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About KCI

Professional Services Firm
About KCI


Analyst Tools

Analyst Tools (5)

Analyst tools and Techniques

This category provides descriptions of various analyst tools/techniques that can be used.

Monday, 27 September 2010 21:09

Enterprise Performance

Enterprise performance is at the core of management focus today. More than just financial measures, quantitative and qualitative measures are a critical element of measuring success today. Measures and measurement systems are the foundation of returning value to investors and owners of an enterprise. As a result, the improvement of performance is one of the most significant tasks managers have in today's enterprise.

A key result of performance management is achieving a lean and more flexible enterprise that returns maximum results. Management uses various methods to achieve these results. Using scorecarding and dashboards is a concise way management uses to communicate its objectives, goals, and results.

For example, financial planning and budgeting process sets objectives and goals which are the basis of a more advanced management discipline and approach. But, this process is not enough to implement an operational performance improvement system today. What is needed is an effective and efficient way to achieve strategic and enterprise level improvement. A key component to the successful deployment of a performance measurement, management and reporting approach is the use of appropriate key performance indicators (KPIs). How is it achieved? It is achieved by the skillful use of performance measures and the presentation of these measures that communicates them to all the stakeholders in the enterprise.

Key benefits of developing a performance management system using this approach is:

  • ability to evaluate the overall performance of the enterprise
  • way to identify those key measures of for the enterprise
  • means to integrate measures across the business
  • gain key insights to strategic enterprise management
  • understand and internalize business modeling for performance
  • learn to develop and apply dimensionless measures
  • distinguish between business intelligence and performance management
  • manage performance data
  • learn which parts of the business contribute most to performance
  • learn where to apply the levels of investment in operations
  • ability to effective communicate management objectives across the enterprise
Wednesday, 22 September 2010 22:53

Impact Analysis

Impact analysis uses one or more matrices to infer (that is indirectly identify) what things might be impacted by a change. So, you can show the relationship of processes to other things, such as: strategies, documents, decisions, or systems in a matrix. The processes are the rows and the columns might be documents (or any other model type). The matrix would show what processes use which documents.

Using impact analysis, for example, you have several matrices. One matrix has “Strategies” as rows and “Processes” as columns and another matrix has “Processes” as rows and “Systems” as the columns. This is accomplished by using the linkage of a “Strategies-to-Processes” and “Processes”-to-“Documents”. As an analyst, you can see which “Systems” would be impacted if a change is made to “Strategies”.

Since we are limited in how much we can spend in money and time to gather the information directly, this is technique is very useful. You could gather material that shows what strategies are related to systems but it is not obvious nor is it easy to gather. It is easy to gather the material on which processes support which strategies. This is often done as part of a strategic planning exercise. You also can find out which systems support different process since often IT has that material. With the use of inference technique, you can easily identify which strategies impact the most systems, document etc. So, when management contemplates a change in strategy, you will know how much effort it will take to align the business with the new strategy. Today, in most businesses, the assessment of impact is just a good guess often done by consultants.

Wednesday, 22 September 2010 22:48

Context Analysis

All models in the Enterprise Architecture are connected and related to other models in some manner. For example, process models can describe the use of documents, systems, databases, people, policies, procedures, other processes and so on.  All of these other models form the ‘context’ of the process or processes that you are interested in. Context, in this situation, means all the things around the process that connects to (touch) the process in some way.  Context analysis is counting the number of things that a process (or set of processes) touch in the enterprise.  If we count the number of ‘touches’ to different things, we can get sense of the complexity associated with the connections in the business.  A larger number of connections mean the relationship is complicated.  This give us an indication of how difficult it might be to make a successful change to the process.
Wednesday, 22 September 2010 22:46

Enterprise Architecture

Multiple descriptive models and the relationship of these models to each other define the structure of the organization. Descriptive models that are usually a normal part of business are: an organization model, a data model, an information model, various technology models (communication, hardware, software, and network), document, decision, and a financial model. Each model represents some basic part of an organization and a set of these models together are useful in analyzing mergers, consolidations, acquisitions, process simplification, process consolidation, impact analysis (described below) and so on. The defined set of these models together form what is commonly called Enterprise Architecture.
Wednesday, 22 September 2010 22:44

Semantic Analysis

Using words and phrases are part of normal business communications. The analysis that focuses on the way an organization uses these words and phrases is called Semantic analysis. But, the analysis does not include the definitions of these words. Semantic analysis uses the words and phrases looking for similarities and differences in how people describe their organization. These words and phrases are grouped into structures or models. A typical example is a process model. A process model is a descriptive model because it explains the organization’s actions in word and phrases (Market Product, Sell Product, Order Product, Ship Product, etc.). There are many other types of models in the organization that are descriptive not just process models. For example, an organization model (usually an organization chart), a chart of accounts, a bill of materials, a distribution network diagram (with words in them), geographic models showing where things are produced, shipped and so on, are all descriptive models. Keep in mind, even diagrams have words and phrases in them and are organized in some manner and are a model. This is what a process flow is.