Email this article   Print article 


GoodData Brings Big Data To Business Users With New BI Toolset

By Kristin Bent
January 31, 2013    1:13 PM ET

GoodData unveiled Wednesday a new set of cloud-based applications it says arms organizations with the ability to analyze massive amounts of unstructured customer data and then use that data to grow their bottom line.

The two new apps, dubbed GoodSuccess Bash and GoodSupport Bash, are the latest additions to GoodData's growing portfolio of BI apps, or "Bashes," for big data analytics. Like the rest of the San Francisco-based startup's family of apps, the new GoodSuccess and GoodSupport Bashes are aimed at helping businesses better monitor and improve their customers' buying experience, explained Mike Smitheman, vice president of Marketing at GoodData.

"[GoodData] takes the world of big data that exists today, which is often a very technical conversation, and makes that data more valuable to business users," Smitheman said. "We launched this strategy, which we call 'BizData Monetization,' which is really about extracting the relevant parts of big data within an organization and putting it in the hands of business users to make business decisions."

[Related: SiSense Offers 'Big Data' Analysis Through Microsoft's Azure Cloud Platform]

GoodData last year launched BI tools for pre-sales efforts, called GoodSales and GoodMarketing, which tap into broader CRM and marketing automation systems to provide analysis on items like sales goals or the effectiveness of a new marketing campaign.

The new GoodSuccess and GoodSupport Bashes are meant for the post-sales stage, Smitheman explained. The apps, which can collect and process data from multiple data sources, perform ad-hoc analysis and generate both reports and dashboards.

The GoodSuccess Bash is used to track customers' satisfaction with a particular product, allowing users to assess engagement activity for key customer accounts, track renewal probabilities, and gauge the effectiveness of upsell and cross-sell strategies.

The GoodSupport Bash is tailored more toward customer service departments, providing analysis on items like customer satisfaction scores or the average time it takes a ticket to be resolved once submitted to a customer Helpdesk.

Smitheman said GoodData sells its BI big data products both directly and through the channel. The company also has a "Powered By" program, whereby other software OEMs integrate GoodData's software offerings into their own. Participating companies include Zendesk, a web-based help desk and customer support vendor, along with BrightIdea, a maker of cloud-based enterprise software suites.

Smitheman said GoodData also has a solution provider program, through which the company provides system integrators go-to-market and technical support. Moving forward, Smitheman said growing GoodData's channel beyond the 20 or so partners it has today will be a priority.

"There are definitely plans to grow that [number]," he told CRN. "Honestly, that's a big part of scaling this business. We can only be experts in so many things, so a big push for the platform development is how we easily enable those partners to build on the platform, use their own solutions and take them to market. It's definitely a strategic aspect of where we are going with the company."

PUBLISHED JAN. 31, 2013

To continue reading this article, please download the free CRN Tech News app for your iPad or Windows 8 device.
Related: Videos | Slide Shows | Comments

SHARE THIS ARTICLE

More Applications & OS

Recent Articles

10 Key Android Jelly Bean Traits For VARs

Android 4.2.2 Jelly Bean delivers thousands of new features, including beaming, multiple users and lock-screen widgets, and is the most powerful and versatile version yet.

Paul Maritz's 10 Commandments Of Big Data

It's not easy building a platform that will launch thousands of new big data applications and services, but that is just what Pivotal CEO Paul Maritz is doing.

CRN Exclusive: 20 Tough Big Data Questions For Pivotal's Paul Maritz

Pivotal CEO Paul Maritz spoke exclusively to CRN about how the ambitious new big data venture from EMC and VMware will tackle Amazon Web Services.

  More Slide Shows




Related Videos
Loading...