Dashboards by Example
    Digital Dashboard Examples & Best Practices.   From Excel Dashboards to Enterprise Business Intelligence, these dashboards contain KPIs, metrics, charts, trends and data visualizations. Learn the best practices of enterprise dashboard design by studying the work of your peers on business dashboard implementation teams around the world. Examine their digital dashboards and share your dashboard design tips in return.

For more Business Intelligence Dashboard Examples, use this link to the Dashboard Spy sitemap: Dashboard

Note: Dashboards By Example readers can get these interesting business intelligence dashboard white papers and I.T. trade magazines at no cost.

Archive for November, 2006

This is an archive of the unique and controversial resource on Enterprise Dashboards known as The Dashboard Spy blog on Enterprise Dashboards. This is Volume 1 of the dashboard screenshot collection where you will find 837 dashboard screenshots of various dashboard implementations. Included in this collection are executive dashboards, enterprise dashboards, performance dashboards, corporate dashboards, balanced scorecards, BI dashboards, business intelligence dashboard - the list goes on. What is the difference between all those terms? That's part of the fun! Start studying these screenshots and learn.

Here is an interesting way to find more enterprise dashboards to study: Click this link for a random dashboard. You'll never know what dashboard you'll see next.

BAM - Business Activity Monitoring or Business Analysis & Monitoring Dashboards

Thursday, November 2nd, 2006

BAM!! Let’s kick up business dashboards a notch! No, this is not the Emeril show, it’s the Dashbaord Spy on BAM Dashboards. Traditionally, the “A” in BAM stands for “Activity”.  Gartner, who coined the term, says it stands for Business Activity Monitoring. I happen to like that definition best. However, there seem to be other variants out there including what the creator of these dashboards call “Business Analysis & Monitoring”.

What is the difference between BAM dashboards and non-BAM dashboards? Here is an interesting comparison between BI dashboards and BAM dashboards as written by someone on wikipedia:

The term refers to the aggregation, analysis, and presentation of real time information about activities inside organizations and involving customers and partners. Although BAM systems usually use a computer dashboard display to present data, BAM is distinct from the dashboards used by Business Intelligence (BI) in that it has three distinct characteristics not found in BI tools:

  1. BAM systems are driven by business events, fed directly from integration software or from Business Process Management most software applications and do not query databases; some companies, like Syndera can read DB logs directly.
  2. BAM systems are real time where data displayed is not dependent upon a user refreshing a query or a query scheduler;
  3. BAM systems are process oriented.

The goals of Business Activity Monitoring are to provide real time information about the status and results of various operations, processes, and transactions so business decisions can be informed, quickly address problem areas, and re-position organizations to take full advantage of emerging opportunities.

Typically BAM software is capable of, for example, providing real time visibility into how business events such as orders, process queues, network failures, database overloads, etc.) affect the progress of business transactions, permitting real-time business decisions in response to system events – e.g., rescheduling business process instances that have stalled as a result of a credit reporting service slowdown, automate real-time notification of violation or pending violation of business-level policies, and provide statistics on business process performance.

Isn’t that a great piece of writing? Anyway, back to our BAM dashboard example. Below we look at a couple of dashboards from www.nrgglobal.com that show the status of the business systems powering various business functions. These screenshots show the challenge of how to roll up the various KPI levels. The first screenshot shows simply the CRM, HelpDesk, ECommerce, Email and Financials applications.

BAM Dashboard Business Function Level

The next BAM dashboard screenshot drills down and reveals the KPIs of the constituent systems that make up the beforementioned applications. The big red/green/yellow indicator lights are kind of cute, but I think overwhelming. Too much real estate taken up for my tastes.

BAM System KPI Dashboard

If you drill down into the applications, you get a display like this one for the HelpDesk application dashboard:

BAM helpdesk

If you continue to drill down and produce a report, it looks like this dashboard screenshot:

BAM graph

There is another option that lets you view status by servers. This consolidated server panel makes much better use of real estate than the big light approach before that I didn’t like.

Consolidated Server KPI dashboard view

Homework: It is difficult to buy books about BAM. The closest way is to do what I did and have Amazon show me Books that contain the phrase Business Activity Monitoring. Followup: Read this article on the state of the art of BAM dashboards.

So what or who is The Dashboard Spy? As his about page states, The Dashboard Spy is just a guy interested in the design of enterprise dashboards. He could not find any executive dashboard design source books (or even screenshots of real business dashboards) and so set about creating his own. Finally convinced to post his extensive collection of dashboard screenshots online, he was amazed to find how popular it has become. If you have a nice screenshot of a digital dashboard, balanced scorecard, or any business intelligence graphic to share, please send an email to info _at_ dashboardspy.com. Also check out The Dashboard Spy’s favorite books on business dashboards.

PS: If you find yourself part of an enterprise dashboard effort, you must study Enterprise Dashboards: Design and Best Practices for IT, the only book on actually implementing enterprise dashboards.


Threat Management Dashboards - Tracking your security risks enterprise dashboard style

Wednesday, November 1st, 2006


Tags for this Dashboard Screen: Security Dashboard, Digital Dashboards, Security Threat Metrics, Security Information Management Dashboard

Security threat management is a big field for enterprise dashboard-style user interface presentation. Here we take a look at a management dashboard from a security portal thats takes a true “At-a-glance” approach to the most significant threat possibilities facing an enterprise’s computer networks. Many of the dashboard’s “portlets” are graphically based. The text-based ones all contain drill-down links to the relevant details. Security threat metrics include: incident and exposure trends, top monitored security events, incident to event ratios, top targeted hosts, top vulnerable applications, top scan exposures, security intelligence trends (reports of threats in the wild), etc.

Security Threat Enterprise Dashboard

Homework: It’s easier to defend the fortress from outsiders and much harder to contains threats from within. Take a look at Enemy at the Water Cooler: Real-Life Stories of Insider Threats and Enterprise Security Management Countermeasures.

Tags: Security Dashboard, Executive Dashboard, Digital Dashboards, SIM Dashboard

So who is the Dashboard Spy? No one really knows, but his growing collection of enterprise dashboard screenshots has captured the imagination of the executive dashboarding community. From excel dashboards and custom-built business scorecards, to xcelsius and flex-based visualizations, the dashboard screenshots at dashboardspy.com serve both as nuggets of inspiration and warnings of what not to do on an enterprise dashboard. These hits and misses will enlighten and entertain. Technology-neutral, and always business-driven, the Dashboard Spy website is the place to go to learn about the latest enterprise dashboard packages. Check out the Dashboard Spy’s latest recommended book, Information Dashboard Design: The Effective Visual Communication of Data

If you are new to enterprise dashboards, you really must start by reading the book by Malik:

Enterprise Dashboards: Designs & Best Practices for IT

To give you a flavor of the wonderful nuggets of enterprise dashboard knowledge, here is a quote from Mr. Malik in which he talks about the SMART elements that enterprise dashboards should have:

So, let us establish the basic characteristics specific to an enterprise dashboard with a useful acronym—SMART. A dashboard must be SMART in that it contains the following underlying elements, which are essential for success: