Archive for February, 2008

Compelling New Dashboard Platform from Google

The Google Sites platform is now available and all of the business dashboard community should immediately explore this new option for BI dashboarding. At least for quick mockups and prototypes, although you’ll find them quite suitable for standalone business dashboard applications. The Google Sites Dashboard is part of the Google Apps offerring. That means it is available at no cost. Dashboard Spy readers - did you hear that? A free, powerful dashboarding tool from Google is now available.

Think of Google Sites as an instant collaboration and community platform. It’s very Sharepoint in it’s functionality and approach. Check out Google Apps and open an account through this link:


Now, let’s look at the functionality and screen templates available from Google Sites. Here are some screenshots of various layouts including the dashboard page type. Remember, the idea is collaboration so think wikis, blogs, sharepoint, etc.

Google Sites Dashboard

Google Sites Portal Layout

Google Sites Intranet

Tags: Google Sites Dashboard

2008 Business Intelligence Dashboard Vendor Consolidation Trends

Business intelligence vendors must be counting time in dog-years because things are happening awfully fast in this space. As we predicted here at The Dashboard Spy, 2007 saw some industry-shaking acquisitions by the major BI dashboarding players. This resulted in Microsoft, Oracle, SAP and IBM moving from owning collectively less than 25% of the market to now controlling over 65% of the space.

Let’s take a look at the famous Gartner Magic Quadrant for Business Intelligence for both January 2008 and January 2007 to see how the BI dashboard space has mutated so quickly. Excuse the scribbling I did on the Magic Quadrant diagram. The January 2008 cutoff date meant that the diagram does not show the SAP/Business Objects acquisition. Go to the Dashboards by Example post here to see an original 2008 BI Magic Quadrant chart.

Gartner BI Magic Quadrant 2008 Diagram

Between January of 2007 and Feb of 2008, we saw the following consolidations through acquisitions by large BI players:

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Enterprise Dashboard Mashups

The recent post on Dashboards By Example on creating WebSphere Portal Dashboard Mashups using Google Gadgets triggered a few discussions on whether or not the public APIs (Google Maps, etc) consumed by mashup dashboards and applicaitons will really be embraced by Enterprise IT. The hesitation expressed concerned the lack of ownership and control of the data.

For those of you that didn’t see the post, I basically ran through some of the impact that Web 2.0 has had on enterprise dashboards. In particular, I discussed how the availability of APIs from Amazon, Google, Yahoo, etc has allowed a surge of Dashboard Mashups - or dashboards that consume both data and behavior from many difference sources. Think of it as web services and SOA come true in its most user-centric way.

There was no doubt among the Dashboard Spy readership that the user experience will benefit, but some dashboarders with a traditional IT mindset seemed a little “scared” of the fact that their applications would be exposing both data and behavior that they did not own.

I point out the very informative InfoWorld article from July 28, 2006 called Enterprise Mashups: Web 2.0 Style Integration at the Browser Isn’t Just for Consumer Apps Anymore and Businesses Are Starting to Take Notice.

Enterprise mashups cover page Info World magazine

I took the liberty of “borrowing” a couple of key graphics from the article (Once a Dashboard Spy, always a Dashboard Spy, I suppose!).

First, let’s have a look at what they call “The beautiful simplicity of mashups”.

Diagram of How Enterprise Mashups Work

Here is a listing of what they identified as enterprise mashup best practices:

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Evolution of Dashboard Design Aesthetics

Using the word “Aesthetics” in conjunction with discussing business dashboards or software in general can be tricky. As most commonly used, aesthetics refers to the way something looks and whether or not it can be considered art. Let’s not go into the discussion of whether various dashboard software elements look good or not. I truly believe that most of that is basically opinion (although of course there are generally accepted prinicipals). No, what I am trying to get to is more of a common category of a visual look. An aesthetic, for example, would be the current Web 2.0 look. You know, that shiny, big-button look that you see everywhere these days. Even on business dashboards.

How does something become an aesthetic? Without delving deeply into the “what is art” discussion, I would say that an aethestic develops out of seeing common design solutions arise out of a particular time and place (virtual places are allowed - doesn’t have to be a physical location). This confluence of similar design takes hold and eventually becomes something that is purposefully strived for as a “look”. That’s when it becomes an aesthetic.

Starting a few years ago, we saw a real growth in the use of CSS for design and styling purposes. By adopting CSS-driven approaches to design elements, we started to see common looks arise. For example, the gradient background, the rounded corners, etc. This css-based look appeared on the “new” sites that were powered by the technologies that we associate with Web 2.0 - CSS/DOM/AJAX, etc. Once the Web 2.0 “look” started being shared through templates (especially on blogging platforms), this look really took off - in fact, it became rapidly emulated. Now, we have the Web 2.0 aesthetic - one that new sites want to adopt so as to be seen as Web 2.0 i.e. new and improved!

Here is a good slide presentation of what makes something look like Web 2.0:

What does Web 2.0 Look Like?

Bringing the discussion back to business intelligence dashboard design and the Web 2.0 design aesthetic, let’s take a look at a dashboard screenshot sent to me by a Dashboard Spy reader who is indeed striving for that 2.0 look.

I have it over at the Dashboards by Example site, but here is a quick screengrab of the upcoming new Dashboard/Scorecard product that’s been under wraps. Have a look and I’ll explain more in the post titled Balanced Scorecard Meets Web 2.0. Please click on the image to bring up a larger dashboard screenshot:

KPI2.0 Dashboard

Tags: Dashboard Design, Web 2.0 Aesthetic, Business Intelligence Dashboard Design