Book Image

IBM Cognos 8 Planning

Book Image

IBM Cognos 8 Planning

Overview of this book

Business planning is no longer just about defining goals, identifying critical issues, and then mapping out strategies. In today's dynamic and highly competitive business environment, companies with complex business models want their abstract strategies turned into discrete, executable plans. They want information from the field to reach decision makers in real-time so that they can fine-tune their plans as events unfold. IBM Cognos 8 Planning offers just that. This book provides you with everything you need to know for building planning models using IBM Cognos 8 Planning. After reading this book, you can begin your journey into model building bringing with you a perspective that comes from three of the most seasoned IBM Cognos Planning consultants in the business. In this book, you will learn how to build planning models using IBM Cognos Planning's modeling tool, Analyst. We introduce you to key objects in Analyst that let you define, store, and move data. Then we show how you can deploy the model to hundreds or thousands of users using IBM Cognos Planning's web-based tool, Contributor. We demonstrate some of the things you can do as an administrator and as a user. Finally, we show the automation tools that you can use to maintain and support your models. As we go through this, we will share with you tips and tricks and insights from our experience with real implementations.
Table of Contents (23 chapters)
IBM Cognos 8 Planning
Credits
About the Authors
Acknowledgment
About the Reviewers
Preface
5
Defining Data Structures: D-List
Index

Summary


In this chapter, we discussed the D-List in detail. We showed you several ways of importing items into a D-List. You can update the D-List manually or automatically by using the D-List update function. When you update the D-List automatically, you can modify the item names by using the Unique names function. After you create the D-List, you can insert formulas, formats, and calculation options. The program provides BiFs that perform complex calculations that span a period of time. When writing formulas, you must take the priorities in calculation into consideration. You can overcome conflicts in calculations by enabling the calculation priority option in the D-List, or by using the order of dimensions in a D-Cube. Finally, we discussed the role of the e.List as a means of providing dimensional structure for the hierarchy that will be built in Contributor.