Concentrix can now provide you with data analysis software which can enable your decision makers to reach decisions, up to 20 times quicker than they could previously.
As a provider of CRM and business management software, Concentrix know how it can improve the efficiency and effectiveness of your business. However, difficulties in analysing the data held within the software often prevent individuals developing a true understanding of their business.
However, Concentrix are now able to provide you with a new software which can change the way your business, uses, looks at and analyses data. Tableau software is a unique data analysis software which will change your decision making process. This groundbreaking software is easy to use, cost effective and intelligent – it can help you to display data in the best way and work out the answers which you need.
Concentrix believe that the Tableau software is a highly complementary product with a powerful synergy which will significantly enhance their current offering.
There are several significant advantages of implementing Tableau including:
· The software can display information from multiple sources in various ways – enabling you to display the data in a way which you understand.
· Tableau enables you to gain answers to a series of questions using interactive visual analysis – thus subsequently reduces decision making time.
· It can enable you to quickly comprehend what is happening within your business.
Tableau will revolutionise the decision making process within your organisation, as individuals will be able to reach decisions up to twenty times quicker than previously.
Concentrix can connect Tableau to the live data within your existing CRM or Business Management Solution, this will provide you with visual data analysis and business intelligence, direct from your system, subsequently it is customised to your needs. The software will also reduce the need for information duplication as it is automatically transferred from your system. When it has been integrated with your CRM, Accounts or Business Management Software, Tableau can be used by anyone in your organisation – if you can use Excel, you can use Tableau. Due to the fact that there is such a wide spectrum of people who can use Tableau, there are two main versions of the product available to suite your requirements: Tableau Desktop and Tableau Server.
As an experienced CRM, Accounts and Business Solutions provider, located in Mountsorrel, Leicestershire, Concentrix is the perfect company to implement Tableau for your business.
For more information about Tableau, contact Concentrix on 01509 410500 or email [email protected].
The only big thing missing in Tableau is the concept of hierarchies. It sees them from multi-dimensional sources like SQL Server analysis services, but Qliktech finds those relationships automatically.
Posted by: Accounting Packages | 28 November 2008 at 05:08 AM
I disagree that the concept of heirarchies is missing from Tableau. Tableau automatically recognizes parent child relationships and automatically groups data, accordingly. For example, each “Product sub-category” is correctly displayed within its “Product Category” in any chart type.
Tableau’s “level of detail” shelf permits you to “drill down” data across any dimension, not just a defined “hierarchy” of related dimensions. For examaple, you can quickly and easily drill down from a Product Category to Shipment Mode.
In fact, a big advantage of Tableau is where the data itself doesn’t provide a hierarchy or “groupings” of data that you want for analysis and presentation, for example next year’s sales territories. With “Ad-hoc Groups”, Tableau lets you create new hierarchies and new defined categories, on the fly.
Whether working at aggregated levels or individual detail records, a powerful strength of Tableau is how it handles the dimensionality of the data.
This is why Concentrix really like Tableau - it is genuinely powerful, easy to use, flexible software with applications throughout industry. It also offers exceptional value for money.
Posted by: Fiona | 12 December 2008 at 12:56 PM