As the 2016 Rio Olympics remains fresh in my mind, I’m reminded of the Olympic motto “Citius, Altius, Fortius” (faster, higher, stronger). Since their inception in 1896, the goal of the modern Olympics has been to provide an international forum where the world’s elite athletes could come together and compete.

That is why the founder of modern Olympics, Pierre de Coubertin, said that “athletes need freedom of excess. That is why we gave them this motto … a motto for people who dare to try to break records.”

What does this have to do with business intelligence and analytics? There are lessons to be learned from the Olympic motto for those of us involved with business analytics. To be leaders and to compete at the highest level in today’s data-driven economy, organisations need to have a platform that enables top performance. Four years ago, I and my colleagues at IDC wrote about this platform in the context of in-memory computing – a capability that was then sweeping the business analytics market and has now become a pervasively accepted part of business analytics technology. Four years on we see another technology – cloud computing – have a similar impact on the evolution of business analytics capabilities.

Just a couple of years ago, spending on cloud business analytics represented a small fraction of this $40bn+ worldwide software market. However, today, we see rapid and unabated growth in the adoption of cloud business analytics solutions. IDC expects that over the next five years, the cloud business analytics portion of this worldwide software market will continue to grow five times faster than similar solutions deployed using any other methods.

This trend is not only about lowering technology and related maintenance costs, although that is one of the key decision variables. Cloud business analytics solutions provide their users with other important benefits that help in promoting more pervasive use of business intelligence and analytics technology throughout the organisation. The move to the cloud includes a better ability to address changing system scalability and performance requirements, greater opportunity to monitor software usage patterns and encourage greater utilisation of the software, an opportunity to take advantage of new, modern user interfaces, easier integration of cloud data sources, more efficient information sharing with external parties, and faster development cycles for new analytic applications.

Importantly, cloud business analytics also help by breaking data and software functionality silos that have persisted for years but are finally being addressed more pervasively, thanks to growth in the availability of cloud business analytics solutions. The barriers, technical and organisational, that exist in any sizeable organisation that has multiple business analytics technology deployments, can be more easily taken down when there is a centralised cloud solution.

As Philip Kim, senior director of big data and analytics at Under Armour, the sports clothing, accessories and connected fitness social network company, said in my discussion with him earlier this year, “our CIO’s strategy is cloud first. We need to have a very solid argument for why any particular application can’t be in the cloud. All of our mobile app data for 160 million athletes is in the cloud; most of our enterprise data is in the cloud. The cost of doing the same on-premises would be prohibitive.”

In Rio, whether you cheered for Michael Phelps, Usain Bolt or Yusra Mardini there is something we all can learn from these leaders. I propose that the business analytics community adopt the Olympic motto – in fact, I believe it has already done so by embracing in-memory processing (faster), shifting to cloud computing (higher), and with those capabilities enabling better decisions that help achieve desired goals (stronger). The Olympics should be a reminder that reinforces the need for organisations to reevaluate their existing, mostly on-premises, business analytics solutions. What is available today is a cloud business analytics technology platform that provides organisation with that needed freedom of excess to support decision-making that fosters innovation, reduces costs, and drives revenue or other desired outcomes.

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