26
Nov

Integrated information for policy-managed decisions

MM: It seems that as your solution evolves to include WiFi Max networks and 3G phones—such as the iPhone—these mobile Internet connected devices become points of control of an entire industry, almost like the channel changer for a TV; it’s becoming the control system for these very sophisticated applications.

MB: I think of the world of mobile devices as a great way to give freedom to people who otherwise have to be slaves to the careful tending of systems and so forth. In that sense, they’re very freeing.

If you take the kinds of monitoring and management application that people want as a business intelligence solution and simply display it to them on a mobile device, you’re not going to be doing them any favors. You’re just changing the location at which they have to do a piece of work, where they look at a screen, make a business decision and so forth. It might give them some location freedom, but there’s a lot more potential out there for the activity you have to do, from the mobile perspective—to be a higher level of monitoring. You automate the decision-making at the lower level.

Today, let’s say you’re looking at a sales margin inventory kind of report. You say, “Gee. Here’s a product that I have very low inventory of, and I happen to be selling a lot of it. Gee. It’s selling at high margins. I guess I should reorder that.”

Of course, the system should just reorder that for you.

Today, people struggle just to get all that information on one line. So they can see that the problem is actually there. The next generation of systems will be ones directed at business rules that will help people automate the solutions. It’s what we call “operational business intelligence,” where triggers and tripwires and things of that sort can notice characteristics of the data in the enterprise, and can take actions.

Then from their favorite mobile device, people can make sure that the decision-making that’s happening for them is not going off the rails for some unforeseen reason. Instead of having to switch every switch on the train, you just have to see that the trains are all moving in a reasonable way.

I think the future will lead to integrated information properly displayed for human decision-making, to support of that human decision-making.

MM: And eventually, I guess, we get into policy-managed processes that basically report back to you that, “Hey. I did this. Is that okay?”

MB: Once you have integrated information, the sky is the limit with what you can do with it. Integrating the information and presenting it in a reasonable model for people has been the bottleneck and remains the bottleneck today.

MM: Well, that sounds like a great place to conclude. Thanks very much.

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Category : Interview
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