Raden also talks about the potential of Web 2.0 (ugh) concepts that may be of benefit to decision-makers: collaboration, tagging, etc. Although I'm not a fan of the label, I am very supportive of Web 2.0 thinking that sees social interaction and bottom-up creation of content as the key to useful tools on the web. If we can overcome the problems we currently have in getting BI software users to contribute metadata, etc., then some interesting things might happen.
My favourite quote from Neil comes at the end, though, and goes directly to the issue of the provision of support to decision-makers. He makes the point that most business people are tech-savvy, often more aware of the latest tech trends than internal IT support staff. They just won't put up with crappy support:
"Look, I'm playing a 3-D video strategy game with four people in China I don't even know, while I'm downloading data to my iPod, while I'm answering messages in Yahoo messenger. Are you going to tell me I can't have a report for three months because it has to go through QA?"
Hi, thanks for sharing this
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