I've consulted with 40+ companies on their BI strategy. The pattern is always the same: they spend millions on data infrastructure and get very little decision-making value out of it.
Here's the uncomfortable truth most BI vendors won't tell you: collecting data and building dashboards is the easy part. Getting people to actually change their decisions based on data? That's the hard part.
The BI Stack in 2026
The modern BI stack has converged around a few core components. If you're building from scratch in 2026, here's what I'd recommend:
But here's the thing: the stack matters way less than people think. I've seen companies with a perfect modern stack produce zero business impact. And I've seen companies with Excel and SQLite make data-driven decisions that transformed their business.
The Decision Gap
The gap between "we have data" and "we make better decisions" is what I call the Decision Gap. Most BI initiatives focus on the first part and ignore the second.
Bridging the gap requires three things:
1. Decision-centric design. Don't build dashboards around data sources. Build them around decisions. "What should I do about pricing?" is a better dashboard headline than "Revenue by product line."
2. Embedded analytics. Put data where decisions happen — in Slack, in the CRM, in the project management tool. Don't make people log into a separate BI platform.
3. Narrative over numbers. Data doesn't speak for itself. Every dashboard should have an interpretation and a recommended action.
My opinion: the company that wins at BI isn't the one with the most data. It's the one where every meeting starts with data, every decision references data, and every debate ends by looking at the numbers.
Common BI Mistakes
I see the same mistakes over and over:
Real-Time vs Batch
Most companies don't need real-time analytics. They think they do because vendors sell real-time as a feature. But if you're making weekly decisions, weekly data refreshes are fine.
Real-time matters for: fraud detection, operational monitoring, and customer-facing analytics. For everything else, batch is cheaper, simpler, and equally effective.
What People Ask About Business Intelligence
How do I get my team to use data more? Make it easy. If your BI tool requires SQL knowledge, you've already lost most of your audience. Invest in natural language querying and self-service dashboards.
Should I build or buy BI? Buy. Building a BI platform from scratch is almost never worth it. The existing tools are too good and too cheap.
What's the ROI of BI? Companies that are data-driven are 5-6% more productive and profitable than competitors. The data varies, but the direction is consistent.
How do you measure BI success? Adoption rate (monthly active users), time-to-insight (from question to answer), and decision impact (revenue influenced by data).
The bottom line: BI is a means to an end. The end is better, faster decisions. If your BI initiative isn't measurably improving decisions, you're just building expensive dashboards. Don't confuse activity with impact.
Going Further
Eckerson Group publishes excellent BI strategy research. Gartner's BI Magic Quadrant is worth reading for tool selection.Also worth exploring: dbt's best practices guide, Looker's analytics resources, and the Kedro documentation for data pipeline patterns.
Key Numbers
McKinsey found that data-driven organizations are 23x more likely to acquire customers and 19x more likely to be profitable. Yet only 26% of companies report having a mature data culture. The gap between aspiration and execution remains wide.
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