Tuesday, September 15, 2015

SAP Design Studio Update Webinar

When: Thursday, Sept. 17, 2015 - 10 am / 1 pm EDT
Guest Presenter: Ian Mayor, Product Manager, BI, at SAP
View other webinars in this series

SAP BusinessObjects Design Studio lets you create scalable, multi-faceted visualizations for dashboards and BI apps, putting timely and actionable information at your decision makers' fingertips. SAP's Ian Mayor joins us to discuss new features in SAP Design Studio 1.5, including:
  • Parallel queries
  • Data Binding (lessening the need for sc ripting)
  • New filtering components
  • Export to Lumira

This webinar will also provide brief introductions to APOS Data Gateway and APOS Semantic Data Driver, two APOS products to help your organization in its adoption of Design Studio.

Please join us for this informative webinar.


Thursday, July 23, 2015

ICD-10 and Beyond - What Are the Key Drivers for Healthcare BI in mid-2015?

There are some consistent themes arising among our US healthcare customers. A common one is that BI platform managers and administrators in the healthcare industry are becoming more proactive in order to resolve numerous pressing issues.

There are regulatory issues (HIPAA, HITECH) and ICD-10 adoption issues There are issues with BI/EHR integration and with change management. And, of course, there is the ever-present issue of resource constraints.

One of our larger healthcare customers recently said they have managed to complete ICD-10 testing and adoption well before the October 2015 deadline, but I wonder, how is the rest of the industry doing? What is the current state of ICD-10 readiness?

In a 2014 survey on ICD-10 readiness by the American Health Information Management Association (AHIMA):
65% of respondents indicated that they could begin end-to-end testing prior to the fourth quarter of 2015, when compliance is set to begin. Of these, a majority (63%) will be ready to conduct testing in 2014, while the rest will wait until 2015.  Ten percent of all respondents currently have no plans to conduct end-to-end testing, and 17 percent don’t know when their organization will be ready for testing.
In general, the larger the healthcare organization, the more likely it is to be prepared, and to have end-to-end testing either already completed or in their plans prior to the adoption deadline. And the smaller the healthcare organization, the more likely it is to have resource constraints and knowledge limitations:
Organizations with no plans to conduct end-to-end testing often cited a lack of knowledge as the reason to forego testing (36%). Nearly half (45%) of these organizations are clinics/physician practices, possibly indicating a knowledge gap around ICD-10 implementation and testing for those organizations with fewer resources. By contrast, only two of the acute care hospitals responding to the survey had no plans for end-to-end testing.
The pyramids of Egypt are testament to what can be accomplished with a nearly unlimited supply of cheap or free labor, and larger healthcare organizations have been able to apply the necessary resources and the necessary knowledge to meet the deadline, but what about the rest of us? How can smaller healthcare organizations make the transition to ICD-10 comfortably?

When you don't have the resources, working smarter is the only practical alternative, and working smarter requires both a deeper knowledge of your deployment than is commonly available, as well as the ability to streamline and automate many of your BI workflows.

Lamont Parraway of LifeBridge Health joins us this afternoon (July 23, 2015, at 2 pm ET) for a webinar to discuss some of the biggest challenges he faces in managing the LifeBridge Health SAP BusinessObjects deployment. Attend the webinar to find out how he uses automation and deep system introspection to manage change, meet reporting needs, and reduce the load on IT resources.

View the recorded webinar...

(Note: if you register but are unable to attend, we will send you a link to a recording of the webinar, which you can then enjoy and share at your leisure.)

Wednesday, June 3, 2015

Press Release - APOS Data Gateway for Lumira

APOS today announced the release of its APOS Data Gateway product for SAP Lumira. The APOS Data Gateway is currently available in two editions:
  • APOS Data Gateway, Lumira Desktop Edition for Web Intelligence
  • APOS Data Gateway, Lumira Desktop Edition for Microsoft Access
Using these editions of the APOS Data Gateway, Lumira users can connect Lumira to alternative data sources, including SAP BusinessObjects Web Intelligence reports and Microsoft Access databases. These initial editions of the Data Gateway allow organizations to leverage the reach and business logic of Web Intelligence reports and instances, as well as the tables and queries in Microsoft Access.

Wednesday, May 20, 2015

Ongoing BARC BI Survey 2015 Preliminary Results

Preliminary data from the 2015 BARC BI Survey indicate that use of BI is increasing and becoming more pervasive in departments besides Finance and upper management:

Following rather stagnant numbers in 2014, this year reveals an upward trend across all business departments. The biggest increase can be found in production departments (from 21 percent to 53 percent). The operationalization of BI has progressed rapidly in recent years. This is particularly evident in big data analytics scenarios where ever-increasing volumes of machine and sensor data are being used in the production process – for example for optimizing production processes or predictive maintenance of machines.

The Business Application Research Center (BARC) is an enterprise software industry analyst doing research in data management, business intelligence, customer relationship management, and enterprise content management.

Participation has its benefits. If you take the survey, you will:
  • Receive a summary of the results from the full survey
  • Be entered into a draw to win one of ten $50 Amazon vouchers
  • Ensure that your experiences are included in the final analyses

Sounds like it might be worth the 20 minutes or so it will take you complete the survey.


Monday, May 4, 2015

Web Intelligence, Lumira and the Road Ahead

Our SAPinsider-hosted Q&A on April 22, 2015 was a resounding success. It featured a cast of SAP luminaries:
  • Ty Miller - Vice President, Lumira Product Management, SAP
  • Frank Prabel - Senior Director of Product Management, SAP
  • Gregory Botticchio - BI Product Manager, SAP
  • Sylvain Riboud - SAP BusinessObjects Web Intelligence and Semantic Layer Area Delivery Manager, SAP
  • Ian Booth - Director Product Management, SAP

Here's Frank Prabel on the road ahead for Web Intelligence:

SAP has a very large installed base of Web Intelligence customers and is committed to investing in the WebI future.

The investment will be partly incremental innovations such as those planned for BI 4.1 SP06 (global input controls, freehand SQL, etc.), but we are also working on key new innovations (commentary, parallel queries, or HANA direct access). Please refer to this Web Intelligence roadmap slide for additional details:





Thursday, April 16, 2015

Will Your Web Intelligence Journey Lead You into Lumira?

When: April 22, 2015 - 11:30 am EDT

APOS is pleased to present this online Q & A session in conjunction with SAP and SAPinsider. During this session, SAP Product experts will explore the latest capabilities, future roadmap, and product synergies of SAP Web Intelligence and SAP Lumira. The SAP expert panel will include:

  • Ty Miller - Vice President, Lumira Product Management, SAP
  • Frank Prabel - Senior Director of Product Management, SAP
  • Gregory Botticchio - BI Product Manager, SAP
  • Sylvain Riboud - SAP BusinessObjects Web Intelligence and Semantic Layer Area Delivery Manager, SAP
  • Ian Booth - Director Product Management, SAP

Understanding product roadmaps and capabilities is key to successful SAP BI tool selection and usage. What criteria will differentiate the application and uses of SAP BusinessObjects Web Intelligence and SAP Lumira, now and in the future?

This online interactive Q & A session will give you the opportunity to pose your questions directly to these SAP experts, learn about recent and upcoming Web Intelligence and Lumira enhancements, and explore opportunities to harmonize the use of these tools for better user engagement.

Register for this session.

Tuesday, March 24, 2015

Healthcare GRC and Social Engineering

There is some debate over whether or not the CHS, Anthem and Premera data breaches were the result of "sophisticated" attacks. The jury is still out, but cautious journalists are using quotation marks to indicate that this explanation is not universally accepted. Regardless of the sophistication of these attacks, attacks they certainly are, and healthcare organizations should be prepared for the onslaught to continue, because healthcare data breaches are so lucrative. They have to assume they are being targeted by criminal hackers for fun and profit.

Maybe former Intel CEO Andrew S. Grove's book title got it right: only the paranoid survive. Perhaps healthcare organizations could learn from their corporate antitheses, the tobacco companies, who have many enemies, but are protected by a culture of hardened security.

There is certainly room for technological solutions to help manage risk, but we must recognize that the most frequent cause of data breaches is human behavior. (According to a Verizon data breach report, about 76% of network intrusions involve weak credentials -- bad passwords.) The biggest risk to the security of your data is your people. No amount of monitoring using sophisticating technology can protect your data from bad decisions by people on your network.

Let's not forget the subtitle of Grove's book: How to Exploit the Crisis Points that Challenge Every Company and Career. The threat to data is also an opportunity to establish a culture of data governance. In such a culture, the value of data is recognized, and human behavior is shaped by this recognition.

Human behavior is a critical factor, because social engineering is how malware and other created vulnerabilities find their way into your network. It is essential that your systems have malware protection, but it is equally important that your people know what not to click.

A strong governance, risk management and compliance (GRC) culture fights social engineering with social engineering.

If healthcare organizations can learn to fend off the cyber attackers, they will be in a better position to fend off the lawyers bearing class action law suits.