Internal company data on websites, advertising platforms, CRM systems, shops, and accounting – plus public data sources on benchmarks, study results, and survey findings. There are countless sources of potentially strategically decisive information for companies and their goals.
Yet many companies and executives still make decisions based on incomplete information, delayed evaluations, pure experience, or gut feeling.
Business Intelligence closes this gap. It makes existing data accessible enough to produce better decisions, more efficient processes, and a clearer picture of progress toward company goals.
The benefits show up in every part of a company. Management can see target-vs-actual deviations in real time. The marketing team can compare campaigns across channels live. Accounting notices a missing entry live instead of at month-end. And so on.
The path there is less effort than most people expect. Modern self-service BI solutions make it possible to achieve first results in days rather than months.
This article shows the concrete benefits of Business Intelligence across different areas and describes how to achieve them in practice. A compact section on limitations and prerequisites rounds out the picture.
More informed and faster decisions
The most fundamental benefit of BI. Decisions are based on current, comparable data instead of assumptions, outdated reports, or individual observations.
Without BI, many decisions rely on experience and point-in-time information. That works in stable situations, but as soon as conditions change – through new channels, rising costs, or shifting customer behavior – the data foundation for quick course corrections is missing.
With BI, decisions become comparable and traceable. Target-vs-actual comparisons show whether measures are working. Trends become visible before they turn into problems. And because the numbers can be made accessible to all stakeholders, discussions are based on the same foundation instead of different interpretations.
How BI helps with decisions
This decisive benefit arises fundamentally through the following approach:
- Define concrete goals
- Identify outcome and driver metrics
- Identify processes, measures, and employees
- Make targeted adjustments
- Monitor and optimize
This is a heavily simplified version of the approach. More information on this process can be found in Developing a BI Strategy and Data and KPIs in BI.
Instead of introducing BI across the entire company at once, start with a pilot project and then expand the rollout.
Less effort for control, reports, and analysis
Creating reports without a BI solution requires regular effort. Data is spread across different tools, spreadsheets, and accounts. It has to be gathered and prepared manually before it can be shared. Decision-makers lack quick access to factor it into their decisions.
The right BI solution changes that. Reports are set up once and can be shared as a live view both internally and externally. Manual data gathering and preparation falls away, replaced by automated data transfer.
Anyone with the appropriate access and editing rights can independently access the data, run analyses, or make adjustments. No support from data engineers or IT required.
A marketing manager spent two to three hours every Monday morning gathering figures from Google Analytics, Google Ads, the newsletter tool, and the shop system. These figures were reported to management in regular meetings.
After switching to the BI solution, this manual reporting overhead disappears. Management has live insight into the data. Less time is spent on reporting and more time is available for strategic direction.
The time saved flows into the analysis and optimization of ongoing campaigns.
Approach for automating reports
- Identify areas with high reporting overhead
- Integrate the data sources for those reports into the BI solution
- Create reports and manage access rights as needed
- Share the interactive live reports with the relevant stakeholders
A central data basis instead of distributed data silos
Without centralized data infrastructure, company data is spread across departments. It sits scattered across applications, spreadsheets, and user-specific accounts – often without other departments even knowing it exists.
The BI solution changes this: all company data is instead stored in a central cloud infrastructure where it can be visualized, filtered, and shared. Admins gain insight and administrative rights over company-wide data. With the appropriate permissions, this data is accessible from any device type.
Better collaboration across the team
BI creates a shared data basis. Every department knows its own performance – and, where appropriate, other departments' performance too.
That means: marketing and sales measure their collaboration against shared metrics. Management refers to the same dashboard in team meetings that department heads also use. Results and their drivers are visible to everyone, and everyone can optimize their work – and collaboration – accordingly. Not just the person who created the report.
This also changes company culture. When results are transparent and traceable, the focus shifts from opinion to measurement. Goals become more tangible, successes become verifiable, and the need for action becomes visible early.
Making BI accessible to the whole team
Sandbank allows unlimited internal users instead of charging per seat. Give your employees access and use access management to control who can see which data.
Let department heads set up dashboards so that outcome and driver metrics are clearly visible. This gives their employees the same understanding of how they can concretely improve results.
Embed BI into recurring processes – strategy planning, team meetings, reporting.
BI has its strongest impact where numbers are not just collected but regularly discussed and translated into action.
Business Intelligence without data engineering
Self-service Business Intelligence solutions make BI accessible and intuitive. The software you already use integrates in a few clicks, spreadsheets can be uploaded, and dashboards can be created from professional templates.
Modern self-service BI solutions no longer depend on dedicated data or IT teams or on-premise infrastructure. EU cloud solutions make Business Intelligence accessible and beginner-friendly. Internal and external data can be stored, managed, and visualized centrally.
Organization, role, and access management; first dashboards in clicks; intuitive drag-and-drop operation; and unlimited internal users.
All as a single subscription. No additional employees or costly operation of infrastructure required.
Benefits of BI by department
Business Intelligence can be applied very broadly. Capturing and gaining insight into data gives management and employees alike clarity about which measures lead to success and which do not. Here are some examples of how BI can support different roles and departments.
| Department | Typical BI benefit | Example metrics |
|---|---|---|
| Management | Clear summaries across departments, real-time target-vs-actual deviations, decisions on a shared data basis | Revenue by department, plan variance, profit margin, employee satisfaction |
| Department head | Managing own team based on current results and drivers, faster identification of bottlenecks | Goal achievement, team utilization, throughput times |
| Marketing leadership | Cross-channel comparison, budget allocation based on actual performance | Channel ROI, cost per lead, campaign conversion |
| Marketing (operational) | Campaign performance without manual data gathering, real-time feedback on measures | Click rate, impressions, cost per click, organic traffic |
| Sales leadership | Pipeline transparency, forecast accuracy, data-driven coaching of individual team members | Pipeline volume, win rate, forecast vs. actual, close rate by region |
| Sales (operational) | View own activities and results, learn from top performers, identify process bottlenecks | First contacts, response time, booked appointments, quote-to-close ratio |
| Finance and controlling | Ongoing target-vs-actual comparisons instead of monthly reports, linking financial data with operational metrics | Contribution margin, liquidity runway, cost center variance, budget consumption |
| Customer service | Measure processing times and satisfaction, identify recurring issues, reduce escalations | First-contact resolution rate, average handling time, CSAT, ticket volume |
| HR | Track employee satisfaction, turnover, and capacity planning, evaluate recruiting efficiency | Turnover rate, time-to-hire, sick leave rate, training completion rate |
| Procurement | Supplier comparison, identify price fluctuations, make dependencies transparent | On-time delivery rate, purchasing volume per supplier, price trends, order frequency |
| Logistics and warehouse | Optimize inventory, identify bottlenecks early, analyze delivery times | Inventory turnover, delivery time, stock coverage, delivery error rate |
| Production | Monitor utilization and scrap, plan maintenance cycles, track quality metrics | OEE, scrap rate, machine utilization, throughput time |
| Project management | Compare budget consumption and hours per project, identify resource bottlenecks | Project margin, planned vs. actual hours, utilization per employee |
| E-commerce | Measure shop performance across channels, analyze cart value and returns | Conversion rate, average order value, return rate, customer lifetime value |
| Agency (client reporting) | Multi-tenant dashboards for clients, reduce reporting overhead, make performance transparent | Channel performance per client, budget utilization, campaign ROI |
Not every department needs to be – or should be – covered at once. It is advisable to start where the greatest positive impact is possible and then bring in additional departments step by step as success is demonstrated.
Conclusion
Business Intelligence makes company data usable. For better decisions, less reporting overhead, cross-channel transparency, and stronger collaboration across the team. The benefits can extend across all departments.
A typical BI pilot project starts like this:
- Identify one department with the greatest leverage
- Connect the most important data sources
- Build a first dashboard and embed it in existing processes
- Gather feedback, optimize, and expand to further departments upon success
Start small, prove the value, then scale.
Those who want to build the benefits systematically will find a concrete roadmap in the article Developing a BI Strategy. For a quick start without your own infrastructure, Self-Service BI provides orientation.
All Data. One system.
Contact
Paul Zehm
Founder at Sandbank