下载PDF
Fairfly Uses Sisense to Get Business Insights Without Relying on Their Technical Departments
技术
- 应用基础设施与中间件 - 数据可视化
- 分析与建模 - 预测分析
适用行业
- Software
- Professional Service
适用功能
- 商业运营
- 销售与市场营销
服务
- 系统集成
- 培训
挑战
Doron Gill, VP R&D at FairFly, needed to make day-to-day decisions based on a rapidly growing database. He wanted to combine this data with several other sources, including MixPanel and a CRM, without relying on R&D resources. After researching several BI tools, Doron realized he needed a tool that was easy to use for non-technical business managers. He was concerned that if R&D or IT had to manage data requests daily, it would not be sustainable. Doron and his colleague Ami Goldenberg were impressed by Sisense's ability to be used by business users without R&D involvement and its intuitive data visualizations.
关于客户
FairFly operates in the global aviation market, which is known for its volatile ticket prices. The company was created to help consumers by monitoring ticket prices after purchase and notifying them if the price drops, allowing for potential savings. FairFly's mission is to ensure customers get the fairest price for their flights through continuous analysis and monitoring of flight data. With a rapidly growing user base and a vast amount of flight data, FairFly needed an easy-to-use BI tool to manage, access, and visualize this data efficiently.
解决方案
FairFly chose Sisense as their BI tool because it required no R&D resources to operate. Sisense's BI solution allowed business managers to manage, access, analyze, and visualize data independently. The tool's intuitive and visually appealing dashboards were a significant factor in their decision. Sisense provided excellent customer support during the buying process, which further solidified their choice. The dashboards are refreshed automatically four times a day, and business managers can use them to track customer retention, behavior, and other critical metrics without R&D involvement.
运营影响
相关案例.
Case Study
Factor-y S.r.l. – Establishes a cost-effective, security-rich development environment with SoftLayer technology
Factor-y S.r.l., a web portal developer, was faced with the challenge of migrating its development infrastructure to a reliable cloud services provider with highly responsive technical support. The company needed a solution that would not only provide a secure and reliable environment but also support its expansion by providing resources to create and deliver innovative offerings.
Case Study
UBM plc: Taking the pulse of the business and engaging employees with a far-reaching strategic transformation
UBM, a leading global events business, was undergoing a significant strategic transformation named 'Events First'. As part of this transformation, the company was preparing to complete the largest acquisition in its history - Advanstar, a US-based events and marketing services business valued at more than USD970m. The company faced the risk of human capital flight if it was unable to effectively engage top talent with the new strategic direction. UBM needed to make significant structural, process and systems changes, uniting its previously autonomous regional businesses. The challenge was to ensure all of its employees were engaged and aligned with the new future vision.
Case Study
Darwin Ecosystem: Accelerating discovery and insight through cutting-edge big data and cognitive technologies
Darwin Ecosystem was founded with a unique vision of harnessing chaos theory mathematics to uncover previously hidden connections in unstructured data. The company’s algorithms can look at all the data generated by any source (such as news, RSS feeds and Twitter), and analyze how a specific set of concepts within that data are evolving over time. This is particularly valuable in situations such as business and competitive intelligence, social research, brand monitoring, legal discovery, risk mitigation and even law enforcement. A common problem in these areas is that a regular web search will only turn up the all-time most popular answers to a given question – but what the expert researcher is actually interested in is the moment-tomoment evolution of the data available on that topic. Darwin’s algorithm is computationally intensive, and the sources of data it correlates can be vast. To bring its benefits to a larger commercial audience, Darwin needed to find a way to make it scale.
Case Study
Wittmann EDV-Systeme launches IT monitoring services
Small and medium-sized businesses often lack the know-how and resources required for thorough IT system monitoring. Wittmann EDV-Systeme wanted to launch a solution to plug the gap – enabling it to improve its own competitiveness and that of its customers. IT landscapes are becoming ever more complex and outsourcing is gaining popularity, IT systems must nonetheless remain easy-to-use and extremely reliable at all times. Automated, round-the-clock system monitoring therefore represents an immensely valuable proposition for companies: downtime for business-critical applications can be avoided, and IT systems remain available at all times.
Case Study
Zend accelerates, simplifies PHP development
Zend Technologies, a major contributor to the PHP open source community, needed to keep pace with emerging trends such as mobility, agile development, application lifecycle management and continuous delivery. The company needed to provide the right tools to the worldwide community of PHP developers. The challenge was to support enterprise-class capabilities from end to end, including mobile, compliance and security. The pace of business required developers to show results fast across a variety of devices without compromising quality or security.
Case Study
Delivering modern data protection with cloud scale backup from Cobalt Iron and IBM
Organizations are struggling to modernize their legacy data protection environments in the face of growing demands around new infrastructure, new applications, and budget consolidation. Virtualization and modern application development processes have significantly outgrown legacy backup architectures. In response, infrastructure teams have created multiple backup solution types to handle the varying SLAs (performance, scale, cost) required by their business sponsors. However, the sheer number and variety of solutions in this uncontrolled expansion creates huge amounts of work, threatening to overwhelm the IT team in many organizations. Today, developers may add new applications and virtual server instances by the hundreds per day without accounting for the restrictions of the existing backup infrastructure. They leverage the cloud for immediate compute and storage resources, yet rarely communicate succinctly with corporate IT to ensure that the appropriate data protection services are in place.