The document is a Forrester Consulting study on the total economic impact of Oracle Real-Time Decisions (RTD). It includes:
- An interviewed financial services company saw a 986% ROI over 3 years from two RTD projects that improved online closure rates and follow-up campaigns. This generated over $109 million in benefits against $10 million in costs.
- The projects increased online closure rates by 1% and average deal sizes. A follow-up campaign lifted conversion rates by 1% compared to a control group. These produced over $54 million and $41 million in additional revenue respectively over 3 years.
- Costs included $260,000 in internal labor, $600,000 in
Heap provides a platform for customer data infrastructure and analytics that enables such digital intelligence, allowing organizations to gather customer behavioral data from many sources, analyze it in the platform,and automatically load the data into third-party data stores for specialized
storage, analysis and activation — helping organizations improve offerings
with speed and agility. Heap commissioned Forrester Consulting to
conduct a Total Economic Impact™ (TEI) study and examine the potential return on investment (ROI) enterprises may realize by deploying Heap.
This presentation looks at the different sources of data that will help to inform Senior Executives about the current quality of IT services overall and help make the right decisions about future IT investment priorities?
Benchmarking is the process of measuring products, services, and processes against those of organizations known to be leaders in one or more aspects of their operations.
It is a way of discovering what is the best performance being achieved – whether in a particular company, by a competitor or by an entirely different industry. This information can then be used to identify gaps in an organization’s processes in order to achieve a competitive advantage.
Benchmarking can help you identify areas, systems, or processes for improvements—either incremental improvements or dramatic improvements.
Organizations are constantly pressured to prove their value to their leadership and customers. A relative comparison to “peer groups” is often seen as useful and objective, thus benchmarking becomes an apparent alternative. Unfortunately, organizations new to benchmarking may have limited internal data for making valid comparisons. Feedback and subsequent “action” can quickly lead to the wrong results as organizations focus on improving their comparisons instead of improving their capability and consistency.
Adding to the challenge of improving results, software organizations may rely on more readily available schedule and financial data rather than KPIs for product quality and process consistency. This presentation provides measurement program lessons learned and insights to accelerate benchmark and quantification activities relevant to both new and mature measurement programs (IT Confidence 2013, Rio de Janeiro (Brazil))
Innovative Data Leveraging for Procurement AnalyticsTejari
This webinar will explore the types of problems and questions faced by procurement executives that can benefit most through the application of analytical solutions (e.g. innovation, strategic cost management, risk mitigation, etc.). In addition, we will cover the different forms of cognitive solutions that are emerging to drive real-time decision-making and predictive sourcing capabilities.
Heap provides a platform for customer data infrastructure and analytics that enables such digital intelligence, allowing organizations to gather customer behavioral data from many sources, analyze it in the platform,and automatically load the data into third-party data stores for specialized
storage, analysis and activation — helping organizations improve offerings
with speed and agility. Heap commissioned Forrester Consulting to
conduct a Total Economic Impact™ (TEI) study and examine the potential return on investment (ROI) enterprises may realize by deploying Heap.
This presentation looks at the different sources of data that will help to inform Senior Executives about the current quality of IT services overall and help make the right decisions about future IT investment priorities?
Benchmarking is the process of measuring products, services, and processes against those of organizations known to be leaders in one or more aspects of their operations.
It is a way of discovering what is the best performance being achieved – whether in a particular company, by a competitor or by an entirely different industry. This information can then be used to identify gaps in an organization’s processes in order to achieve a competitive advantage.
Benchmarking can help you identify areas, systems, or processes for improvements—either incremental improvements or dramatic improvements.
Organizations are constantly pressured to prove their value to their leadership and customers. A relative comparison to “peer groups” is often seen as useful and objective, thus benchmarking becomes an apparent alternative. Unfortunately, organizations new to benchmarking may have limited internal data for making valid comparisons. Feedback and subsequent “action” can quickly lead to the wrong results as organizations focus on improving their comparisons instead of improving their capability and consistency.
Adding to the challenge of improving results, software organizations may rely on more readily available schedule and financial data rather than KPIs for product quality and process consistency. This presentation provides measurement program lessons learned and insights to accelerate benchmark and quantification activities relevant to both new and mature measurement programs (IT Confidence 2013, Rio de Janeiro (Brazil))
Innovative Data Leveraging for Procurement AnalyticsTejari
This webinar will explore the types of problems and questions faced by procurement executives that can benefit most through the application of analytical solutions (e.g. innovation, strategic cost management, risk mitigation, etc.). In addition, we will cover the different forms of cognitive solutions that are emerging to drive real-time decision-making and predictive sourcing capabilities.
Management model for exploratory investment in IT WGroup
The ability to evaluate these new technologies in a practical environment where their technological value and impact on business and IT operations can be assessed is extremely important. Exploratory efforts should be structured and controlled similarly to other major projects and in addition should be evaluated for use in the production environment. In addition to evaluating the technical capabilities and practical application of the new technology, IT must evaluate the “fit” of the new technology in the existing service portfolio or catalog. In this article, WGroup has developed a new class of IT investment, referred to as “Exploratory,” along with a supporting management model to guide the effort through the evaluation phases and ensure a tight fit within the service catalog.
Implementation of Shared Service Centre on Financial Performance of Publicly ...s071185s
Cost reduction and efficiency are one of the company’s primary motives in implementing the shared service center, an internal outsourcing business model that centralizes back-office support functions for operating business units. This research aims to examine the effect of introducing the shared service center on productivity, as experienced by publicly listed Malaysian companies. This research has analyzed, using comparative techniques, whether substantial changes in cost structure, return on investment, efficiency, productivity, competitiveness, and profitability have occurred due to developing shared service centers. The relationship between these financial performance metrics is evaluated for five years using regression methods. Secondary data has been collected from financial reports and other publicly accessible documents such as business gadgets. The study also aims to recognize the advantages of shared service center implementation for financial results. The study has clearly indicated that SSC implementation is not always for the better, however. The increasing cost structure ratio indicates that the growth of total revenue due to SSC implementation is not as fast as the growth of operating expenses. Asset turnover is observed to be generally decreasing after SSC implementation. The graphical trending has rejected the claim that all the variables or financial performance indicators have improved after establishing SSC. The results of the ordinary least squares regression method have corroborated 4 out of 5 hypotheses – only the asset turnover ratio has revealed a relationship that is different from what has been predicted. The payback period can be included as an additional variable or determinant to further corroborate the time-specific benefits regarding future research
Supplier Procurement Analytics powered by PMSquarePM square
Supplier Procurement Analytics solution powered by PMSquare assists procurement and finance departments lower costs. The solution provides detailed analytics to identify enterprise spend, transaction costs and how to better manage your suppliers
The leader's job is to set a clear direction of what their organizations mean by "results" - Peter Drucker
Here's a partial example of how to do that with Balanced Scroecard
Aberdeen Group presentation at Spare parts 2013Copperberg
"Covergence 2012: People and Parts Linked Together To Solve Customer Issues" Aberdeen Group presentation at Spare parts 2013
More information http://www.sparepartseurope.com/
IJRET : International Journal of Research in Engineering and Technology is an international peer reviewed, online journal published by eSAT Publishing House for the enhancement of research in various disciplines of Engineering and Technology. The aim and scope of the journal is to provide an academic medium and an important reference for the advancement and dissemination of research results that support high-level learning, teaching and research in the fields of Engineering and Technology. We bring together Scientists, Academician, Field Engineers, Scholars and Students of related fields of Engineering and Technology
This paper provides lessons on how leaders can enable procurement change within their organization. It identifies seven key obstacles that tend to arise within the firm, and provides suggestions and examples on how these can be tackled.
S2 p strategic opportunity-s2p-implementation-0113-1Dr Gordon Murray
Addressing S2P (Source-to-Pay) is necessary for organisations today in order to reduce transaction costs, but that alone is not enough to drive real cost reduction and bottom line profitability. To derive the maximum benefit, organisations need to seize the opportunity created by the disruption of a S2P implementation to radically transform the way in which procurement is carried out throughout the organisation. This paper provides suggestions on how to make the most of the opportunity created by S2P implementation and makes recommendations on how to maximise the benefits,
BRIDGEi2i has frameworks to establish Analytics CoE for Supply Chain functions within organizations. Demand planning solution of BRIDGEi2i aims at using advanced statistical forecasting coupled with real-time decision engines models for demand planning, inventory optimization.
Across the corporate landscape IT functions are completing their transformation to a service-orientation. Slowly but surely, “governance” has become a core mission, if not yet the core competency, of the IT organization. Governance involves many fronts and addresses many levels – there is architectural governance, IT finance and projects governance, and of course, supplier governance. All call for new skills and new structures. WGroup collectively brings decades of hands-on experience in IT supplier management to assist our clients with the multi-supplier challenge – from building the governance structures to defining sourcing strategies to facilitating contract reviews to transition management. This states how WGroup would implement a multi-supplier governance model successfully.
Weekly tasks or assignments (Individual or Group Projects) will be.docxphilipnelson29183
Weekly tasks or assignments (Individual or Group Projects) will be due by Monday and late submissions will be assigned a late penalty in accordance with the late penalty policy found in the syllabus. NOTE: All submission posting times are based on midnight Central Time.
The design of your research should now be completed, and you are ready for the execution phase. This is a key step in the research process and should result is meaningful, measurable, and useful information that you will use later for analysis purposes. Proper execution of your research plan will play a large role in the success of your project.
For this assignment, you will continue your work on the project with the execution of the research portion of the project. Research identified in Week 2 will be conducted, results will be gathered, and a summary of the research results will be presented as part of the submission for the week. You will also provide a summary of how well the research process achieved the desired goals for the project.
The project deliverables are the following:
· Update the Information Technology Problem Analysis document title page with a new date and project name.
· Update the previously completed sections based on your instructor's feedback.
· New Content: Project Research Execution
· Research Execution
· Conduct the research identified in the research plan, and document the process as it is performed.
· Gather the research results in an organized format that clearly identifies how the results relate to the identified problem(s) and the benefits that can be expected from solutions that have been found.
· Research Results Summary
· Summarize the results of the research.
· ? Include a discussion of specific project objectives that can now be stated based upon the research. Each objective should be unique and not overlap with other objectives and each objective should be supported by information and measures identified via the research. For example, a potential problem could be a trend of reduced customer satisfaction that is correlated with reduced sales. Research concerning what causes this type of problem and research about solutions, may reveal many issues and solutions. For example, customer service could be slow due to an IT system that has a slow response time when customer service representatives access information. The online sales portal that the customers utilize (if there is one) could be too slow – it could also be confusing. It could be that it is needed to consider using Social Media as part of a new customer relations campaign that will place our company more in touch with each specific customer and allow the identification of trends in what customers want and what they think about our company.
· ? Discuss how tangible and intangible measures are related to each objective and solution. For example, reductions in labor cost due to a proposed change accomplished via a specific IT project, is a tangible measure. An increase in customer satis.
Management model for exploratory investment in IT WGroup
The ability to evaluate these new technologies in a practical environment where their technological value and impact on business and IT operations can be assessed is extremely important. Exploratory efforts should be structured and controlled similarly to other major projects and in addition should be evaluated for use in the production environment. In addition to evaluating the technical capabilities and practical application of the new technology, IT must evaluate the “fit” of the new technology in the existing service portfolio or catalog. In this article, WGroup has developed a new class of IT investment, referred to as “Exploratory,” along with a supporting management model to guide the effort through the evaluation phases and ensure a tight fit within the service catalog.
Implementation of Shared Service Centre on Financial Performance of Publicly ...s071185s
Cost reduction and efficiency are one of the company’s primary motives in implementing the shared service center, an internal outsourcing business model that centralizes back-office support functions for operating business units. This research aims to examine the effect of introducing the shared service center on productivity, as experienced by publicly listed Malaysian companies. This research has analyzed, using comparative techniques, whether substantial changes in cost structure, return on investment, efficiency, productivity, competitiveness, and profitability have occurred due to developing shared service centers. The relationship between these financial performance metrics is evaluated for five years using regression methods. Secondary data has been collected from financial reports and other publicly accessible documents such as business gadgets. The study also aims to recognize the advantages of shared service center implementation for financial results. The study has clearly indicated that SSC implementation is not always for the better, however. The increasing cost structure ratio indicates that the growth of total revenue due to SSC implementation is not as fast as the growth of operating expenses. Asset turnover is observed to be generally decreasing after SSC implementation. The graphical trending has rejected the claim that all the variables or financial performance indicators have improved after establishing SSC. The results of the ordinary least squares regression method have corroborated 4 out of 5 hypotheses – only the asset turnover ratio has revealed a relationship that is different from what has been predicted. The payback period can be included as an additional variable or determinant to further corroborate the time-specific benefits regarding future research
Supplier Procurement Analytics powered by PMSquarePM square
Supplier Procurement Analytics solution powered by PMSquare assists procurement and finance departments lower costs. The solution provides detailed analytics to identify enterprise spend, transaction costs and how to better manage your suppliers
The leader's job is to set a clear direction of what their organizations mean by "results" - Peter Drucker
Here's a partial example of how to do that with Balanced Scroecard
Aberdeen Group presentation at Spare parts 2013Copperberg
"Covergence 2012: People and Parts Linked Together To Solve Customer Issues" Aberdeen Group presentation at Spare parts 2013
More information http://www.sparepartseurope.com/
IJRET : International Journal of Research in Engineering and Technology is an international peer reviewed, online journal published by eSAT Publishing House for the enhancement of research in various disciplines of Engineering and Technology. The aim and scope of the journal is to provide an academic medium and an important reference for the advancement and dissemination of research results that support high-level learning, teaching and research in the fields of Engineering and Technology. We bring together Scientists, Academician, Field Engineers, Scholars and Students of related fields of Engineering and Technology
This paper provides lessons on how leaders can enable procurement change within their organization. It identifies seven key obstacles that tend to arise within the firm, and provides suggestions and examples on how these can be tackled.
S2 p strategic opportunity-s2p-implementation-0113-1Dr Gordon Murray
Addressing S2P (Source-to-Pay) is necessary for organisations today in order to reduce transaction costs, but that alone is not enough to drive real cost reduction and bottom line profitability. To derive the maximum benefit, organisations need to seize the opportunity created by the disruption of a S2P implementation to radically transform the way in which procurement is carried out throughout the organisation. This paper provides suggestions on how to make the most of the opportunity created by S2P implementation and makes recommendations on how to maximise the benefits,
BRIDGEi2i has frameworks to establish Analytics CoE for Supply Chain functions within organizations. Demand planning solution of BRIDGEi2i aims at using advanced statistical forecasting coupled with real-time decision engines models for demand planning, inventory optimization.
Across the corporate landscape IT functions are completing their transformation to a service-orientation. Slowly but surely, “governance” has become a core mission, if not yet the core competency, of the IT organization. Governance involves many fronts and addresses many levels – there is architectural governance, IT finance and projects governance, and of course, supplier governance. All call for new skills and new structures. WGroup collectively brings decades of hands-on experience in IT supplier management to assist our clients with the multi-supplier challenge – from building the governance structures to defining sourcing strategies to facilitating contract reviews to transition management. This states how WGroup would implement a multi-supplier governance model successfully.
Weekly tasks or assignments (Individual or Group Projects) will be.docxphilipnelson29183
Weekly tasks or assignments (Individual or Group Projects) will be due by Monday and late submissions will be assigned a late penalty in accordance with the late penalty policy found in the syllabus. NOTE: All submission posting times are based on midnight Central Time.
The design of your research should now be completed, and you are ready for the execution phase. This is a key step in the research process and should result is meaningful, measurable, and useful information that you will use later for analysis purposes. Proper execution of your research plan will play a large role in the success of your project.
For this assignment, you will continue your work on the project with the execution of the research portion of the project. Research identified in Week 2 will be conducted, results will be gathered, and a summary of the research results will be presented as part of the submission for the week. You will also provide a summary of how well the research process achieved the desired goals for the project.
The project deliverables are the following:
· Update the Information Technology Problem Analysis document title page with a new date and project name.
· Update the previously completed sections based on your instructor's feedback.
· New Content: Project Research Execution
· Research Execution
· Conduct the research identified in the research plan, and document the process as it is performed.
· Gather the research results in an organized format that clearly identifies how the results relate to the identified problem(s) and the benefits that can be expected from solutions that have been found.
· Research Results Summary
· Summarize the results of the research.
· ? Include a discussion of specific project objectives that can now be stated based upon the research. Each objective should be unique and not overlap with other objectives and each objective should be supported by information and measures identified via the research. For example, a potential problem could be a trend of reduced customer satisfaction that is correlated with reduced sales. Research concerning what causes this type of problem and research about solutions, may reveal many issues and solutions. For example, customer service could be slow due to an IT system that has a slow response time when customer service representatives access information. The online sales portal that the customers utilize (if there is one) could be too slow – it could also be confusing. It could be that it is needed to consider using Social Media as part of a new customer relations campaign that will place our company more in touch with each specific customer and allow the identification of trends in what customers want and what they think about our company.
· ? Discuss how tangible and intangible measures are related to each objective and solution. For example, reductions in labor cost due to a proposed change accomplished via a specific IT project, is a tangible measure. An increase in customer satis.
Life Cycle Costing Critical Evaluation ReportAnkur Aggarwal
Life Cycle Costing (LCC) is an important economic analysis used in the selection of alternatives that impact both pending and future costs. It compares initial investment options and identifies the least cost alternatives for a twenty year period.
TEI of Glance Networks Circular Economics BriefLiberteks
Circular economics is a useful methodology
Case studies include small business and startup success
Technology management improves the customer experience and create a sustainable brand
In this report, we will discuss the strategic performance objective of Qatar Airways which is based on five key characteristics i.e. Speed, Cost, Quality, Dependability, and Flexibility.
Nintex Workflow for Sharepoint - Return on Investment Whitepaper by Forrester...David J Rosenthal
Nintex commissioned Forrester Research to conduct aTotal
Economic Impact™ (TEI) study and examine the potential
return on investment (ROI) that enterprises may realize by
deploying Nintex’s workflow platform. The purpose of this
study is to provide readers with a framework to evaluate the
potential financial impact of using the Nintex workflow platform
within their organizations.
To better understand the benefits, costs, and risksassociated
with the implementation of the Nintex workflow platform, which we will refer to as the Platform, Forrester interviewed several
customers with multiple years of experience using Nintex Workflow and Nintex Forms. These customers recognize the value
inherent in automating processes. Their colleagues and customers are working both in offices and on mobile devices and
are spread across many countries. Content necessaryto collaborate and make business decisions is stored in many
applications across these devices. They have some well-defined processes, but the steps leading up to these processes or
to connect closely related processes are loosely defined and manual. With Nintex Workflow, customers can automate their
processes and create workflows that connect their people, processes, and content. With Nintex Forms, Nintex provides an
easy way to collect data from colleagues and customers within the workflow. Using Nintex Mobile, customers can extend
these workflows to users who are on the go. With Nintex Connectors, customers can easily integrate cloud services and lineof-business applications into their workflows.
Prior to using the Platform, these customers were mostly relying on custom code to automate processes. However, it was
difficult and time-consuming to build workflows, and many processes remained manual (e.g. paper-based,email, excel files)
while a backlog of requests for automation grew. This left customers frustrated with process inefficiencies and the inability to
automate faster. With the Platform, customers are able to automate processes in pace with demand, connect the right
people and data in each process, and easily make changes to workflows as processes change. This results in increased
productivity for end users and IT, reduced costs associated with automation, better collaboration, and higher quality of work.
For years, customers have been telling us that using Beckon to measure everything, learn fast, spend wisely and optimize in real-time has transformed their business. But, we are a data-driven company and customer anecdotes aren't enough.
We commissioned Forrester as a neutral third party to talk with our customers and quantify the benefit of using Beckon to make faster, data-informed decisions and optimize campaigns in-flight (before its too late to impact results).
Optimizing Organizational Performance by Managing Project BenefitsUMT
Too many organizations today still measure the success of a project based only on the traditional project management standards of delivering On Time, On Budget and On Scope. While these criteria are valid measures of successful project management, they are less suitable when assessing a project’s true success: its contribution to the overall organization's performance. Indeed, the ulti-mate success of a project – whether cost savings, revenue increases or customer satisfaction improvements – may not be known until years after it has been successfully delivered.
1. A Forrester Total Economic Impact™ Study Prepared For Oracle
Total Economic Impact of Oracle Real-Time Decisions
Project Director: Jonathan W. Lipsitz
Contributors: Paul Devine
July 2011
3. Forrester Consulting
Total Economic Impact Of Oracle Real-Time Decisions
Executive Summary
In April 2011, Oracle commissioned Forrester Consulting to examine the total economic impact and potential return
on investment (ROI) enterprises may realize by deploying Oracle Real-Time Decisions (RTD). The RTD platform
combines both rules and predictive analytics to power solutions for real-time enterprise decision management, enabling
real-time intelligence to be instilled into any type of business process or customer interaction. The purpose of this study
is to provide readers with a framework to evaluate the potential financial impact of RTD on their organizations.
RTD Significantly Increases Revenue By Improving Closure Rates And Transaction Values
Our interview with one existing RTD customer in the financial services industry and subsequent financial analysis
found that the company experienced the risk-adjusted ROI, costs, and benefits shown in Table 1. The company has
operations in all 50 states and more than 20,000 employees. It has completed several initiatives using RTD, including:
1. Shopping cart abandonment rate reduction — online and call center channels.
2. Post abandonment follow-up email campaign.
3. Optional program enrollment, i.e., electronic funds transfer (EFT), paperless statements, etc.
4. Retention event identification and resolution strategies.
The benefits and costs associated with the first two projects are included in the ROI analysis. The company was unable
to share metrics related to the latter two projects because they are considered trade secrets. Therefore, benefits
associated with these two projects are not included in the ROI analysis, but they are described in qualitative terms.
Table 1
Three-Year Risk-Adjusted ROI1
ROI Payback
period
Total benefits
(PV)
Total costs
(PV)
Net present
value
986% 3 Months $109,819,439 ($10,107,894) $99,711,545
Source: Forrester Research, Inc.
• Benefits. The organization we interviewed is meticulous in defining test procedures to accurately identify and
quantify the benefits derived from RTD, as well as all other initiatives. These procedures include using control
groups and blind testing of hypotheses. Following these procedures, the company identified the following
benefits:
Page 2
4. Forrester Consulting
Total Economic Impact Of Oracle Real-Time Decisions
o Increased closure rate revenue. The initial project’s objective, to reduce shopping cart abandonment,
resulted in approximately a one percentage point lift in the closure rate during the original sales cycle. This
equates to roughly $54.4 million in additional revenue over three years.
o Incremental deal size revenue. The initial project also looked at ways to increase the average financial
services product price by suggesting additional options to the basic offering. This increase applies to all new
sales, not just those attributable to the use of RTD, and is additive to the increased closure rate benefit. This
results in more than $41.1 million over the life of the study.
o Post cart abandonment follow-up campaign revenue. The second project created personalized follow-up
emails to potential customers who asked for a quote but did not buy (abandoned their cart). This resulted in
approximately a one percentage point lift in the conversion rate compared with a control group consisting of
a single, static message. This totals $56.4 million over three years.
o Greater customer retention and lifetime value (non-quantified). Through a variety of RTD initiatives,
customer retention rates were improved. This increases the total lifetime value for these customers and
reduces the cost of finding new customers to replace the losses. Due to confidentiality issues, this
information could not be provided by the interviewed customer.
o Better business intelligence (non-quantified). RTD helped the organization learn more about its own value
proposition and what motivates customers’ purchasing behaviors than could otherwise be learned. This
contributes to the process of continual improvement and identifying new profit maximizing opportunities.
o Improved customer experiences (non-quantified). RTD shows what customers really want through
observed behavior, which is more accurate than relying on what customers say. The result is greater
customer satisfaction and the ability to better differentiate in the highly regulated financial services industry.
• Costs. Some of the costs described in this study have been updated from what the interviewed organization
actually paid to better reflect what a new customer can expect. The objective is to provide readers with the latest
information in order to best understand the potential financial impact to their organizations. The company we
interviewed experienced the following costs:
o Internal implementation labor. The customer followed a process similar to Oracle’s Quick Start
methodology for RTD implementations. Each project lasted approximately six months — from inception
through refinement in pilot. The total labor costs for the two projects included in the ROI analysis are
$260,000.
o Professional services. The customer utilized a professional services company for assistance in implementing
both RTD projects, each lasting six months. These costs should decrease with subsequent projects once the
RTD infrastructure is established and in-house skills are developed. Professional service fees for individual
projects can range from $200,000 to more than $400,000. The study includes $600,000 in professional service
fees split between the two projects
o Hardware. Servers are required for development, testing, and production. For the projects included in the
cost benefit analysis, 16 blade servers were used. This totals $320,000 in purchase costs and maintenance.
Page 3
5. Forrester Consulting
Total Economic Impact Of Oracle Real-Time Decisions
o RTD licenses and support. RTD licenses can either be on a per-CPU basis or part of a Universal License
Agreement (ULA). The licenses costs depicted in this study are based on the interviewed customer’s number
of CPUs but applying current licensing costs. License acquisition and support costs total more than $9
million over three years.
o Ongoing campaign management labor. Each RTD project is run by a campaign manager permanently
assigned for the ongoing operation, analysis, and refinement of an RTD campaign. This totaled $650,000
over three years.
Figure 1
Summary Financial Results, Risk-Adjusted
$90,000,000
$70,000,000
$50,000,000
$30,000,000
$10,000,000
($10,000,000)
($3,782,100)
$10,517,896
$45,570,448
$99,711,545
Initial Year 1 Year 2 Year 3
Costs (PV) Benefits (PV) Cumulative cash flow (NPV)
Source: Forrester Research, Inc.
Factors Affecting Benefits And Costs
Table 1 illustrates the risk-adjusted financial results that were achieved by the organization. The risk-adjusted values
take into account any potential uncertainty or variance that exists in estimating the costs and benefits, which produces
more conservative estimates. The following factors may affect the financial results that an organization may experience:
• Existing revenues/size of the organization. In absolute terms, organizations with greater existing total sales
should see larger benefits from RTD. This is because an equal percentage improvement from a large base is, by
definition, greater than from a smaller base. However, smaller organizations should still expect to see ROIs
broadly in alignment with the one shown in this study.
Page 4
6. Forrester Consulting
Total Economic Impact Of Oracle Real-Time Decisions
• Complexity of decisions/problems RTD is addressing. RTD is especially valuable in high involvement decision-
making such as selecting financial service products. While simpler tasks can also benefit from RTD, the
corresponding financial benefits may not be as high.
• Number of projects utilizing RTD. The interviewed customer is using RTD in many scenarios and is always
looking for new areas to use RTD for improving financial results. Each new project brings a whole set of benefits
that improves the overall ROI. Readers are encouraged to think about all of the ways that a tool like RTD can be
deployed in their organization.
Disclosures
The reader should be aware of the following:
• The study is commissioned by Oracle and delivered by the Forrester Consulting group.
• Forrester makes no assumptions as to the potential return on investment that other organizations will receive.
Forrester strongly advises that readers should use their own estimates within the framework provided in the
report to determine the appropriateness of an investment in Oracle Real-Time Decisions.
• Oracle reviewed and provided feedback to Forrester, but Forrester maintains editorial control over the study and
its findings and does not accept changes to the study that contradict Forrester’s findings or obscure the meaning
of the study.
• The customer name for the interview was provided by Oracle.
Page 5
7. Forrester Consulting
Total Economic Impact Of Oracle Real-Time Decisions
TEI Framework And Methodology
Introduction
From the information provided in the interviews, Forrester has constructed a Total Economic Impact™ framework for
those organizations considering implementing Oracle Real-Time Decisions. The objective of the framework is to
identify the cost, benefit, flexibility, and risk factors that affect the investment decision.
Approach And Methodology
Forrester took a multistep approach to evaluate the impact that Oracle Real-Time Decisions can have on an
organization (see Figure 2). Specifically, we:
• Interviewed Oracle marketing and sales personnel and Forrester analysts to gather data relative to RTD and the
marketplace for real-time recommendation engines.
• Interviewed one organization currently using RTD to obtain data with respect to costs, benefits, and risks.
• Constructed a financial model representative of the interviews using the TEI methodology. The financial model is
populated with the cost and benefit data obtained from the interviews as applied to the composite organization.
Figure 2
TEI Approach
Constructfinancial
model using TEI
framework
Write case
study
Perform due
diligence
Conduct
customer
interviews
Source: Forrester Research, Inc.
Forrester employed four fundamental elements of TEI in modeling RTD:
1. Costs.
2. Benefits to the entire organization.
3. Flexibility.
4. Risk.
Given the increasing sophistication that enterprises have regarding ROI analyses related to IT investments, Forrester’s
TEI methodology serves the purpose of providing a complete picture of the total economic impact of purchase
decisions. Please see Appendix A for additional information on the TEI methodology.
Page 6
8. Forrester Consulting
Total Economic Impact Of Oracle Real-Time Decisions
Analysis
Interview Highlights
The customer interviewed for this study is a financial services provider. The company has operations across the United
States and more than 20,000 employees. A significant portion of revenues come via online channels.
The individual interviewed for the study is a member of the companywide technology leadership team and describes
himself as “a steward of the technology innovation process.” He said his job responsibility is to “cultivate a strategic
vision of how technology can help the business and how disruptive technologies can help achieve quantum leaps in
competitiveness. RTD has been one of the gems in my total body of work here.”
The interview uncovered the following salient points:
• RTD fundamentally altered how the organization understands its value proposition to customers. RTD has built
in/automated learning capabilities using behavioral observations.
o “RTD taught us in two months that we were sub-optimizing our sales. Customers didn’t want the lowest cost
overall; they wanted the best fit solution at the lowest cost for that fit. No rules engine would ever detect that
or fix our cultural bias.”
o “Decades of accumulated culture, processes, and training were based on the premise that we needed to be a
low cost provider. We were ecstatic, and surprised, when RTD discovered that was not entirely the case.”
• Having a decision support engine that operates in real-time is critical to achieving the financial benefits.
o “Any time there is a customer interaction, nothing beats real-time analysis and heuristics.”
o “If we tried to do everything with a traditional business rules based solution, it would be very cumbersome
and difficult to maintain.”
• RTD is very useful in formulating and testing hypotheses to improve sales and competitive differentiation.
o “We are a metrics driven organization. We can assign a value to every eCommerce widget. We are also a
testing organization; we operate under the presumption that in order to exploit hidden value we have to
constantly experiment with customer experiences. RTD make this process much more effective.”
o “Historically, we could only test one hypothesis at a time, which was very time consuming. By the time we
thought we figured it all out, the opportunity may have already passed. RTD has sped this process up
considerably, resulting in new revenue opportunities.”
o “We hypothesized some unusual use cases. That is when we brought Oracle in to explore if RTD would be of
value, and it was.”
• Properly modeling business hypotheses is critical to success, and finding the right integration partner makes this
possible.
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o “There were two or three really difficult nuts to crack. It helps to have someone around who has done this
before. That is why it was important to get the right consulting company involved.”
o “We were very careful in how we modeled the hypotheses for testing. We ran half of the quoting process in
RTD and half business as usual. Getting the number of transactions between the various control groups to
equal was a challenge. It was important to get this right since the benefits were so dramatic we had to show
that the study was well designed.”
• The company created stringent criteria for evaluating the various decision support solution options.
o “We were looking for a generalized platform for customer experience and business process optimization.”
o “RTD was the first product we encountered that had what we were looking for. We then looked at other
platforms that alleged to have similar capabilities. There were some fundamental differences that made RTD
the preferred choice.”
ƒ Rules versus data mining — “A rules only solution would not solve our business challenges.
Classic business intelligence solutions would not scale.”
ƒ Website versus all channel optimization — “We looked at several campaign management
solutions that were only relevant for e-commerce. We need something that addressed
online channels and call centers.”
ƒ CRM versus decision analytics solution — “We did not want to buy a whole CRM system
just to get the real-time decisions solution we needed. Most of the solutions we looked at
that might meet our needs were intelligence layers on top of a full blown CRM solution.”
• The customer has undertaken a series of projects, each designed to address a unique business challenge and
generate additional revenue.
o “The initial pilot looked at ways to reduce shopping cart abandonment and to improve the sales funnel. The
initial objective was to increase sales by changing how we position our offerings to potential customers.” This
was expanded from the online channel to call centers, and went live in December 2007. It also looked for
opportunities to up-sell additional services.
o “Our second project was to follow up with potential customers who register as part of the new quote
generation process but do not complete the purchase. We use information we gathered online to customize a
follow-up email inviting them to come back and continue the process. We can customize the tone, theme
and content of the email.”
o “The third project was focused on getting existing customers to enroll in services that increase loyalty and
reduce churn. These services include electronic funds transfer (EFT), paperless statements, automatic credit
card processing etc.” RTD helped identify which theme to use to improve adoption, i.e. green, cost savings,
etc.
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o “The project currently under way is designed to predict retention events and take proactive steps to reduce
customer churn.”
Framework Assumptions
Table 2 provides the model assumptions that Forrester used in this analysis.
Table 2
Model Assumptions
Ref. Metric Value
A1 Annual fully burdened compensation†
per internal resource $130,000
†
Includes salary, variable compensation, and all direct benefits (e.g., disability insurance)
Source: Forrester Research, Inc.
The discount rate used in the PV and NPV calculations is 10%, and time horizon used for the financial modeling is
three years. Organizations typically use discount rates between 8% and 16% based on their current environment.
Readers are urged to consult with their respective company’s finance department to determine the most appropriate
discount rate to use within their own organizations.
Some values in the study are rounded to the nearest dollar. Therefore, some calculation results shown in the tables may
be off by up to a few dollars.
Costs
This section describes the direct costs of implementing Oracle RTD projects and the ongoing management costs. Some
of the costs in this section reflect Forrester’s best estimates of what a new customer should expect to pay, and may not
be what the interviewed customer actually spent.
The majority of the effort and costs were incurred in the initial period and in Year 2, when the two projects were
undertaken. The incremental costs shown in Year 2 are because of an increase in scope — the second project — and not
an increase in complexity.
Internal Implementation Labor
The interviewed customer followed a process similar to Oracle’s Rapid Start methodology. For each new project, a
similar timeline was followed — three months of development followed by three months of pilot. The development
activities include formulating hypotheses, defining the interaction optimization model and rules, and defining the test
protocols, installing additional hardware and the RTD system as needed, configuring and testing RTD settings and
scripts, and integrating into other required backend systems, e.g., databases, CRM, marketing campaign systems, etc.
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Once the development effort was completed, three months was spent monitoring, analyzing, and fine-tuning the
campaign.
The interviewee said that he “always felt a well defined pilot with clearly defined targets and end criteria is essential for
success. Close collaboration between ourselves, Oracle, and our integration partner was necessary to make this
happen.”
For the initial project, three FTEs spent three months working on development. This effort was split between project
management, business analysts, and system developers. During the pilot, one business analyst spent three months
analyzing and fine-tuning the campaign criteria and testing protocols within RTD. Three months of development x
three FTEs and three months in pilot x 1 FTE, all at $10,833 per month is equal to a total internal labor cost of $130,000
for the initial project. A similar delivery process was followed for the second project in Year 2.
Table 3
Internal Implementation Labor
Ref. Metric Calculation Initial Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Total
B1 Number of months - development 3 3
B2 Number of FTEs - development 3 3
B3 Number of months - pilot 3 3
B4 Number of FTEs - pilot 1 1
B5 Monthly fully burdened cost A1/12 $10,833 $10,833
Bt Internal implementation labor ((B1*B2)+(B3*B4))*B5 $130,000 $130,000 $260,000
Source: Forrester Research, Inc.
Professional Services
The interviewed customer repeatedly said that having the right integration partner is critical to successfully
implementing RTD and creating valuable campaigns. The integration partner was used for each new project to define
the campaigns and set up the RTD system. Projects were designed so that ongoing management was fully in the hands
of internal resources, lowering ongoing operating costs.
Forrester estimates that professional service costs will be higher for the first project because of the added time for setting
up the systems and knowledge transfer.
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Table 4
Professional Services
Ref. Metric Calculation Initial Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Total
C1 Development phase $300,000 $150,000
C2 Pilot phase $100,000 $50,000
Ct Professional services C1+C2 $400,000 $200,000 $600,000
Source: Forrester Research, Inc.
Hardware
The interviewed customer set up the RTD solution in development, testing, and production environments. This can
vary from customer to customer depending on how intensively they are using RTD and the nature of their RTD license
model — per processor versus ULA. Additional hardware was added for each new project because of the need for
greater computing power and because some of the projects were for different parts of the organization and being run
completely independent.
Readers are encouraged to work with Oracle or an integration partner to properly scope out their hardware
requirements.
Table 5
Hardware
Ref. Metric Calculation Initial Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Total
D1
Number of blade servers
added
8 0 8 0
D2 Cost per blade $16,000 $16,000 $16,000 $16,000
D3 Total purchase costs D1*D2 $128,000 $0 $128,000 $0
D4 Maintenance D3[through current year]*10% $0 $12,800 $25,600 $25,600
Dt Hardware D3+D4 $128,000 $12,800 $153,600 $25,600 $320,000
Source: Forrester Research, Inc.
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RTD Licenses And Support
RTD license costs can be based on a per dual-core CPU basis or as part of an Oracle ULA. Often, a customer will begin
with a per-CPU license model and then transition to a ULA when the economics make sense. That is the model the
interviewed customer followed.
The per-CPU license cost varies based on the number of years contracted as well as volume discounts. Standard RTD
license costs are published on the Oracle website. Annual support is charged at 22% of the acquisition price. The
licenses costs presented are Forrester’s estimate of what a new customer should expect to pay in licenses for an
installation similar in size and scope to that of the interviewed customer.
Additional licenses were added in Year 2 to accommodate the new project.
Table 6
RTD Licenses And Support
Ref. Metric Calculation Initial Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Total
E1 Number of dual-core
CPUs added
E1 * 4 CPUs per
blade
32 0 32 0
E2 Licenses cost per CPU
(perpetual usage)
$92,000 $92,000 $92,000 $92,000
E3 Total license costs E1*E2 $2,944,000 $0 $2,944,000 $0
E4 Software update and
support
E3[through current
year]*22%
$647,680 $1,295,360 $1,295,360
Et RTD licenses and support E3+E5 $2,944,000 $647,680 $4,239,360 $1,295,360 $9,126,400
Source: Forrester Research, Inc.
Ongoing Campaign Management Labor
Each RTD project/campaign should be closely managed on an ongoing basis to analyze results and refine business
logic. RTD campaigns are all about continual improvement through observation, experimentation, and analysis. A
company may want to organize a centralized group with RTD skills or may choose to disperse these resources across
the various, relevant parts of the organization. This will depend more on how the reader’s organization generally
structures itself.
For the interviewee, the RTD business analysts were initially spread across the marketing organizations. Based on the
now widespread use of RTD, there is a reorganization effort under way to create a centralized RTD decision
management team.
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Table 7
Ongoing Campaign Management Labor
Ref. Metric Calculation Initial Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Total
F1 Number of FTEs 1 FTE per
campaign/project
1 2 2
F2 Annual fully burdened cost A1 $130,000 $130,000 $130,000
Ft Ongoing campaign
management labor
F1*F2 $130,000 $260,000 $260,000 $650,000
Source: Forrester Research, Inc.
Total Costs
Table 8 summarizes the costs for the implementation and ongoing campaign management for two RTD projects. The
increased costs in Year 2 are attributable to the completion of a second RTD project.
Table 8
Total Costs
Ref. Costs Initial Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Total
Bt Internal implementation labor ($130,000) ($130,000) ($260,000)
Ct Professional services ($400,000) ($200,000) ($600,000)
Dt Hardware ($128,000) ($12,800) ($153,600) ($25,600) ($320,000)
Et RTD licenses and support ($2,944,000) ($647,680) ($4,239,360) ($1,295,360) ($9,126,400)
Ft Ongoing campaign management
labor
($130,000) ($260,000) ($260,000) ($650,000)
Total ($3,602,000) ($790,480) ($4,982,960) ($1,580,960) ($10,956,400)
Source: Forrester Research, Inc.
Benefits
The first half of this section details the quantitative benefits included in the ROI. The second half describes qualitative
benefits that the interviewed customer described but could not be quantified for this study. They are not part of the ROI
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analysis. Readers should take the qualitative benefits into consideration when analyzing the total benefits their
organization may realize by utilizing the RTD solution.
Increased Closure Rate Revenue
The first benefit that the interviewed company was seeking to achieve with RTD was to improve the conversion rates
from quote requests to actually buying. Stated another way, the company wanted to reduce shopping cart
abandonment. Even a small improvement in this area could have huge impacts in terms of additional revenue. The
interviewee said, “We have a rather mature, highly tuned online platform. All of the low hanging fruit has long been
picked. So, anything approaching a 1% point lift in closure rate is considered quite spectacular. The various RTD-
driven optimizations in place have no doubt contributed to this outcome.”
The number of new sales because of RTD is directly related to the number of quote requests received — both through
the online and call center channels. Over the life of the study, the number of overall quote requests decreased year-on
year for a variety of reasons not related to RTD. The result is fewer new sales each year even though the closure rate
continued to improve because of RTD.
In the first year of the study, approximately 0.8% point more quote requests were converted into sales. This increased to
1.0% beginning in Year 2. This improvement is attributable to the self-learning capabilities of RTD as well as the
ongoing hypothesis testing and campaign refinement work completed by the decision management team. The
interviewee was not able to share the baseline closure rates because it is considered highly confidential. By example, if
the original close rate was 40.0% of all quote requests in Year 0, it would be 40.8% in Year 1, and 41.0% in years 2 and 3.
Once a new sale is made, that revenue continues year after year unless the customer leaves — customer churn. Forrester
assumed a 25% annual churn rate based on industry averages.
Readers are encouraged to think about opportunities to reduce cart abandonment or otherwise improve the sales funnel
using a tool like RTD and calculate what the potential upside can be.
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Table 9
Increase Closure Rate Revenue
Ref. Metric Calculation Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Total
G1 Percentage point closure
rate lift
0.8% 1.0% 1.0%
G2 Incremental # of new sales
from RTD
14,400 13,600 12,500
G3 Estimated churn rate Forrester assumption 25% 25% 25%
G4 Cumulative # of incremental
sales from RTD
(G4[previous year]*(1
G5))+G2[current year]
14,400 24,400 32,020
G5 Average annual sale price $740 $740 $740
Gt Improved closure rate
revenue
G4*G5 $10,656,000 $18,056,000 $23,694,800 $52,406,800
Source: Forrester Research, Inc.
Incremental Deal Size Revenue
Table 9 shows an average sale price of $740. As part of the initial project, the company also looked at way to increase the
average price. This was done by targeting additional services based on real-time observed behaviors and assumptions
based on past experiences. “If the RTD predictive models discovered that informing specific prospects about additional
options could jeopardize the sale, it wouldn’t be offered. For those customers that the closure rate would not be affected,
we would educate them on those options.”
The result was a $10 increase in the average price for all sales in Year 1, not just for those closed because of RTD. This
increased to $12 in years 2 and 3. This improvement is attributable to the self-learning and predictive modeling
capabilities of RTD, along with the ongoing efforts of the decision management team to identify new areas for
improvement.
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Table 10
Incremental Deal Size Revenue
Ref. Metric Calculation Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Total
H1
Incremental # of new
sales from RTD
G2 14,400 13,600 12,500
H2
# of new “business as
usual" sales
720,000 680,000 624,000
H3
Total annual # of new
sales
H1+H2 734,400 693,600 636,500
H4
Cumulative # of new
sales
(H4[previous year]*(1
G3))+H3[current year]
734,400 1,244,400 1,569,800
H5
Average increase in sale
price
$10 $12 $12
Ht
Incremental deal size
revenue
H4*H5 $7,344,000 $14,932,800 $18,837,600 $41,114,400
Source: Forrester Research, Inc.
Post Cart Abandonment Follow-Up Campaign Revenue
A subsequent project was looking at the potential customers who initiated the quote process online but still did not
purchase. Using information captured during the registration and quoting process, the company used RTD to identify
highly personalized content to include in follow-up emails as part of a campaign to win this business. These emails
could be highly targeted in terms of tone, theme (green vs. dollar savings), color scheme, subject line, etc.
This outbound campaign was highly successful. The company estimates that they “realized approximately a 1% point
lift from that campaign. We were able to close more business than without RTD, and that results in tens of thousands of
new sales every year.” Once again, the interviewee was not able to share the existing closure rates in order to show the
full calculation. This benefit is calculated using the improved sale price described earlier.
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Table 11
Post Cart Abandonment Follow-Up Campaign Revenue
Ref. Metric Calculation Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Total
I1 Number of additional sales 0 25,000 50,000
I2 Cumulative # of additional sales (I2[previous year]*(1
G3))+I1[current year]
0 25,000 68,750
I3 Average annual price G5+H5 $750 $752 $752
It Post cart abandonment follow-
up campaign revenue
I1*I2
$0 $18,800,000 $37,600,000 $56,400,000
Source: Forrester Research, Inc.
Total Benefits
Table 12 summarizes the total quantified benefits the interviewed company realized through RTD projects.
Table 12
Total Quantified Benefits
Ref. Benefits Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Total
Gt Improved closure rate revenue $10,656,000 $18,056,000 $23,694,800 $52,406,800
Ht Incremental sale price revenue $7,344,000 $14,932,800 $18,837,600 $41,114,400
It Post cart abandonment follow-up campaign
revenue
$18,800,000 $37,600,000 $56,400,000
Total $18,000,000 $51,788,800 $80,132,400 $149,921,200
Source: Forrester Research, Inc.
Qualitative Benefits
Greater Customer Retention And Lifetime Value
The benefits quantified earlier show the financial contribution for the first three years. In reality, these benefits will
continue as long as the individual remains a customer. A third project was undertaken to increase customer loyalty.
RTD is being used to target messages to improve enrollment customers in paperless billing, ETF, and other programs
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that have been shown to increase customer loyalty. Enrollment has improved because of RTD. “I can say with some
certainty that our retention rate has improved over the last two consecutive years. Each one-tenth of one percent
improvement in retention is worth a lot to the bottom line. If we can keep a customer for three years, we can keep them
for life.” This benefit was not included in the ROI analysis because the information is kept highly confidential by the
interviewed company.
Another benefit of improved retention is cost avoidance for having to acquire new customers. It costs the interviewed
company five times more to acquire a new customer compared with retaining an existing customer. Reducing customer
churn reduces overall customer acquisition costs.
Better Business Intelligence
As discussed earlier, the organization interviewed places a heavy value on business analysis and continual
improvement. RTD has helped in understanding the business fundamentals and customers’ wants.
“We have changed how we approach customers in terms of what we say, when we contact them, etc. Some emails
go out at different times of day based on when there is an increased likelihood of it being read. People will usually
say what they think is the correct answer, but if you observe their behavior they can’t lie. We learn a lot more
about who our customers really are and what they really want.”
RTD also allows the company to better structure customer analytics and research projects. It can easily change
weighting and factors to determine what works best. RTD also allows for multiple experiments to be run at the same
time with the ability to control for each experiment individually. These experiments can also be completed more
quickly, and the outcomes put into general use. This results in additional revenues because previous analysis methods
would often discover the opportunities too late to be monetized.
Improved Customer Experiences
The financial services industry is highly regulated, which limits the extent to which providers can compete on price.
Therefore, improving customer service is extremely important in attracting and retaining customers. Enhanced
personalization and predictive modeling makes for an overall more valuable customer experience.
“We want to easily give customers what they want when they want it. We can be predictive based on IP address,
search words, average demographics, past histories, etc. This can be used to tailor the landing page and all aspects
of the online and call center experience. The goal is to deliver relevance to each visitor. We also learn more using
RTD than we otherwise could. Without RTD I don’t know how we would do any o f this as effectively. Since sales
price and fundamental product structure is largely regulated, we focus on the long tail of customer experience as
our differentiator.”
Flexibility
Flexibility, as defined by TEI, represents an investment in additional capacity or capability that could be turned into
business benefit for some future additional investment. This provides an organization with the “right” or the ability to
engage in future initiatives but not the obligation to do so. There are multiple scenarios in which a customer might
choose to implement RTD and later realize additional uses and business opportunities. Flexibility would also be
quantified when evaluated as part of a specific project (described in more detail in Appendix A).
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The RTD platform is very flexible in terms of quickly initiating and running multiple campaigns targeted at different
areas of the value chain. It can also enable an organization to do more with fewer people resources. The interviewee said
that with RTD they can be “more efficient, faster, and more agile.” New projects can be completed faster at a lower
incremental cost.
To a large extent, the uses of RTD are only limited by the imagination for the interviewed customer. They “see a lot of
opportunity to be more strategic in the use of the platform for customer touch projects.” A project recently launched is
looking at real-time customer analysis during a phone call to identify potential upcoming retention events and make
suggestions to the agent to improve retention.
For each new project, there may be an incremental investment in licenses (depending on if a ULA is in place),
hardware, internal labor, and professional services. For the projects already completed by this RTD customer, the ROI
for each project has been significant. No future flexibility benefits have been included in the ROI analysis.
Risk
Forrester defines two types of risk associated with this analysis: implementation risk and impact risk. “Implementation
risk” is the risk that a proposed investment in RTD may deviate from the original or expected requirements, resulting in
higher costs than anticipated. “Impact risk” refers to the risk that the business or technology needs of the organization
may not be met by the investment in RTD, resulting in lower overall total benefits. The greater the uncertainty, the
wider the potential range of outcomes for cost and benefit estimates.
Quantitatively capturing investment and impact risk by directly adjusting the financial estimates results in more
meaningful and accurate estimates and a more accurate projection of the ROI. In general, risks affect costs by raising
the original estimates, and they affect benefits by reducing the original estimates. The risk-adjusted numbers should be
taken as “realistic” expectations since they represent the expected values considering risk.
The following implementation risks that affect costs are identified as part of this analysis:
• The implementation project could go longer than expected or fail due to technical complexities of integrating
RTD with other backend systems, i.e., CRM DBMS, etc. This risk can be largely mitigated by engaging with a
system integrator that has previous, relevant experiences implementing RTD.
• Understanding the Oracle licensing model is also important for avoiding cost overruns. Readers should consider
their likely usage in order to identify the best initial model and constantly be looking to determine if it makes
sense to move between a ULA and per CPU license.
The following impact risks that affect benefits are identified as part of the analysis:
• RTD involves experimentation with actual customers. In all likelihood, not all experiments will deliver the
desired results. This could result in lost revenue for a segment of customers. The interviewee described this as the
“cost of experimentation.” This risk, along with the risk of other unintended consequences being introduced into
production, can be mitigated by architecting the solution so that turning off RTD will revert the underlying
systems to their original state. That way, if the RTD goes down or needs to be taken off line, the other systems
and business logic all remain intact. This was described as a best practice by the interviewee.
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• There is also the risk of suboptimal results because of the lack of expertise to build, score, and iterate RTD
campaigns. This can be mitigated by engaging with an experienced integration partner and providing the
necessary training to internal resources.
• RTD requires a certain level of trust from employees, i.e., call center staff, if they are to follow the system
recommendations. This requires adequate training to ensure that all parties are comfortable with the system and
understand how it changes people’s daily responsibilities.
Table 13 shows the values used to adjust for risk and uncertainty in the cost and benefit estimates. The TEI model uses a
triangular distribution method to calculate risk-adjusted values. To construct the distribution, it is necessary to first
estimate the low, most likely, and high values that could occur within the current environment. The risk-adjusted value
is the mean of the distribution of those points. Readers are urged to apply their own risk ranges based on their own
degree of confidence in the cost and benefit estimates.
Table 13
Cost And Benefit Risk Adjustments
Costs Low
Most
likely
High Mean
Internal implementation labor (medium risk) 100% 100% 115% 105%
Professional services (medium risk) 100% 100% 115% 105%
Hardware (medium risk) 100% 100% 115% 105%
RTD licenses and support (medium risk) 100% 100% 115% 105%
Ongoing campaign management labor (medium risk) 100% 100% 115% 105%
Benefits Low
Most
likely
High Mean
Improved closure rate revenue (medium risk) 80% 100% 95% 92%
Incremental deal size revenue (medium risk) 80% 100% 95% 92%
Post cart abandonment follow-up campaign revenue
(medium risk)
80%
100%
95% 92%
Source: Forrester Research, Inc.
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Financial Summary
The financial results calculated in the Costs and Benefits sections can be used to determine the return on investment,
net present value, and payback period for the organization’s investment in Oracle Real-Time Decisions. The financial
results are based on rigorous testing methodologies followed by the customer. These include using control groups and
blind testing of hypotheses. These are shown in Table 14 below.
Table 14
Cash Flow — Non-Risk-Adjusted
Cash flow Original estimates
Initial Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Total Present value
Costs ($3,602,000) ($790,480) ($4,982,960) ($1,580,960) ($10,956,400) ($9,626,566)
Benefits $18,000,000 $51,788,800 $80,132,400 $149,921,200 $119,368,956
Net benefits ($3,602,000) $17,209,520 $46,805,840 $78,551,440 $138,964,800 $109,742,390
ROI 1,140%
Payback period 2 Months
Source: Forrester Research, Inc.
Table 15 below shows the risk-adjusted ROI, NPV, and payback period values. These values are determined by applying
the risk-adjustment values from Table 13 in the Risk section to the cost and benefits numbers in Tables 8 and 12.
Table 15
Cash Flow — Risk-Adjusted
Cash flow Risk-adjusted estimates
Initial Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Total Present value
Costs ($3,782,100) ($830,004) ($5,232,108) ($1,660,008) ($11,504,220) ($10,107,894)
Benefits $16,560,000 $47,645,696 $73,721,808 $137,927,504 $109,819,439
Net benefits ($3,782,100) $15,729,996 $42,413,588 $72,061,800 $126,423,284 $99,711,545
ROI 986%
Payback period 3 Months
Source: Forrester Research, Inc.
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Figure 3
Summary Financial Results, Risk-Adjusted
$90,000,000
$70,000,000
$50,000,000
$30,000,000
$10,000,000
($10,000,000)
($3,782,100)
$10,517,896
$45,570,448
$99,711,545
Initial Year 1 Year 2 Year 3
Costs (PV) Benefits (PV) Cumulative cash flow (NPV)
Source: Forrester Research, Inc.
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Oracle Real-Time Decisions: Overview
According to Oracle, Oracle’s Real-Time Decisions (RTD) platform combines both rules and predictive analytics to
power solutions for real-time enterprise decision management. It enables real-time intelligence to be instilled into any
type of business process or customer interaction. A high-performance transactional server delivers real-time decisions
and recommendations. This server automatically renders decisions within a business process and reveals insights,
creating actionable intelligence from data flowing through the process in real time.
Appendix A: Total Economic Impact™ Overview
Total Economic Impact is a methodology developed by Forrester Research that enhances a company’s technology
decision-making processes and assists vendors in communicating the value proposition of their products and services
to clients. The TEI methodology helps companies demonstrate, justify, and realize the tangible value of IT initiatives to
both senior management and other key business stakeholders.
The TEI methodology consists of four components to evaluate investment value: benefits, costs, risks, and flexibility.
Benefits
Benefits represent the value delivered to the user organization — IT and/or business units — by the proposed product
or project. Often product or project justification exercises focus just on IT cost and cost reduction, leaving little room to
analyze the effect of the technology on the entire organization. The TEI methodology and the resulting financial model
place equal weight on the measure of benefits and the measure of costs, allowing for a full examination of the effect of
the technology on the entire organization. Calculation of benefit estimates involves a clear dialogue with the user
organization to understand the specific value that is created. In addition, Forrester also requires that there be a clear line
of accountability established between the measurement and justification of benefit estimates after the project has been
completed. This ensures that benefit estimates tie back directly to the bottom line.
Costs
Costs represent the investment necessary to capture the value, or benefits, of the proposed project. IT or the business
units may incur costs in the form of fully burdened labor, subcontractors, or materials. Costs consider all the
investments and expenses necessary to deliver the proposed value. In addition, the cost category within TEI captures
any incremental costs over the existing environment for ongoing costs associated with the solution. All costs must be
tied to the benefits that are created.
Risk
Risk measures the uncertainty of benefit and cost estimates contained within the investment. Uncertainty is measured
in two ways: 1) the likelihood that the cost and benefit estimates will meet the original projections, and 2) the likelihood
that the estimates will be measured and tracked over time. TEI applies a probability density function known as
“triangular distribution” to the values entered. At minimum, three values are calculated to estimate the underlying
range around each cost and benefit.
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Flexibility
Within the TEI methodology, direct benefits represent one part of the investment value. While direct benefits can
typically be the primary way to justify a project, Forrester believes that organizations should be able to measure the
strategic value of an investment. Flexibility represents the value that can be obtained for some future additional
investment building on top of the initial investment already made. For instance, an investment in an enterprisewide
upgrade of an office productivity suite can potentially increase standardization (to increase efficiency) and reduce
licensing costs. However, an embedded collaboration feature may translate to greater worker productivity if activated.
The collaboration can only be used with additional investment in training at some future point in time. However,
having the ability to capture that benefit has a present value that can be estimated. The flexibility component of TEI
captures that value.
Appendix B: Glossary
Discount rate: The interest rate used in cash flow analysis to take into account the time value of money. Although the
Federal Reserve Bank sets a discount rate, companies often set a discount rate based on their business and investment
environment. Forrester assumes a yearly discount rate of 10% for this analysis. Organizations typically use discount
rates between 8% and 16% based on their current environment. Readers are urged to consult their respective
organization to determine the most appropriate discount rate to use in their own environment.
Net present value (NPV): The present or current value of (discounted) future net cash flows given an interest rate (the
discount rate). A positive project NPV normally indicates that the investment should be made, unless other projects
have higher NPVs.
Present value (PV): The present or current value of (discounted) cost and benefit estimates given at an interest rate
(the discount rate). The PV of costs and benefits feed into the total net present value of cash flows.
Payback period: The breakeven point for an investment. The point in time at which net benefits (benefits minus costs)
equal initial investment or cost.
Return on investment (ROI): A measure of a project’s expected return in percentage terms. ROI is calculated by
dividing net benefits (benefits minus costs) by costs.
A Note On Cash Flow Tables
The following is a note on the cash flow tables used in this study (see the example table below). The initial investment
column contains costs incurred at “time 0” or at the beginning of Year 1. Those costs are not discounted. All other cash
flows in Years 1 through 3 are discounted using the discount rate (shown in Framework Assumptions section) at the
end of the year. Present value (PV) calculations are calculated for each total cost and benefit estimate. Net present value
(NPV) calculations are not calculated until the summary tables and are the sum of the initial investment and the
discounted cash flows in each year.
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Table [Example]
Example Table
Ref. Category Calculation Initial cost Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Total
Source: Forrester Research, Inc.
Appendix C: Supplemental Material
Related Forrester Research
“Defining The Online Marketing Suite,” Forrester Research, Inc., October 17, 2007
Appendix D: Endnotes
1
Forrester risk-adjusts the summary financial metrics to take into account the potential uncertainty of the cost and
benefit estimates.
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