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Technology Manager. Print Technology Manager (TM) is a web-based tool intended to allow stake and district technology specialists, ecclesiastical leaders, and Church Headquarters (CHQ) support personnel to view and manage networks and firewalls in meetinghouses and other Church buildings.

Technology Manager

Technology Manager: Displays property addresses, unit names, firewall model #, serial #, IP address, activation status, and online status of local meetinghouses.Displays DHCP & static IP addressing.Displays announcements from CHQ.Allows access to view and edit ISP information.Allows users to easily submit for any new feature requests.Shows contact information of key individuals. To access TM, visit People with the following callings should have access to this tool: Stake and district technology specialistStake and district presidencyHigh councilorsStake and district clerkFacility managers (FM)FM adminsFM mechanics Access to this tool is obtained through the Church Directory of Leaders (CDOL).

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HAAS. BusinessIntelligence.com. Kimball Group: Data Warehouse Training, Consulting, and Kimball University. What is BI? Introduction Before diving into an explanation of dashboards, it is important to have a fundamental understanding of business intelligence (BI).

What is BI?

To be sure, there are many definitions, but Dashboard Insight defines it as: Turning data into knowledge to support informed decision making. Successful BI implementations require technology to store, analyze, and present data; furthermore, it requires a certain way of thinking: the BI Philosophy. BI Technologies The following image illustrates the BI Technology Stack and depicts the relevant technologies typically needed to implement BI in an organization. The data layer consists of technologies that organizations use to store their raw data (web statistics, sales transactions, etc.). The analytics layer draws from the data layer.

The presentation layer delivers the processed data in a meaningful and intuitive way to data analysts, business analysts, and individuals at all levels within an organization. The BI Philosophy Conclusion. What is a Dashboard? No votes for this yet Introduction There are many different ideas of what a dashboard is.

What is a Dashboard?

This article will clearly define it along with other presentation tools. In my article, What is BI - A Business Intelligence Primer, I discussed the presentation layer of the business intelligence technology stack. To reiterate, there are typically four types of presentation media: dashboards, visual analysis tools, scorecards, and reports. Dashboards Dashboard Insight uses Stephen Few’s definition of a dashboard: A dashboard is a visual display of the most important information needed to achieve one or more objectives; consolidated and arranged on a single screen so the information can be monitored at a glance.

Here are the key characteristics of a dashboard: All the visualizations fit on a single computer screen — scrolling to see more violates the definition of a dashboard. Dashboards. What are ASU Dashboards?

Dashboards

A dashboard is a web interface for users that organizes and presents information in a way that is easy to read and interpret. Dashboards are meant to provide visibility into key performance indicators (KPIs) – through simple visual graphics such as gauges, charts and tables within a web browser – of information most important to the institution. The information is intended to be simple to monitor at a glance and, where appropriate, actionable. Ultimately, dashboards are created to provide a unique and powerful means to present information about any range of topics. In many respects, a reporting dashboard can be likened to a dashboard in an automobile. CSI: Business Intelligence, Business Transformation, Business Expertise.

Accounting software, ERP, electronic banking, and specialized SAAS. Articles: Designing Dashboards. By Wayne Eckerson You can read the full article below or at TDWI . How do you deliver design dashboards that end users will adopt and use? That was the gist of the insightful and humorous presentation titled “Dashboards to Die For” delivered by John Rome, Associate Vice President in the Technology Office at Arizona State University (ASU), at TDWI’s BI Executive Summit in San Diego earlier this month. ASU’s design dashboard project started with a memo from the University’s president to the CIO, Adrian Sannier, Rome’s boss, that said “Adrian, learn all you can about Dashboards and then see me.” (See figure 1.) Figure 1. The data warehouse already contained most of the data so ASU only needed a flexible development tool and design principles to put the icing on the cake. Four years later, ASU has deployed dozens of design dashboards in multiple departments and now has its own tips and techniques for delivering user-friendly and powerful design dashboards.

Figure 2. Accommodate color blindness. Sales, Leadership & Management Training. Hardcore Developer Training. Think Bigger, Plan Smarter, Act Faster. Tomorrow is built today. Easy Email Newsletters, Simple Email Marketing. Capital IQ - Our Products: Company and Market Research, Financial Analytics, Screening, and Relationship Management Tools for Financial Professionals. Www.agencyhartwell.com. Articles by McKinsey Quarterly: Online business journal of McKinsey & Company. Business Management Strategy - Corporate Strategy - Global Business Strategy. Haines Centre for Strategic Management.