Ventana Research Analyst Perspectives

PivotLink Advances Business Analytics in the Cloud

Written by Ventana Research | Sep 26, 2011 1:22:06 PM

PivotLink introduced version 5 of its Business Intelligence (BI) product, which it delivers in the cloud computing environment and available through software as a service (SaaS) at its user conference. Demonstrating one of the unique benefits of providing it a SaaS approach, PivotLink did not require any of the attendees to request a download, get a new license file or do any type of software upgrade to receive the new version. It had already been done for them. One purpose of the conference was to inform customers of the new features they now had at their disposal. Any enterprise that has had to coordinate a major software upgrade should appreciate the time savings SaaS can provide on normal software maintenance activities. Our recent benchmark research on business data in the cloud indicates that companies are adopting SaaS-based products to varying degrees across all the lines of business.

Not only has PivotLink’s product been overhauled, but the management team has been overhauled as well. Bruce Armstrong, former CEO of software companies Kickfire and Knova, joined PivotLink earlier this year. He has assembled a leadership team that includes some of his former colleagues, bringing a focus and discipline to the company that should help it capitalize on its assets and the market opportunity represented by SaaS BI.

On its BI platform  PivotLink has created ReadiMetrix packages of key performance indicators (KPIs), dashboards and reports for several domains including sales, marketing, human resources, supply chain and retail. Much of PivotLink’s commercial success has come from retail customers and related domains such as the suppliers to those retailers. My colleague Mark Smith has previously written about the challenges of retail analytics, and our new benchmark research findings on this industry sector. PivotLink’s SaaS-based approach to retail solutions allows its customers to easily incorporate their network of manufacturers, supplier and distribution channels in the BI process. Anyone in the network can access the appropriate portion of the data and the analysis without installing any software.

In addition to operating in the cloud computing and SaaS approach, the PivotLink BI platform is designed for speed and flexibility. A columnar database combined with in-memory analytics provides high performance. A dynamic data model that allows structure to be created at query time rather than in advance, provides flexibility and minimizes the amount of data preparation required. As our business analytics benchmark research shows, over two-thirds of organizations spend more time on data preparation tasks than on analyzing data, so any steps to reduce this time can be valuable.

PivotLink 5 also adds mobile BI with native capabilities for Apple iPad, Android-based tablets and BlackBerry PlayBook. In our benchmark research on information applications 51 percent of participants said broader access to information on mobile technologies is important or very important. In addition, our benchmark research on BI and performance management shows that many organizations support a broad spectrum of mobile devices. Users want all the capabilities inherent in those devices, which are available only via native applications. Mobile capabilities should also appeal to PivotLink’s core constituency of retail customers who often spend many hours out of the office traveling to various locations and suppliers.

The new release incorporates enhanced visualization capabilities including geospatial mapping, another capability important to the retail market. As well its dashboarding, charting and conditional formatting provide more usability. On the back end are new editors for defining data sources, tables, queries and reports, which make it easier for self-service administration by end-user groups. Additional Web services interfaces have been created along with an expanded metadata layer so administrative functions can be performed programmatically and automatically.

To build on its success in retail, PivotLink will need to expand on its success in retail-specific analytics, as identified in my colleague’s post above. As a smaller vendor, it can’t be all things to all people. PivotLink faces competition from larger vendors who have now introduced cloud-based alternatives of their own BI offerings. Right now there is plenty of interest in the cloud and few pure-play cloud-based BI vendors. PivotLink must capitalize on that interest in the cloud and build its market share with a continued focus on specific markets where it can be competitive even when commodity BI vendors expand further in the cloud. Take a look at PivotLink and its simple path to business analytics, it might surprise you.

Regards,

Ventana Research