Book Image

MicroStrategy Quick Start Guide

By : Fernando Carlos Rivero Esqueda
Book Image

MicroStrategy Quick Start Guide

By: Fernando Carlos Rivero Esqueda

Overview of this book

MicroStrategy is an enterprise business intelligence application. It turns data into reports for making and executing key organization decisions. This book shows you how to implement Business Intelligence (BI) with MicroStrategy. It takes you from setting up and configuring MicroStrategy to security and administration. The book starts by detailing the different components of the MicroStrategy platform, and the key concepts of Metadata and Project Source. You will then install and configure MicroStrategy and lay down the foundations for building MicroStrategy BI solutions. By learning about objects and different object types, you will develop a strong understanding of the MicroStrategy Schema and Public Objects. With these MicroStrategy objects, you will enhance and scale your BI and Analytics solutions. Finally, you will learn about the administration, security, and monitoring of your BI solution.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
Title Page
Copyright and Credits
Dedication
Packt Upsell
Foreword
Contributors
Preface
Index

MicroStrategy Administrative Clients


The last section of this book will briefly describe three MicroStrategy tools for Administration and Project Maintenance: Command Manager, Object Manager, and Integrity Manager.

Note

There are additional tools to help Administrators to configure, monitor, and automate the MicroStrategy platform, such as Enterprise Manager, Operations Manager, and System Manager. However, these are out of the scope of this book. For information about these, you can search in the MicroStrategy Community Portal: https://community.microstrategy.com.

Migrating your Objects – Object Manager

A MicroStrategy Project lifecycle usually starts from gathering requirements from the business, investigating whether the organization's source systems have data that could satisfy such requirements, and then moving on to designing a data model that supports them, building a database schema to host the data from the source systems, and finally developing MicroStrategy objects from that schema...