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Why Excel Still Matters in Analytics — and How It Should Evolve

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 For decades, Excel has been the backbone of business analysis. Finance teams forecast revenue in it. Operations teams track performance with it. Analysts test assumptions, model scenarios, and validate numbers inside spreadsheets before those numbers ever reach a dashboard. Despite the rise of modern BI tools, Excel has not disappeared. In many organizations, it remains the starting point, decision layer, and final checkpoint . The real challenge today is not replacing Excel. It is figuring out how to extend Excel without breaking the way people actually work . This is where Excel-first analytics approaches, such as those built around platforms like XLAnalysis , become relevant—not as replacements, but as evolutions. The Reality of How Analysts Work Most analytics platforms assume a clean slate: raw data goes in, dashboards come out. In reality, analysis rarely works that way. Typical analyst workflows look more like this: Data is exported from multiple systems Logic is...

Why Context Is the Missing Layer in Modern AI Systems

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 Artificial intelligence has advanced quickly over the last decade. Models can summarize text, generate content, classify data, and even hold conversations. Yet despite this progress, many businesses experience the same frustration: AI outputs that look correct on the surface but fall apart when applied to real decisions. The issue is not intelligence. The issue is context . Most AI systems still operate in isolation from the information that actually matters inside an organization—its documents, workflows, assumptions, historical decisions, and domain-specific logic. Without this grounding, AI becomes a guessing engine rather than a decision-support system. This article explains why contextual understanding is essential, where traditional AI systems fail, and how contextual AI changes the way organizations extract value from their data. The Real Problem With “Smart” AI When companies adopt AI, they often expect it to “understand” their business. In practice, most systems are...