izenda business intelligence

Hedge Against the Future with Izenda Business Intelligence

By | BI Innovation, Business Intelligence | No Comments

Buy Izenda. But seriously, make sure that your BI solution continues to meet the demands of your customers, prospects, and development teams. Listening to those people is going to be key in finding out what they’ve heard, what is becoming more common in the market, and what features your tool should have. If your current solution fails to meet these benchmarks as time goes on, it might be time to re-evaluate. Read More

Reports Can Enhance Your Product

4 Ways Reports Can Enhance Your Product

By | Ad Hoc Reporting | No Comments
The need for data analytics to support business decisions continues to grow. Reporting empowers your users when it comes to these business decisions. They give users the ability to find answers to their business questions quickly through the analytics.

Because of this, reports have a lot of value within an application. From scheduled operational reports to ad hoc reports for visual data discovery, you can use a report feature in many ways within your product. Read More

9 Questions to Ask Your Reporting Vendor When Embedding a BI Reporting Platform

By | Embedded BI
izenda supports a variety of on premise and cloud databasesThe explosion of structured and unstructured data began long before IoT made an appearance. This increase in the volume of data stored in relational database management systems, as well as NoSQL databases, has made access to it increasingly important.  Users expect the ability to create
self-service reports
on a web-based, device-independent platform.  Selecting an Embedded Reporting tool is a decision that will have consequences for years to come.  Because the reporting components will be so deeply embedded in your systems, it’s critical to pick the right one.  Here are 9 questions to ask when selecting an embedded reporting platform. Read More

MVC as a Gateway to “Pure” HTML5

By | Customer Success, Izenda Reports, Microsoft

I still remember the launch date when .NET was announced to the world. I was working at Microsoft on the Visual Studio.NET team, and it was the day we could finally start talking about all the top secret .NET technology we had been developing. At the time, websites were very simple and web apps had just started emerging. Technologies like Javascript and CSS were fragmented and incompatible twinkles in our browser vendor’s eyes. Chrome and Safari had yet to be conceived. Since HTML was still a new paradigm for most developers, Microsoft created an object-oriented framework that sheltered most of the complexity around html with a simple drag and drop interface that lets you build apps visually. I fell immediately in love.

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