Understanding Needs to Prevent Over‑Indulging, Maintain ROI, and Build Trust One of the clearest realizations after Day 3 of #FabCon26 is that the Microsoft ecosystem — and the broader BI and AI landscape — offers an extraordinary number of tools to meet a wide range of data needs. That abundance can be empowering, but it can also be overwhelming. It is easy to imagine assembling the “best” or most advanced tool for every possible scenario: the most sophisticated analytics platform, the most powerful AI layer, the most cutting‑edge external add‑on. In many ways, FABCON makes it very clear what an “elite” architecture could look like. But the question that keeps surfacing for me is whether striving for the most elite toolset in every case is actually necessary. I’m increasingly thinking that it isn’t. Over‑indulging in tools, especially without a grounded understanding of real needs, risks fragmenting projects, stretching teams thin, and ultimately undermining organizational trust rather than strengthening it. What seems far more valuable is developing a deep understanding of how much can be achieved with the resources already available, including not just technology, but human skills, institutional knowledge, and existing workflows. FABCON has repeatedly reinforced that well‑designed semantic models, disciplined governance, and thoughtful sequencing can unlock tremendous value — often without needing to adopt everything at once. In other words, excellence is not defined by how many tools we use, but by how intentionally we use them. This perspective has direct implications for trust and ROI. When engaging teams, clients, or leadership — especially when rolling out BI and AI capabilities — trust grows when we can clearly explain why a particular path forward was chosen. That explanation should include not only what a solution enables, but also where we are intentionally saving money, reducing complexity, and avoiding unnecessary risk. Sharing the research, reasoning, and trade‑offs behind decisions helps demystify the technology and reinforces that these systems are being built with them in mind, not imposed upon them. I am also putting financial constraints in focus — and intentionally so. If the future of BI and AI is only accessible to organizations with the largest budgets and the most complex stacks, then a significant portion of the ecosystem will be left behind. FABCON has shown that thoughtful architecture, strong fundamentals, and human‑centered design can level that playing field. Smaller organizations can participate meaningfully in the BI and AI revolution by making disciplined choices, maximizing what they already have, and aligning technology decisions with real outcomes. Trust is built through clarity, restraint, and intentionality. By understanding needs first — and resisting the urge to over‑engineer — we protect ROI, empower people, and create systems that are both credible and sustainable. Microsoft FABCON
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Just some of the tools