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Mode is the modern business intelligence platform that unites data teams with business teams to build analytics that drive business outcomes.
Organizations of all types have relied on proven IBM SPSS Statistics technology to increase revenue, outmaneuver competitors, conduct research, and data driven decision-making.
Also is good subscription by email (or other methods) and great to use python to create some sophisticated analysis.
Right now, Mode can only send on a schedule... but many of our needs are warning systems (if X<=0 then send an alert to this team).
Very easy to use, set up and organize. Their charting and reporting tools are super powerful, and generate great dashboards and reports.
There is an issue with PDF exporting cutting off tables and visualizations and i have been asking for it to be fixed for almost a month now and no one has fixed it.
Mode clearly cares about the success of their users with their product and it’s shown in the features of the offer and the support that they have.
Organizing reports was hard to manage, and we had many legacy reports from past colleagues that had no context unless the user opened the report, which became time consuming.
Moreover, it's very simple to create charts and diagrams from the data to generate nice presentations / reports. By the way you have a nice integration with Python/R notebooks.
Sometimes queries fail or it takes time to refresh a dash.
All in all IBM SPSS Statistics is a super solid and reliable solution for your statistical analysis needs and is still my number one choice.
It is unreasonable to blame a program for my own limitations.
I like that you can simply click through the options in order to complete the analysis. The syntax feature is also great because you can save your work and re-use the same syntax again and again.
Horrible graphics you need to export data to work on Excel. High price and need to buy separate modules not included.
I like the visualizations. It wonderful that you can edit graphs and charts to suit your preferences, without any chances to the actual data.
The output window looks about the same as it did 10 years ago and is getting obsolete.
Fantastic experience while using SPSS and would love to continue as no other better alternative is available.
SPSS is a bit costly compared to similar software.
Rohan V.: My name is Rohan. I'm a software engineer at Lyft. And I use Mode Report just for general analytics to understand our data better. And I would give it a rating of a five. I use Mode report at Lyft for different data purposes. It might be for visualizations to better understand our data sets and to be able to get better visibility into the data that we have to understand it. At a higher level, it may be to be able to generate reports, to be able to share with other stakeholders in order for us to be able to better inform them on the data that we do have. Or it may be to even just do playground reporting. Just like being able to investigate data on an ad hoc basis to be able to figure out something on the fly. For all these different purposes, Mode report has been very helpful. I would say that the biggest thing that I like about Mode is just how easy it is to use and how nice it looks. I think the combination of both makes it a very accessible platform to be able to do anything of the use cases that I mentioned before. The fact that visually it has a lot of customization aspects to it, to be able to make it feel how you want it to. And then the fact that all the features are very self-evident, very well documented, and usually pretty intuitive to be able to look at and understand how to interact with it makes it a very engaging solver to use. The two things that I suppose has the most room for growth with regards to Mode that I dislike at the moment is the use of the collections feature and the UI for being able to navigate different data sources. For a collections, being able to organize by maybe teams or purposes is an important feature that I think should definitely be there. But I think the way that I'm navigating it feels not as fluid and not as smooth as the other aspect of Mode. It feels very ad hoc, search driven. Instead of being able to view the collections as a whole, I have to explicitly find it, which only comes from having the pre-knowledge that it exists. And for the data sources, having different engines or different data sources to be able to query data on when I'm using the Python notebooks, or being able to use the data to actually get the sets from, it tends to not have much information about its availability, about if it's actually able to be used with the table in reference. And that tends to mean that you have to have, again, a lot of pre-knowledge on the actual data that you're using to be able to know if the query engine would work for it.
Michael A.: I'm Michael. I am a market researcher and a digital transformation specialist. I work at a company size that's over 5,000 people, and I am a five out of five with IBM SPSS. I use IBM on a day-to-weekly basis for a lot of analyses, especially survey analyses, market research data. What I like most about SPSS is ease of use, its user-friendliness. It's a resemblance of Excel in functionality, except you have a lot more power and capabilities with it, and it's this familiar interface and expansiveness of value delivery that makes it a solid choice for users without as much technical specificities to deliver big insights and value. I like pretty much everything about it. It continuously improves and I'm not sure what's on the road map for it in terms of the bigger IBM picture, so I can't really say what I don't like. I'm sure they continuously roll out better things as time goes on.
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