who everyone knows well. They have got their sales quota we all know….

On the scene came Simon Lidberg to do the demo. I must say I am impressed, daring to demonstrate Performance Point Server. I have seen it in Seattle and I have seen it in Solna, so my hawk eye was on highest alert. Will it perform today??? And my answer is: I still don't know if it is a bird or a fish. The impression you get it is a fish, I mean everyone taking a breather after getting it started in a demo… But what MS tells you is that it is a bird flying on it's own after four years of development inside MS, with 10000 beta testers… Anyhow these brave guys got it flying. The learnt a lot since last time, because now thye told the business story before they began. So for the twelfth time at least in my life I was told the story about a bicycle manufacturer with great international business, I mean how exciting Adventure Works is… Is this, what MS has got to show?? They must have some more exciting data to display, I mean BI is about excitement for data not for technique, or.. It is at least what MS claims. What these guys showed up though was good, very good. They demonstrated that the MS solution is simple to handle, you don't need to be an expert. The showed up how easy it is to connect and what you could achieve if you got an IT-department that has given you a connection to use from Excel 2007. They ended the demonstration with data-mining without knowledge about what you do. This approach could be dangerous, but is of course appealing, and basically it tells the story 'BI simple don't make simple things complicated'. I read a comment from Cognos Sweden about PPS, congratulating MS to Halo.. After this demo we had a coffee break.

After, Urban Ask from Gothenburg entered the scene, presented as the guru of BI in Sweden, and I have never heard of him.. My ears might not be of best quality, being 56 these days. Exciting guy though I must say, telling the relaxed story about BI. He was announced to tell trends in BI and CPM from the University of Gothenburg. I think his presentation is the reason why I give this seminar four out of five, not for his presentation, but from the MS perspective a choosing such a guy, when announcing PPS. He told the story which I think should be on any BI seminar; don't be too technical, BI is the story about acting better in the real world without getting stoned in technical implementation and theory about OLAP. I was taught this lesson some fifteen years ago working with IKEA. The question raised about any issue in IT and BI was always, 'Will this sell some more Billy?'. His mission was almost impossible but I think he did well, very well. First he claimed that CPM means a lot of competence from both a user perspective and from the organization asking for the application. If that is not available experience tells the truth, the project probably will be a failure. He also stated that CPM is top-down, meaning that if management is not involved and engaged the failure is almost impossible to avoid. The most exciting statement he did was that to most people today ERP is almost the same as SAP.. His speech was around trends in CPM and it covered six points. Firstly he talked about the rhetoric in CPM, with it specialized language making it to be technically complex. Then he spoke about the metaphors and the high focus on technologic part of the development of the products in the market place today. We also was told that Sweden is top with Switzerland and Denmark when it comes to BI-investment per capita. He ended up with the trend of packs of key indicators, at least 200 per package. And finally he talked about the trend of how to organize the implementation of CPM, it should be done through a support group containing both technical and business people… As I said a totally different approach and surprising since we were there to hear about PPS. But of course the message that Mr Ask gave is important, when implementing CPM don't forget the human aspects! Finally he gave a hint on the hottest book for the moment 'Competing on Analytics'.

And finally it was time for the announcement of PerformancePoint Server. We had some PP-slides to get the picture and the message was monitor, analyze and plan. A total product covering scorecards, dashboards, reporting, analytics, planning, budgeting, forecasting and consolidation, for just $20k/server and $195/CAL. 'A complete package to the price of a fraction in the industry'. We then went into the demo that started with at least a string response time of 50-60 seconds. The public was all quite as the speaker. He then did a showcase of why the Germans had a problem with there planning and did some score carding in PPM. He went into Excel 2007 where he made a change of the plan and ended with showing up the result in the scorecard. Response time during this part was good enough. The presentation ended with some pictures telling us that the beta had been used by 10000, I wonder if my download was counted because I didn't manage to get it sunning on my machine… And it has been under development for four years and used inside Microsoft for two years. Conclusion the product is complete already in release 1 and 1000 partnes have been educated in how to use it. I decided to give it a chance and will return with my experience later.


 

2007-10-07

Conclusion

  1. Great interest – 1250 persons
  2. Steve Ballmer same message as in Seattle.
  3. Announcement of PerformencePoint Server – to be tested.

The story.

Living in the south of Sweden meant I had to start off this day early, so my wife was not too happy when the alarm started at a quarter to five. Using SAS and the Arlanda Express I arrived 8.30 at the entrance of Berns where the conference was held, half an hour before they promised to close the doors. Security this day meant we were not supposed to carry our outdoor jackets or any suitcases of any kind. A lot of people with high expectations had already gathered and I managed to get some breakfast and a cup of coffee before I decided to get a seat quite close to the scene.

At nine prompt the scene was entered by Thomas Andersson and Marcus Gullberg, who were our hosts today. They told us that they were very happy, that we were so many, 1250 persons, which is impressive and really gives the feeling that this is a serious effort on Microsoft's behave of getting into the marketplace of BI and trying to change it into a more democratic approach. We were also told that the total Swedish market for 2007 was expected to be 7 billion SEK. I always wonder were these figures come from?? I have no clue, but they always tell them in a very convincing way? I mean, if we split them on 1250 we would each get more than 5 million SEK 2007. I am happy if I in my company reach 900'. So? Who gets the rest? They also told us that Gartner has estimated BI to be the hottest investment in IT followed by security, they opposite of BI, I mean lock in all information and hide it so it won't harm you. They left the scene for Lars Backhans, Business & Marketing Officer of Microsoft Sweden.

I have seen Lars a lot in his career and some 12-14 years ago, when he was newly arrived from Borland into Microsoft, he was the guy convincing me that JET, the database engine of Access, was a full blown replacement of DB2 on mainframe which was my reference of a relational database at that time. Since I have been able to make living on his advice my confidence in him might be to high, which could be a reason for my view on him being biased. Today his role was to be the warm-up for Steve Ballmer. His presentation was to convince us by telling us how he is eating his own dog food, which I think is the English way of saying eating your own medicine which is the saying used in Swedish. So he described one part of his current job were BI is used. It is in the planning of where to put emphasize, when deciding which of Microsoft's products that should be supported and how much resources different products and markets are worth. To estimate how big the market is, Microsoft collects information by using outside marketing analysis, interviewing potential customers asking two questions 'How much will you invest in ….?' and 'Who is your preferred supplier?' These two questions give an estimate of the 'potential' and the 'reach'. These figures are compared with sales figures picked up in the internal systems, which gives the URP, unrealised potential. The URP then gives you advice on what and where to put in resources to reach your goals and to best use of our resources. In theory this seems wise and very rational, and he really gave me a very convincing feeling as always. Is this the secret behind Microsoft's tremendous success? Is this the way they do it in practice? Who knows? In the middle of his presentation he got the sign that Steve has arrived. He told us the true story why he still after fifteen years loved Microsoft. It was two reasons, Bill Gates and ….., the American who best knew how to pronounce his last name in Swedish – Mr Steve Ballmer.

And there he was!! As in Seattle he told us what an honour it was for him to meet us, and we all felt warm heartened by his comment. We were told that the agenda was 'Role of BI in Business', the dog food story and Microsoft's future plan in BI. He started with a big view of history; on the left side was the story about the information worker looking for a more effective way to solve his/her problem on the right hand side was the IT-department and the desire from the company of solving it's processes in a cheaper and more efficient way. In between there was a cloud of confusion as there always has been. If I understood Steve's picture right this was the new mission of Microsoft, clearing out this cloud. I don't think this is history today or maybe it is. I am convinced that in the history book some hundred years from now there might be statements telling the story about the two different approaches of how computers should be utilized in the society. But, who knows?

(My thoughts) : The structured business information today governed by ERP-systems like SAP is hidden for those who need it. The truth is that still today many people don't get the information they need to make fact based decisions on their business problems, I know because I meet them every day. They wish they could, but there is some small obstacles making it impossible…. It is bureaucracy and misplaced security around the business information of the company that make up most of these problems. But there are also technical and political issues. Many of the people I meet use Excel to do the calculations they need to make sound business decisions, but many of the figures they need are known by their ERP-system, but still they have to do their best estimates. Is this mission new for Microsoft, no I don't think so. ODBC was their first effort of trying to break this barrier, and they almost succeeded. But then came the Internet-cloud and the mystery cloud of security. So for about ten years nothing has actually happened in this area. All of us who has been working in this arena welcome Microsoft back to the origin in their business, making facts from figures. We all know that the competitors of Microsoft have been trying to do their best to defeat them in this aspect, but I think in the long run they will lose. Most people working in an office for a company knows what type of information they need to make sound business decisions, and they should of course get the information they need for those purposes. Anyhow, that is not what is happening today, but with the support from Microsoft it might be possible to get there.

After this initial message Steve stressed how much money Microsoft has put into R/D in the BI-area, very impressive figures as always. Still one wonders, are money spent a true picture of the impact that will reach the market. The truth is that I think Microsoft have to invest ten times the money they spent ten years ago to get the same market impact. If this is due to internal inefficiencies in Microsoft or if it depends on a more demanding market, could of course be discussed. I think it could be 80% due to the inefficiencies of a bigger organisation and 20% on market demands, but any figure might be right, it only depends on your religion. Innovation is and will always be cheaper in smaller organizations, where less effort is spent on dependencies to earlier investments. The backpack you carry isn't cheap!

After the initial presentation Steve went into his interviewing role of truth witnesses. On guy from Sandvik and one from SSAB were introduced, covering traditional Swedish manufacturing business. I think this was the most convincing part of the whole day. I got the message that these guys where happy and convinced that the solutions offered by Microsoft were good enough to make the difference. I got the feeling that Steve was impressed that BI was used in manufacturing and not only in finance as in the US. We are in the frontline in Sweden was the message brought to me. If it was just theatre I don't know, but I believed it was realty…

Then Steve told the dog food story about how much BI was used inside Microsoft. As in Seattle he stressed the importance of Kevin Turner from Wal-Mart and how he has been working since arriving in Microsoft of making it happen. As a partner of Microsoft I have got the feeling that something has happened. A year ago I was struggling about a bug with support, and just two days after I was asked to fill in a quiz about my satisfaction, if this was pure coincidence I don't know, anyhow it made me go to Microsoft.com to realize that two new outsiders now have reached top management, Kevin and Ray the crown princes of Microsoft. I felt relived, now could anything happen… If the dog food story is true I don't know. I think if it was, some more stories would have been told during the day. My believe is that Microsoft as most companies today have a good view of their sales performance, and for this they use BI in one way or the other. I don't think that Microsoft is head of their competitors (if they exist) in using BI for managing the company, to much bias is produced to convince me of that. To conclude I think the dog food story is half way true and half way wishes.

After this Steve went into the future business, telling the same story as in Seattle. They have asked the best brains they know about the future and any ideas about how to make profitable software for the next ten years. They, I don't know if it was Bill and Steve or who 'they' were, has gotten 35 ideas about it, they have expected five. One of them was 'BI for the masses' and it was high on the priority in Redmond. One of the ideas was in interface and expression. How will I as a user express what I want? He used the example of how he expressed him self in preparation of his Europe-tourney. The only thing he said was 'Give me my preparation for the journey' and his assistant delivered all what he needed and wanted. I think this vision could be too tough for any computer to handle though. He used the word to get the computer to understand 'My intent'. The other thing he stressed was self-service, which will reduce costs a lot in the BI-area. The idea was that I as a user could do it myself. But he also confessed that many reports he asked for inside Microsoft he was unable to produce. The last point mentioned was about models of business processes. They should in the future be good enough to do recommendation to line of business (LOB). I think this vision also have some years before it will arrive. Conclusion is Microsoft have the intention to make the computer to understand my intention, if it is expressed through the keyboard or by speech. Will they manage to do it? Speech recognition has been in Office since 2000 and in Sweden at least it not used at all. The last sentence about the future was 'Software as a service', which I also think is essential for Microsoft's survival.

At the end he also mentioned that he was on scene to tell us about the new product announced today 'Performance Point Server'. He told us about all the money spent on this major investment from Microsoft. As far as I have understood this is an application developed with .net as the platform. So I mean it has to be great…. OR

After the presentation it was time for the questions from the 'audience'. This trick is too simple. I have been asked to send in questions as many others, but using the filter of an internal from Microsoft doing the quiz doesn't convince me. (I just say the Shah of Iran, what did he know about Khomeini.. ) To be truthful you must handle the microphone to the audience, else it won't be convincing. I have to comment one question though, which could be worth mentioning. 'Which is the most intelligent use of BI that you have heard of?' The answer given by Steve was thoughtful, because what he mentioned was the Wal-Mart story, created by Kevin Turner, now at his office. I think the idea of giving the suppliers all the information and probably more than they needed in a way they could use and interpret is one of many factors about the tremendous story about the Wal-Mart phenomena, mentioned in many American business books. The information given about you and your competitor's performance at the cashier's desk has given a great impact on how to deliver the right goods to a reasonable price to the consumer. Coming from the south of Sweden though, I don't see the big difference from what we call the IKEA phenomena. 'Same, same but different…'

After Steve Ballmer, Marcus was given the opportunity of his life. I mean talk about warm-up…. Most of the time you feel that people from Microsoft are comfortable in their role of presentation, but I do understand if you are feeling a little nervous after having Steve Ballmer as warm-up. I think Marcus and Simon did a tremendous work in convincing us that BI with Microsoft is good enough and much easier to understand than most others. We were also taught that half of the BI market in 2007 in Sweden is in manufacturing and government.

Then they told us that Sharepoint is meant to expose the result from our analysis to others, I mean forget the G-disk who everyone knows well. They have got their sales quota we all know….

On the scene came Simon Lidberg to do the demo. I must say I am impressed, daring to demonstrate Performance Point Server. I have seen it in Seattle and I have seen it in Solna, so my hawk eye was on highest alert. Will it perform today??? And my answer is: I still don't know if it is a bird or a fish. The impression you get it is a fish, I mean everyone taking a breather after getting it started in a demo… But what MS tells you is that it is a bird flying on it's own after four years of development inside MS, with 10000 beta testers… Anyhow these brave guys got it flying. The learnt a lot since last time, because now thye told the business story before they began. So for the twelfth time at least in my life I was told the story about a bicycle manufacturer with great international business, I mean how exciting Adventure Works is… Is this, what MS has got to show?? They must have some more exciting data to display, I mean BI is about excitement for data not for technique, or.. It is at least what MS claims. What these guys showed up though was good, very good. They demonstrated that the MS solution is simple to handle, you don't need to be an expert. The showed up how easy it is to connect and what you could achieve if you got an IT-department that has given you a connection to use from Excel 2007. They ended the demonstration with data-mining without knowledge about what you do. This approach could be dangerous, but is of course appealing, and basically it tells the story 'BI simple don't make simple things complicated'. I read a comment from Cognos Sweden about PPS, congratulating MS to Halo.. After this demo we had a coffee break.

After, Urban Ask from Gothenburg entered the scene, presented as the guru of BI in Sweden, and I have never heard of him.. My ears might not be of best quality, being 56 these days. Exciting guy though I must say, telling the relaxed story about BI. He was announced to tell trends in BI and CPM from the University of Gothenburg. I think his presentation is the reason why I give this seminar four out of five, not for his presentation, but from the MS perspective a choosing such a guy, when announcing PPS. He told the story which I think should be on any BI seminar; don't be too technical, BI is the story about acting better in the real world without getting stoned in technical implementation and theory about OLAP. I was taught this lesson some fifteen years ago working with IKEA. The question raised about any issue in IT and BI was always, 'Will this sell some more Billy?'. His mission was almost impossible but I think he did well, very well. First he claimed that CPM means a lot of competence from both a user perspective and from the organization asking for the application. If that is not available experience tells the truth, the project probably will be a failure. He also stated that CPM is top-down, meaning that if management is not involved and engaged the failure is almost impossible to avoid. The most exciting statement he did was that to most people today ERP is almost the same as SAP.. His speech was around trends in CPM and it covered six points. Firstly he talked about the rhetoric in CPM, with it specialized language making it to be technically complex. Then he spoke about the metaphors and the high focus on technologic part of the development of the products in the market place today. We also was told that Sweden is top with Switzerland and Denmark when it comes to BI-investment per capita. He ended up with the trend of packs of key indicators, at least 200 per package. And finally he talked about the trend of how to organize the implementation of CPM, it should be done through a support group containing both technical and business people… As I said a totally different approach and surprising since we were there to hear about PPS. But of course the message that Mr Ask gave is important, when implementing CPM don't forget the human aspects! Finally he gave a hint on the hottest book for the moment 'Competing on Analytics'.

And finally it was time for the announcement of PerformancePoint Server. We had some PP-slides to get the picture and the message was monitor, analyze and plan. A total product covering scorecards, dashboards, reporting, analytics, planning, budgeting, forecasting and consolidation, for just $20k/server and $195/CAL. 'A complete package to the price of a fraction in the industry'. We then went into the demo that started with at least a string response time of 50-60 seconds. The public was all quite as the speaker. He then did a showcase of why the Germans had a problem with there planning and did some score carding in PPM. He went into Excel 2007 where he made a change of the plan and ended with showing up the result in the scorecard. Response time during this part was good enough. The presentation ended with some pictures telling us that the beta had been used by 10000, I wonder if my download was counted because I didn't manage to get it sunning on my machine… And it has been under development for four years and used inside Microsoft for two years. Conclusion the product is complete already in release 1 and 1000 partnes have been educated in how to use it. I decided to give it a chance and will return with my experience later.


 

2007-05-17

BI Conference in Seattle

Conclusion (Interpretation of Steve Ballmer)

  1. Dead serious about Business Intelligence
  2. Democratize Business Intelligence – BI to the masses
  3. Prized for this approach.
  4. Both internally using it and externally.

This was a very brief summary of Steve Ballmer's keynote at the conference 11th of May. (His speech starts 3:30 into the video)

The story.

Back home with jetlag. It has been a great week in Seattle with a good show from Microsoft, trying to convince 2800(?) delegates from all around the world.

Arriving 8th of May late in the afternoon to Seattle with warm and welcoming spring weather after a nine hour flight from Copenhagen, finding my way to the impressive 'Washington State Convention & Trade Center' and grabbing my badge just before they closed the reception desk.

First day of the conference was started by a keynote from Jeff Raikes, who stressed on the message 'BI for the masses'. This means trust on data, ease of use, scorecards and the prizing of MS products. Availability of 'Office PerformancePoint Server' in late summer 2007 and the release of 'Katmai', next version of SQL Server in 2008. (24-36 months will be the normal frequency of releases of new versions of SQL Server). Then there was a keynote of Michael Tracy, who has found that the secret behind growth for companies was the company's ability to get acceptance for the strategy and getting the strategy executed. One very important way of achieving this was to use BI to get acceptance for the strategy in the corporation so everybody strived to fulfill and prioritize in their daily work. The successful companies never believe in one strategy to fulfill their aspiration of growth, they have 30-40 different approaches each giving 1-2%. He also stated that fact based decision-making beats experience 8 times of 10, and that BI gives fundamentally new ways of running a successful company, when used as a democratic tool. After that we all split up, I visited a presentation of a new add in for Excel to simplify data mining by means of SQL Server. It was impressive. I then visited a presentation by Ron Tolido of Capgemini NL, who spoke of the need for more current data in BI to make it useful for the masses and he also meant SAP has a horrible user interface… I also managed to find the worst presentation of the conference and it almost made me totally ignorant to the PerformancePoint Server (CAL will cost $195). As not native in English it is very hard to understand people from India trying to speak English. Day ended with a nice dinner sponsored by MS Denmark.

Second day was started by Ted Kummert, who spent the first three minutes with telling us about his fantastic career at Microsoft, I mean who cares? He is responsible for SQL Server and talked about Katmai and said 'We have been listening'. He also mentioned the acquisition of Softartist to create Excel and Word reports directly at the server, and that it would probably ship with Katmai. Bob Kaplan, the father of Business Scorecard was the next speaker. His main mission was to execute strategy you need scorecards. The GAP between Vision – Strategy –What people do (WIIIFM – What is in it for me). Executing a strategy is not a project it is a process. It was for me followed by a new lesson about PerformancePoint which could be summarized by MAP (Monitor, Analyze and Plan). Monitor means scorecards, dashboards, drilldowns – Analyze means Proclarity for its display functions – Paln which is the new part meant for planning and forecasting, all displayed with a WEB-part interface and Sharepoint philosophy. Might be something worth considering? Cost ( $20k/server and $195/cal). Most delegates spent a nice evening at Experience Music Project conceived by Paul Allen for his passion to Jimmy Hendrix. Soon the bars went out of Heineken in the bar, which was good for me the next morning.

Third day started at 9 am with keynote of Steve Ballmer whose points are in the conclusion. After that I listened to war stories by Claudia Imhoff, a person with a lot of insight in how to implement BI effectively in practice.

Business Intelligence – Microsoft

MS claims that they have been into BI for ten years with their acquisition of what later was to be called Analysis Server. It was also ten years ago when pivot table first arrived in Excel. I have been working with the BI offering from MS since start, since they always have had another approach to the concept, i.e. the democratic and fairly prized, or bottom up approach if you prefer. With the investments in Excel 2007 in integrating it much better with Aanlysis Server and with a totally other focus, they have at least convinced me that they at least has gotten serious.

2007-03-31

Blog photos

Conclusion (Pdf)

  1. Blogging with photos – you will need a photo editing program – Picasa is my suggestion or use your favorite. The tools supplied with Vista could be an alternative, but I think they lack my favorite not modifying my original.
  2. Word's photo editing tools are not good enough.
  3. When publishing JPG:s inserted from a file Word 2007 makes silly resizing of the bitmaps.
  4. I publish with Word and catch up the silly names given. After publishing I copy the correctly sized JPG:s to remove the silly copied by Word!!
  5. Very, Very Annoying!! Especially after republish my copies are gone again…
  6. Don't use the advanced photo effects in Word with pictures copied inside Word. Insert them and edit to achieve the correct result.

     

The story.

Since my blog vision includes posting rocky photos I will have to find out a descent way of handling photos in a smart way. Since more than one year I am a big fan of Picasa from Google. It is a simple tool to keep order on my digital photos and to make them look much better than raw from the camera. I have been a digital amateur since I bought my first digital camera 1999, Nikon Coolpix 100 with 480x640 pixels and storage for 20 pictures on a pcmcia card. Today I am on my third, an Olympus CF-70 I bought two years ago. When I bought my new computer this autumn Corel Paint Shop Pro was available for free for testing. I tested it but didn't manage to get up in speed and didn't find was I was looking for sp I gave it up and uninstalled it some month ago. Many of my friends using digital cameras like me just dump their photos to the hard disk and never tries to edit and correct them.

In this blog I will try to compare the functions offered by Word with those of Picasa to figure out a smart way of doing what I am planning to do. Let us take a photo I shot when I was out walking last Sunday with my wife in our village, Bjärred in the south of Sweden. I downloaded my photos to my hard disk, in my camera I always use best quality JPEG with 7 Mpixels. On many of photos I have problem with the white balance making them look blue, uninteresting and flat. When loaded into Picasa one of them looked like this:

I chose to do some corrections so I chose the middle tab showing the adjustment tools, which are simple to use. With the tool I chose a gray, white or black area. The cover of the field in the foreground I knew was white so that is where I point with the tool. Other spots to look for are clouds in the sky which might be blue instead of gray. You get an instant view of the photo after the correction, and if you fail you could easily undo it.

After grayscale correction you will often find the picture a little bit over exposed, but most of the time I use the upper for my second correction.

As you might see on the sliders that a correction is done for the second and third which are contrast and shade. This auto correction made the photo a little bit too dark in my taste, so I will do a little adjustment of shadow until a result I accept.

With the final correction of the photo will make it look like this :

Picture after what I call 'The three click wonder of Picasa!' Crisp and clear with depth.

 

With the cropping tool I select the part I would like to use in the blog:

The photo ready for being used in a blog.

 

If you leave Picasa all your modifications of the photo is stored so when you return you will see the modified picture. But what has happened with your original – NOTHING. That is the main reason why I like Picasa, in most other photo editing software I have used I have had to store the modified photo somewhere else, with Picasa I keep the original and in a small tine file in the folder a file name picasa.ini the modifications are stored. If you look into a folder you have included for Picasa editing it may look like:

Where my original is saved together with the screenshots, actually there are two copies of my original photo, and if you look at one of them with another program than Picasa you will see it is still unmodified. Looking into the ini file we could see how Picasa stores our modifications in text format. (Happily not in XML so it is easy to understand..)

When all corrections are done I select the photos I want and do an export to another folder in Picasa where. In that process I could decide the width and what quality I want for the JPG:s.

 

I make them 500 pixels wide so they will fit into my 510 pixel width in my CSS for the blog, and the get small and feasible for using for blog purposes.

The cropped and revised photo aimed for publishing in the blog is just 19kb and sized 500x313 and I think it is good enough for a blog.

 With the tools in Word After changing contrast and sizing and cropping I get the following result

Result of editing photo with tools in Word – and the picture is diffuse due to error in white balance.

 

And as expected it is resize after publishing so it is cut to the right when viewed in the blog! Microsoft, please correct this bug ASAP!! I think reading without any picture might make a lot of readers bored!

View on my blog screen in Word it looks like this:

This makes it a PNG with correct size and lost colors – and growing from 15k to 88k!!

 

And now let us have a look on the features available in Word but lacking in Picasa. There are almost endless possibilities to add effect in both programs but I think Word is stronger in this part so here are some variations of the selected photo:

This is called Preset5.

 

Black border with shadow.

 

Soft edges 10 points.

 

As you see above none of the effects where moved to the blog. When looking at my screen it looked like this:

Instead of copying this picture is inserted as a JPG and the softened which make is correct but since it is a JPG it is resized.

 

The solution is that for the above samples I did a copy and paste inside Word, which made Word believe I published the same picture four times and not doing a correct transfer to my FTP-site. If I instead insert my JPG with the insert picture function it will be correctly displayed with the effect, but since it is a JPG is incorrectly resized!

You can't win them all!!!

2007-03-27

GIFJPGPNG

Conclusion (Pdf)

  1. Use PNG to publish screenshots, a little bit bigger but it will work as you expect, i.e. no resizing.
  2. Word behaves strange with JPG:s resizing them when publishing.
  3. Picture tools in Word are good enough, no need for a special program.
  4. Use Paint for a first preliminary cut, then size or crop inside Word. Avoid sizing if not needed – you will loose in sharpness!
  5. Avoid frames in Word they are costly in size and degrade picture sharpness. Frame with CSS.
  6. Compress option not worth trouble?
  7. The names given by Word is strange but logical and types are kept at least if no modifications.
  8. Be careful when moving around pictures after first publish… Word seems to mess them up sometimes!
  9. Word's nice tables look great and not too ugly in published HTML, have a look!

What happens with my picture when publishing?

I just thought I have understood how to handle pictures when using Word 2007 as my blog client..

But something happens that I don't understand!

It is always like this!! I took a screenshot with Alt/Prnt Scrn and then opened Paint and pasted it. I cut out the peace I wanted and opened a new picture in Paint and pasted it back with roughly the correct picture size that I wanted to show. Then I saved it as PNG, GIF and JPG with paint. Looking at the pictures files at the hard disk with Windows Explorer they have the following properties: before and after publishing:

File

Pixels local HD

Size local HD

Pixels FTP-site

Size on FTP-site

File type FTP-site

GIF

601x267

28613

605x271

28233

GIF

JPG

601x267

24216

755x338

31437

JPG

PNG

601x267

33194

605x271

37441

PNG

       

I publish to my account on Wordpress with the picture setting to my own FTP-site and it all look great in Word, i.e. the JPG is in the size it was on my hard disk, but when looking at my publish post on Wordpress the JPG is in greater size than in Word. One could wonder why?? In the samples below you see the same screenshot saved under a different formats. I had made up my mind to skip GIF:s because they lose too much of the gradients built into Office 2007 as could be seen. I thought it would be smart to have a look on whether choosing JPG or PNG for screenshots and then this happens. In one way or the other this made my choice very simple, since Word destroys my JPG:s by resizing then I have to choose PNG, which seems to be best quality but with rather high impact on file size.

Another way around could be to let Word publish on my FTP-site and then renaming and copy the correct files manually to my FTP-site, but being lazy….

       

GIF (032607_2103_JPPNGGIF3.gif)

GIF size 606x271, 18k.

     

JPG (032607_2103_JPPNGGIF4.jpg)

JPG, resized by Word!! Why?? To 755x338 and 31k.

     

PNG (032607_2103_JPPNGGIF5.png)

PNG 601x267 -> 605x271 (invisible fram, or??) 33k->37k.

     

Now let us see if we could have any benefits from all the new picture modifications built into Word 2007. The content area in my CSS used at Wordpress is set to 510px, which means that all pictures above got truncated when shown in the blog. We start with adding a border to make the screenshot more precise. Then we will try to resize the picture to get it to fit into 510px. I will also try to crop it with the cropping tool, and then I will test to use compress to save file size when publishing.

PNG with border in gray. (032607_2103_JPPNGGIF6.png)

Done with 'Picture Tools','Picture Border' choosing 50% black. What happens is a little bit strange, the picture gets dimmed and the sharpness seems to be lost in the picture shown in Word.

     

Size by 84%. (032607_2103_JPPNGGIF7.png )

With 'Picture Tools', 'Size' I make it to be 84% of original size, 605px -> 510px is about 84%.

     

Cropped only.( 032607_2103_JPPNGGIF8.png )

With 'Picture Tools', 'Crop' I make it 13,34 cm (5.25" for 'inci-people') wide and cut off some of the under part. Exatly the same width I have got on my printout from Wordpress!! I am impessed!

     

Sized and compressed. (032607_2103_JPPNGGIF9.png )

This one is sized to 80% and then compressed with these options set. -6%! Not impressed!!

     

     

Cropped and compressed. (032607_2103_JPPNGGIF12.png)

Cropped to same size but also compressed with the options above.

     

Publishing the pictures after modification and then copying them back to my local HD gives the following result:

Let summaries these figures, you have to excuse my computer is talking Swedish. Headings in the picture above are Name, Size, Type, Changed and Pixels.

Pic

Picture

Sizechange

Comment

5

PNG origin

=

+16% than JPG

6

Gray Border

+65%

Costly!!

7

Size 84%

+40%

Fewer pixels but bigger!!

8

Cropped

-29%

-63% in pixels!!

9

Size & Compress

-6%

Compress, not worth it!

12

Cropped & compress

+4%

As above!

Let us look into the docx-file of the saved document to see how the pictures are stored there, it is done by renaming the docx-file to zip, and then 'Exploring' gives:

Some pictures seem to be missing in the saved document?? (Only 9 out of 12??) No clue about what has happened. Feel free to investigate and tell the World more about these pictures and you picture of Word 2007! Send me a post and I'll post it!!

2007-03-24

Start blogging experience

Conclusion

To be done!!

Vision.

A month later! And a lot of adrenalin and frustration… I will try to save you all my troubles and just tell you what to do and why.

My vision was and is:

  1. I want to blog, and I want to do it to reach more than Swedish talking people.
  2. I want to be effective, using the right tools to make it happen.
  3. I need to use screenshots pics in my blog.
  4. I want my blog to have inspiring picture to make my boring text more interesting.
  5. I want it to be found and hopefully read and inspiring.
  6. I would like to see that I manage to reach out…

And that is about all… I think my vision could be shared by many, i.e. nothing strange at all. Though I had to invest a month to get going, my personal problem maybe…..

Reality – client tool.

I have tried three popular blog-places: Blogspot, MS Live and Wordpress. After a long evaluation period I have made up my mind about what I hope is my optimal blog strategy. I will use all of them! If that is a correct decision, I DON'T KNOW!

I will use Word 2007 to create all posts. The primary reasons being: It is an editor where I feel comfortable, all other I have tried have got me feel inconvenient. I would like to have WYSIWYG and I need good spellchecking support. The standard tools offered at any of the three above mention places are good, but not good enough. They all offer a tiny spot in an IE window where I could enter my thoughts.

This is the interface in BlogSpot (Google).

This is the offer from Live Space (MS).

This is Wordpress window for entering thoughts.

A Word 2007 tool seems appealing… My choices are space, spellchecking but no WSIWYG unfortunately.

The interface of client tool MS Live Writer 1.0 (beta)

Life Space has no spellchecking what so ever. Blogspot and Wordpress offers insulting spellchecking, you have a tool to active when you like that tells you what it think is wrong. I want to know the correct spelling I don't want to be insulted!! Live Writer is far much better, a tool you active that give you suggestion, like MS Word ten years ago. The polite way of telling that I think is unique for MS Office, telling you right away when you type. There is just one choice!! What so ever if you need spellchecking like I do. I could of course use Word for spellchecking and then past it in the silly window offered, but then I will miss the features of pictures inserted into the text.

What makes MS Live Writer great is the possibility to view your post and what it will look like. For both Wordpress and Blogspot you get a nice way 99% WYSIWYG, but for MS Live Spaces it misses…

My other big issue has been good support for screenshots and nice photos so you won't get bored. After much consideration I think for my purposes I have better store the picture files on my own FTP-site. If I ask Word 2007 to handle the pictures for me, I could do but often it will either fail or recopy them so I get thousands of copies of the same picture, which happens if I do a republish a lot of times. If I have had a descent prewiew before publishing I would not have needed to publish…..

2007-03-23

Last testpost – translation Swedish to English

Conclusion

  1. I have tried translation before so I was eager to see if it has gotten any better with Office 2007.
  2. It had not – still need for many humans to do a decent job, at least for Swedish – English!
  3. So you have to stand my English, it is not native so in this blog there will be a lot of errors. But please forgive me, I will try to do my best and Word 2007 will help me with the spelling!

The story.

Highlight the text and right click to get the offer of translation!! Normal ie this means the normal text I have to enter into to get going. It shows up with all my spelling errors which are very comfortable to correct in MS Word. I will also try to use the translate function in Word 2007 to see if I could blog in Swedish and get it well translated into English. We try by typing the above text in Swedish and then I will do a translation. The first test failed. Word 2007 crashed but it managed to restore my document.

Normal dvs det innebär normal text som jag måste skriva in för att komma i gång. Här visas alla mina felstavningar som jag enkelt kan korrigera i MS Word. Jag ska också prova att använda översätttnings funktionen i Word 2007 för att se om jag kan blogga på svenska och få det bra översatt till engelska. Vi provar med att skriva in ovanstående text på svenska och sedan kommer jag att göra en översättning. Första testet gick inget vidare. Word 2007 bombade men det klarade av att återställa mitt dokument. Första testet misslyckades.

This is what I got from 'Lingo': Normal i.e. it means normal text that I must enter in order to come in time. Here, all my error spellings are shown that I simple can correct in MS Word. I will also try to use översätttnings the function in Word 2007 in order to see if I can blogga on Swedish and few the good translated to English. We try with entering the above text on Swedish and since comes I to do a translation. The first test went nothing furthermore. Word 2007 bombed but it coped with of restoring my document. The first test failed.

What is your opinion is it readable? I think NO.

  • 'Come in time' – phrase in Swedish that failed. 'komma i gång' is similar to 'get going' or maybe 'start up'.
  • 'error spelling' – understandable but wrong order used the Swedish order.
  • 'översättnings' – didn't find the word, ok if failed. Means translation the 's' is to connect it with the rest.
  • 'blogga on' – blogga is a new Swedish word coming from blog, on is a direct translation of 'på' which is a preposistion but the wrong one in English 'in' sounds better.
  • 'few' – funny mistake Swedish word 'få' has many translations into English both few and get is correct, but since it is a verb here it should be 'get'.
  • 'the good translated' - ?? good try…
  • 'on' – should be 'in' or maybe 'into' I am not sure.
  • 'since' – 'sedan' has many meanings in English 'later on', 'then', 'since' (from my dictionary). 'Later on' or 'Then' would be correct.
  • 'comes I' - ?? I Swedish we have two construct for future with a verb, either 'skall' or 'kommer att' both should be translated into English with 'will' or 'shall', I think..
  • 'nothing furthermore' – 'gick inget vidare' is a kind sort of 'failed' if I have used 'misslyckades' it would have worked. But in Swedish that is much harder and asks for sympathy.
  • 'coped with of restoring' – 'managed to restore' I think sounds more correct.
So for the time being and with my budget there is no option. If I want to reach out in the world outside of Sweden I have to use my English from high school (8 years). I hope you could cope with it but probably there will be many errors. So please forgive me…