Business Intelligence Dashboard Reporting
Excel is recognised as the most widely used reporting tool in
the world today. While many organisations have non-Excel core
reporting applications, the final presentation layer is often
Excel.
"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." Stephen Few, Information Dashboard
Design (2006)
While there are multiple definitions of what a dashboard is, or
should be, one universal theme is the concept of a single screen.
When all the information is available on one screen without
scrolling. In this way it's possible to see pattern and shared
trend between the various aspects of the business which is not
possible with traditional multi-screen layouts.
To fully leverage this effect, it's vital to have granular
control over the sizing and positioning of the tables and charts
comprising a dashboard. Charts can be sized and positioned freely,
and rows and columns can be altered in size as required. There are
even techniques to allow the simulation of variable width columns
and rows.
Even within the Excel environment, it can be a challenge to
bring all the information onto one screen, and to retain enough
visualisation within the report to make it easily digestible. Here
the ability to easily create multiple small charts with MicroCharts
has huge advantages. This enables creation of 'Visual tables',
where the headline number is shown along with graphical elements
for trend, comparison to target or exceptions. The Visual table
approach, is highly space efficient, and brings together huge
volumes of information in a manner which can be easily
assimilated.
The example below was one of the winners in our 2008 Excel
Dashboard Competition. It was developed by Jim Uden of Meridian
Surgical Partners, on Hospital Outpatient data. Click on the image
for background on the dashboard components and thought process
behind the development.

Addressing Excel's Weaknesses
Despite the inherent strengths, there are two primary drawbacks
associated with Excel for reporting and dashboarding, and the
XLCubed suite of products can address both.
1) Spreadmarts.
This is where data is either simply held in Excel, or copied from
the central systems into Excel. Here Excel becomes a database
rather than a presentation layer or calculation tool. Core data can
be easily overtyped or become out of synch with the central
repository. The ensuing problems are why Excel is so unpopular in
many IT departments.
We're huge Excel fans, but don't believe it makes for a good
database. XLCubed Excel edition extends the strengths of Excel,
adding advanced analytics, and mitigating the weaknesses by
connecting directly to server based data.
2) Report deployment.
Excel is quick and nimble for report development, but is not well
suited for large scale distribution. It doesn't handle multiple
users especially well, and the alternative is distributing a
potentially large workbook to hundreds of users each reporting
cycle.
For large deployments the Web browser is the ideal. No client
installation is required and users access a centrally updated
version of the report. With XLCubed Web edition, data-connected
reports can be built in Excel, and simply published to the web. The
web version of the reports retain an active connection to the data,
and also the dynamic nature of the in-Excel reports where
required.
Example dashboards

