Since IT’s responsibilities are more and more aligned with business objectives—like revenue growth, customer retention, and even developing new business models—it’s critical to measure success beyond deploying modern BI technology. It’s equally important to empower the business to adopt and use analytics to discover opportunities, create efficiencies, and drive change.
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3. Onboarding and license management
As your analytics deployment grows, it's not scalable to have individuals submit one-off requests for software licenses that you then have to manually assign, configure, and track. You can take advantage of the groups you’ve already established in your identity and access management solution to automate the licensing process for your analytics program. This can also reduce unused licenses, helping lines of business to save a little extra budget.
4. Ensuring responsible use
Another big concern as analytics programs grow is maintaining data security and governance in a self-service model. Fortunately, you can address this while streamlining user onboarding even further by automatically configuring user permissions based on their group memberships. Coupled with well-structured analytics content, you’ll not only reduce IT administrative work, but you’ll help people get faster, secure access to trusted data that matters most to their jobs.
5. Enabling access from anywhere
When your organization is increasingly relying on data to make decisions, 24/7 support and access to customized analytics is business-critical. With secure, mobile access to analytics and an at-a-glance view of important KPIs, your users can keep a pulse on their business no matter where they are.
6. Growing data literacy
When everyone in the organization is equipped and encouraged to explore, understand, and communicate with data, you’ll see amazing impact from more informed decision-making. But foundational data skills are necessary to get people engaged and using data and analytics properly. Customers have shown us creative and fun ways that IT helps build data literacy, from formal training to community-building activities. For example, St. Mary’s Bank holds regular Tableau office hours, is investing more time and energy in trainings, and has games that test employees on their Tableau knowledge.
Want to learn more?
If you missed AWS re:Invent 2020, you’re not out of luck! You can still register and watch on-demand content, including our own discussion of scaling Tableau Public tenfold to support customers and their growing needs for sharing COVID-19 data (featuring SVP of Product Development, Ellie Fields, and Director of Software Engineering, Jared Scott). You’ll learn about how we reacted to customer demands—especially from governments reporting localized data to keep constituents safe and informed during the pandemic—including shifts from on-premises to the cloud, hosting vizzes that could handle thousands, even millions, of daily hits.
Data-driven transformation is an ongoing journey. Today, the organizations that are successfully navigating uncertainty are those leaning into data and analytics to solve challenges and innovate together. No matter where you are—evaluating, deploying, or scaling—the benefits of the cloud and modern BI are available to you. You can start by learning more about how we partner with AWS.