What is the difference between Business Intelligence and Data Science?

Hugo Le Squeren
It’s a data world
3 min readMay 27, 2015

In our area of work and as a Business Engineer at Dataiku, people (customers, partners, network, school friends) often ask me: what is the difference between BI and Data Science?

I previously worked in a Business Intelligence environment. Today, I accompany customers in building their own Data Science Applications for BI purposes. So what’s the difference between these two data centric disciplines?

What is Business Intelligence used for?

The first step to any form of Business Intelligence consists in gathering raw data. Once the data is gathered, data engineers use what is called an ETL (Extract Transform Load) tool to manipulate, transform, and classify the data in a structured database.

These structured databases are frequently called data warehouses or data marts. Typically, data warehouses are supposed to be where business owners and decision makers can access their company data and find data-driven answers to their business problems.

Thanks to modern data visualization technologies, business analysts build summaries of the data on visual dashboards, making such and such information accessible to a greater number. This information helps business users analyze past performances and adapt future strategy in light of a specific goal. What does the data say about my latest sales performances and how can I improve them? Is the data revealing increased ROI from my advertising investments? Have we efficiently ventilated our benefits? etc.

Business Intelligence is also essential for enterprise reporting and calculating Key Performance Indicators (KPIs). Whether top level managers use KPIs to help drive company strategy or to deliver results to shareholders, investors, or to the public, Business Intelligence is essential to a company’s success — or to its failure.

When it all comes down to it, classic Business Intelligence provides a global descriptive vision of an enterprise’s activity based on past data.

Which use cases for Data Science?

Data Science is a discipline that involves a set of techniques and methodologies to build business applications from various sources of structured or unstructured data. It is a profession that requires technical, mathematical, and business skills.

Previously, we spoke about data storage systems such as data warehouses and data marts. In Data Science, another term for data storage systems is data lake. The data lake’s purpose is to store several sources of information without aggregating operations.

Companies need “data science skills” to obtain knowledge from their data (I’ve purposefully avoided using the term “Big Data” in this sentence because you do not need “Big Data” to practice Data Science). The diversity of the business applications impacted by the use of Data Science is very large.

Here are some examples of use cases (we have already work on at Dataiku):

At Dataiku we are pleased to discover more and more use cases and ideas impulsed by our users and customers on a daily basis to use Data Science for customer experiences improvements.

Some of our customers also use our software, Dataiku DSS, to improve their BI and reporting capacities. That allows me to confirm that these two disciplines are complementary and essential for companies who want to focus on business improvements using their data.

What is your point of view? Tell me about your uses of Data Science and Business Intelligence in your company in the comments or contact me via Twitter or LinkedIn.

Originally published at www.dataiku.com on May 27, 2015.

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