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SAP Business Intelligence Quick Start Guide

SAP Business Intelligence Quick Start Guide

By : Vinay Singh
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SAP Business Intelligence Quick Start Guide

SAP Business Intelligence Quick Start Guide

By: Vinay Singh

Overview of this book

The SAP BusinessObjects Business Intelligence platform is a powerful reporting and analysis tool. This book is the ideal introduction to the SAP BusinessObjects Business Intelligence platform, introducing you to its data visualization, visual analytics, reporting, and dashboarding capabilities. The book starts with an overview of the BI platform and various data sources for reporting. Then, we move on to looking at data visualization, analysis, reporting, and analytics using BusinessObjects Business Intelligence tools. You will learn about the features associated with reporting, scheduling, and distribution and learn how to deploy the platform. Toward the end, you will learn about the strategies and factors that should be considered during deployment. By the end, you will be confident working with the SAP BusinessObjects Business Intelligence platform to deliver better insights for more effective decision making.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)
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1
Section 1: Introduction to SAP Business Intelligence
3
Section 2: Data Visualization, Analysis, and Reporting
10
Section 3: BI Platform Features and Deployment

SAP BusinessObjects Analysis for Microsoft PowerPoint

In Microsoft PowerPoint, analysis is available as a separate tab in the ribbon. The ribbon is part of the Microsoft Office user interface, above the main work area that presents commands and options. Similar to Microsoft Excel, some Analysis options are available in the ribbon tab under Start.

Let's see how can we create a presentation using BusinessObjects Analysis for Microsoft PowerPoint. While, in Excel, the target users are analysts and business users, in PowerPoint, its target users are, to a further extent, business users. The use cases in PowerPoint also differ from Excel; in the latter, use cases are for the analysis and distribution of analysis (without building) while in PowerPoint, they're for the analysis and distribution of analysis (workbook building). The focus of Excel sheets is analysis and reporting...

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