Book Image

Business Intelligence Cookbook: A Project Lifecycle Approach Using Oracle Technology

By : John Heaton
Book Image

Business Intelligence Cookbook: A Project Lifecycle Approach Using Oracle Technology

By: John Heaton

Overview of this book

Oracle Database 11g is a comprehensive database platform for data warehousing and business intelligence that combines industry-leading scalability and performance, deeply-integrated analytics, and embedded integration and data-quality all in a single platform running on a reliable, low-cost grid infrastructure. This book steps through the lifecycle of building a data warehouse with key tips and techniques along the way. Business Intelligence Cookbook: A Project Lifecycle Approach Using Oracle Technology outlines the key ways to effectively use Oracle technology to deliver your business intelligence solution. This is a practical guide starting with key recipes for project management then moving onto project delivery. Business Intelligence Cookbook: A Project Lifecycle Approach Using Oracle Technology is a practical guide for performing key steps and functions on your project. This book starts with setting the foundation for a highly repeatable efficient project management approach by assessing your current methodology to see how suitable it is for a business intelligence program. We also learn to set up the project delivery phases to consistently estimate the effort for a project. Along the way we learn to create blueprints for the business intelligence solution that help to connect and map out the destination of the solution. We then move on to analyze requirements, sources, and data. Finally we learn to secure the data as it is an important asset within the organization and needs to be secured efficiently and effectively.
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
Business Intelligence Cookbook: A Project Lifecycle Approach Using Oracle Technology
Credits
About the Author
Acknowledgement
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface

Adding metrics to your semantic data model


Adding metrics or calculations to your business events allows the business to start seeing what information will be available within the semantic data model.

Getting ready

Identify all the attributes within your reports that are embedded in business rules, calculations, or those belonging to the business events within your semantic data model.

How to do it...

Metrics in an organization can be defined in many different ways. Traditionally, these are thought of as Key Performance Indicators (KPIs). KPIs are normally very high-level metrics with distinct meanings which are derived from multiple metrics. It is important to understand the metrics which make up these KPIs, and record them within your semantic model. The KPIs should be driven from your business rules as defined in the Defining the business rules recipe of this chapter.

Metrics can be additive (used in a calculation) or non-additive (textual or statistical), for example, Total Invoice Amount...