GoodData ROI case study: GED Testing Service

The GED Testing Service, a branch of Pearson, deployed the GoodData analytics suite to overhaul their data model and provide state education departments with analytics dashboards and real-time data access. The company switched from a yearly report to real-time analytics dashboards for states to track tester performance and data, increasing employee productivity and eliminating costs from the old annual report process.
ROI: 63%
Payback: 2.2 year
Average annual benefit: $566,250

Have a specific question? Query our research catalogue with the Nucleus AI Tool.

Learn more about Nucleus Research’s ROI case study approach here.

Gain the knowledge you need to effectively develop and deliver a financial business case at ROIUniversity.com.

RELATED RESEARCH

    First half 2018 market survey

    Nucleus conducted a survey of 130 technology users in the human capital management (HCM), customer relationship management (CRM), enterprise resource management (ERP), supply chain management…

    Contrast Security Value Drivers

    As Cyber Security concerns increase, the sales cycle for cyber security solutions is focused on the concerns of a potential attack, and the technology used…

    Microsoft Business Central Update

    Microsoft recently announced the October ’18 release of Dynamics 365 Business Central. This release delivers the full functionality of the Dynamics NAV on-premise platform to…

    Anatomy of a decision: Alteryx Platform

    In examining the experiences of Alteryx platform users, Nucleus determined that usability, analytics functionality, task scheduling and automation capability, and integration with common third-party data…

    Ceridian HCM value drivers

    As human capital management (HCM) vendors and decision makers have accelerated their move to the cloud, there’s still confusion about what cloud should actually mean…

    NexJ ROI case study: Anonymous

    A global financial services firm deployed NexJ to replace its aging Oracle Siebel applications, which were no longer effective tools for the sales team. Nucleus…