Teradata, a division of NCR Corporation, has announced Mango, the prestigious Spanish multinational designer, manufacturer and marketer of clothing and accessories for women, has increased the size of its enterprise data warehouse from Teradata by 100 percent to accommodate the company's rapid growth.
The added capacity will accommodate new users from the marketing, product management and logistic departments and will enable new analytical tools.
Mango started its data warehouse implementation project in 2005 to analyze information of sales, stocks, shipments and purchases throughout several business units. The primary goal of the project was to integrate historical data from different systems into a single repository refreshed daily with transactions generated at 885 stores in 80 countries.
Following the implementation, users in the product management, finance and store operations departments now have access to the data warehouse to analyze key performance indicators and improve their decision-making.
"We have just started to sell our products over the Internet in the United States and will also open shops in Los Angeles, Washington, Seattle, San Francisco and Puerto Rico.
Due to this growth in our business, a key factor is using analytic tools to simplify the integration and consolidate the data of our systems to speed preparation and analysis of management reports, and also to detect strengths and weaknesses and inspire new business ideas," said Enric Casi, general manager for Mango.
Teradata, a division of NCR Corporation, has announced Mango, the prestigious Spanish multinational designer, manufacturer and marketer of clothing and accessories for women, has increased the size of its enterprise data warehouse from Teradata by 100 percent to accommodate the company's rapid growth.
The added capacity will accommodate new users from the marketing, product management and logistic departments and will enable new analytical tools.
Mango started its data warehouse implementation project in 2005 to analyze information of sales, stocks, shipments and purchases throughout several business units. The primary goal of the project was to integrate historical data from different systems into a single repository refreshed daily with transactions generated at 885 stores in 80 countries.
Following the implementation, users in the product management, finance and store operations departments now have access to the data warehouse to analyze key performance indicators and improve their decision-making.
"We have just started to sell our products over the Internet in the United States and will also open shops in Los Angeles, Washington, Seattle, San Francisco and Puerto Rico.
Due to this growth in our business, a key factor is using analytic tools to simplify the integration and consolidate the data of our systems to speed preparation and analysis of management reports, and also to detect strengths and weaknesses and inspire new business ideas," said Enric Casi, general manager for Mango.