In their demo video, indicee refers to "accounting's ERP black box," a not so subtle remark about the challenges facing the average business user when trying to draw knowledge from a traditional enterprise technology such as ERP software.
indicee is one of a growing number of companies that has developed methods for providing a layer of usability to existing enterprise technologies to draw intelligence. indicee uses the power of the cloud to allow the business user to do their own data mining and subsequent collaboration.
In the past few weeks we have written posts about companies offering services that allow for more flexibility in editing spreadsheets and collaborating to draw knowledge.
These include companies such as:
The indicee approach is a bit different. It provides the ability to create mashup environments so users can make reports faster without having to cut and paste information, deal with software they do not really understand or wait in line for an expert to do the heavy lifting. It handles multiple types of data and integrates with the leading ERP applications.
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Here's indicee's amusing demo showing how the application works:
The indicee service uses the computational power of the cloud to quickly provide the information the user needs.
Ahh - this is where the true power lies with cloud computing. In this regard, indicee reminds us of how data mining is becoming far more accessible than ever before. We expect this is a trend we will see more of in the coming months as more and more tasks get handled by business users without the need for IT to do the work.
indicee charges on a per user basis. They offer a 30-day free trial. A single sharing license is $69 per month and goes up from there based on storage capacity and the number of users.
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The introducing video is verycool but the product is extremely limited at the moment.
I’ve tried this one and also Good Data and they currently both so poor that I don’t see any chance for them (even for free).
Excel is still lightyears ahead of those.
Guys please try harder, for BI on demand there’s sure a market out there but we need good stuff.
@jeu I don't get it. Excel is a pain for BI, I've poked around Indicee too and I could not disagree with you more. We're definitely going to be taking a deeper look at Indicee.
It relates data extremely well and the value of being able to munge data from multiple sources and add to it over time is extremely compelling.
Our IT guys would never let us connect an Excel front end direct to the database, not too mention the data we need to report on is in multiple databases. Those databases tend to be 'normalized' in a way that makes creating any meaningful business entities out of impossible for anything but the DB guys.
I've not checked out Good Data. But I'm curious to know what you feel is lacking from these new services? They seem pretty compelling to me.
I very much agree with everything you've just written.