Talaoui's doctoral thesis explores how BI acts as a precursor to strategy

New research shows that business Intelligence can even act as a driving force or "prime mover" in strategy formation

Business Intelligence (BI) and analytics play a key role in strategy work. However, business intelligence is not just a data mass that supplements strategy or a self-evident prop, but, together with the predictions generated by new algorithms and computational models, it can even act as a driving force or "prime mover" in strategy formation, according to Yassine Talaoui's doctoral thesis at the University of Vaasa. Yassine Talaoui  CREDIT Riikka Kalmi / University of Vaasa

Business intelligence is needed to help firms sustain their competitive advantage and understand the behavior of their employees.

– The volumes of data are of little to no value for firms unless terabytes of data particles are merged and analyzed longitudinally to uncover patterns that can be compared and juxtaposed to create digital footprints. This in turn requires the creation of mathematical models and representations of everything a firm knows about each entity in its organizational and competitive environment, says Yassine Talaoui, who will publicly defend his doctoral dissertation on Wednesday 11 May.

Talaoui's dissertation on strategic management is a reflexive exploration that seeks to subvert the meaning, assumptions, and grand narratives of scientific texts on the relationship between Business Intelligence (BI) and its associated analytics and strategy. As such, this thesis helps managers to understand the nature of BI and the role of its sophisticated technologies in the emergence of strategy.

The results show that firms that invest in BI and analytics to collect and analyze data on organizational phenomena can develop efficient feedback loops for knowledge absorption and transmission across organizational units. They can also account for strategy emergence when implementing their strategies and create a database of organizational knowledge on networks, practices, routines, and competencies.

– Such firms can also assess their assumptions regarding certain patterns and make rational predictions and strategic decisions about the future of organizational phenomena, says Talaoui.

According to the thesis, executives should address how the predictions can be incorporated into their decision-making and the strategic activity of the organization.

 – A further issue that executives must then address is how they can reveal the predictions to their organizational entities. That can be challenging, especially with predictions of behavior and routines and the implications of such choices.

Public defense

The public examination of M.Sc. Yassine Talaoui’s doctoral dissertation “Business Intelligence (BI) as Simulacra – A radical reflexive look at the BI & analytics sustenance of strategy workwill be held on Wednesday, May 11, 2022, at 5 PM at the University of Vaasa (T306).

You can also participate in the defense online: https://uwasa.zoom.us/j/61859579962?pwd=K0IvaTVkY1dXRmFlTVlobTU4N2RhUT09 Password: 166225

Professor David Boje (Aalborg University) will act as an opponent and Professor Marko Kohtamäki as custos.

Doctoral dissertation

Talaoui, Yassine (2022) Business Intelligence (BI) as Simulacra – A radical reflexive look at the BI & analytics sustenance of strategy work. Acta Wasaensia 486. Doctoral dissertation. The University of Vaasa.

Publication pdf: https://urn.fi/URN:ISBN:978-952-395-022-1