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SRC held its Extend the Reach (Extend 09) conference
last week in Broomfield, Colorado. Approximately 150 people attended
the event, which was aimed at SRC users and partners. The users with
whom I spoke were unanimously enthusiastic about SRC's offerings,
especially Alteryx.
I attended presentations by several user organizations and strategic
partners including Arrow Enterprise Computing Solutions, Buxton,
Environics Analytics and Quizno's. Arrow Electronics' Computing
Services is a $4.8 billion "middle man" for computer components such as
semi-conductors and chipsets, and a reseller of IBM, HP and Sun
Microsystems computers. It is a division of Arrow Electronics, a $16
billion Fortune 200 company. The division sells products to a large
supply chain of resellers. According to Eliot Arnold, marketing manager
of the U.S. Federal Government Division, the company's historic
business model of simply moving products from suppliers to resellers,
who then moved them to end-users, was in the process of dying. The
company needed a new strategy to keep its customer base of resellers.
"We've incubated ideas, and identified that data and intelligence are
going to save our business," he said. The company is developing
applications using Alteryx, referred to at the meeting as a "geographic
business intelligence platform," to leverage historic data about the
supply chain and provide actionable information to resellers. "Alteryx
has been a really flexible agent to allow us to maneuver off legacy
systems and on to new applications," he added. Arnold's colleague,
Anthony Borovica, finance manager for the company's IBM division,
explained further: "About 18 months ago, we implemented a mid-market
strategy to help resellers sell more product. We had 5 million
transaction records - four years worth of data. We wanted to link the
customer record to a DUNS
record [a number issued by Dun & Bradstreet to track
information about a company] so we could tell what industry the
customer was in [by linking to the Dun & Bradstreet-recorded SIC code].
Without Alteryx, we would have had to do that manually. With Alteryx,
we've been able to supply this kind of analytics to many IBM partners."
The idea was to retain reseller customers by helping them sell better,
and the analytics Arrow supplied allowed them to identify which
industry segments were their best customers. "We've got the only
database that can do this for our resellers," he concluded. The project
is in its early stages, but the company plans to roll out similar
applications for its other divisions. Borovica mentioned they haven't
even started to work with the spatial analytics in the product yet.
Environics Analytics, a Canadian-based micromarketing services company,
has a new solution based on Alteryx (press
release), according to its president, Jan Kestle. She described
Envision as a Web-based software-as-a-service (SaaS) micromarketing
application that will generate sophisticated site analytics reports.
Kestle said the tool allows users to access the highly complex
mathematical modeling required for some of the outputs in a SaaS
environment, something which has not been possible before. "A 15-minute
session can generate a lot of reporting - trade areas with distance
decay, segmentation profiles, etc. - we can offer just about anything
you'd want in a trade area analysis," she said.
I was given an Alteryx demo by SRC's Bill Flanagan, vice president of
Professional Services, and my best analogy is that Alteryx is like a
"sandbox" with shovels, buckets, little toy flags, jugs of water,
scrapers, extra sand, and anything else you might like to play with in
and around the sandbox. Instead of building sand castles, you're
building applications that link databases and spatial operations. You
build an old-fashioned flow-chart as you go, and can check results at
any point in the process. Those applications can then be served out
over the Internet using Alteryx Connect. Alteryx (free
eval) can be used by 1) end-user organizations that have personnel
who understand fairly complex spatial analytics; 2) SRC's professional
services group; or 3) third-party resellers. feast
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The
Alteryx user interface, with the application workflow
space in the center and tools on the right and left. (Click
for larger image)
I found Alteryx to be one of the more intriguing offerings in the
"business geographics space" in recent memory, and the lofty label of
"geographic business intelligence platform" does not overstate the case.
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