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chetansehgal
Creator
Creator

Can someone explain the difference between Qlik Sense and QlikView?

I do not understand why this tool was launched in parallel to QlikView in the name Self BI.

34 Replies
vlad_komarov
Partner - Specialist III
Partner - Specialist III

I am not sure why you think Qlik will decommission QV...

As far as I know, QV v. 13 will be released next year. Qlik is not planning to add a lot of new features to QV, but they will be releasing bug fixes and "modifications" for several more years.

And will support existing versions for few more years after that... 

It's obvious that QS is being pushed as a main platform, but QS and QV is sharing an engine now, so it will not be very difficult to support both systems in parallel for a while, IMHO.

VK

Michael_Tarallo
Employee
Employee

Hello Chetann, et all - thanks for all your support of Qlik Sense and thanks for seeing the value it provides.

Chetann - I was recently interviewed for someone's blog and there was a question that you will be interested in related to your concern and question - I will provide it here:

Q: Can Qlik Sense do everything that QlikView can? How?

Mike Tarallo: We get this question a lot. Short answer is Yes and No.  First it is important to note that QlikView and Qlik Sense use the same exact powerful engine. So both products are benefiting from the speed and performance of the QIX indexing associative engine, that which makes Qlik unique. The power of green, white and gray – the associative experience is still a huge part of Qlik’s products, and it is this capability that helps organizations find the unexpected, ask the next question and see the whole story that lives within their data…..But, the way you designe a specific user interface or user interaction in QlikView, has evolved and therefore there may be a better way to achieve the same or similar functionality in Qlik Sense, OR perhaps what you designed in QlikView may not make much sense in Qlik Sense, ( i.e. Layering which does not existing in Qlik Sense due to its mobile ready responsive design and adaptive grid. ) QlikView has more of a develop / publish / consume model where you can make very specific dashboards and user interactions and provide multiple layers.  Qlik Sense – while it can certainly cater to the develop / publish / consume model – also allows for self-service and embedded uses cases. It has a more streamlined user interface and richer API layer built on open standards.

We built Qlik Sense to leverage popular open standard developmental specifications and developmental syntax. JSON, CSS3, HTML5 and JavaScript to be exact. These are very common within the web world when developing apps. Basically, anyone who knows how to develop web apps using these can work with our robust set of APIs to create basically anything they can think of. We have an Engine API that allows you to interact with data at all levels. You can develop your own front-end client interface the way you want and leverage the benefits of our indexing engine (QIX). We also have what we call our Capability APIs which allow developers to easily embed Qlik content into their own web applications with just a few lines of code. These APIs consist of the Root API, App API, Visualization API, Selection API.  You can also simply call a Qlik Sense APP URL into an iframe and embed it into a CRM like Salesforce. I believe the simple answer here is … you have many choices of how you wish to deploy Qlik Sense and you are limited by your imagination, not the software. Don’t believe me? Check out our developer exchange network Qlik branch http://branch.qlik.com/#!/ and its sister site the Qlik Playground: http://branch.qlik.com/#!/blog/57e297eb34193fe96af041a0 - you will see some amazing “things” created by those with a thirst for making their dreams become reality.

Due note that we recognize there are certain capabilities in QlikView that would also make sense in Qlik Sense and we do take that into consideration and add these features accordingly. While making sure said features do not interfere with the ease of use that Qlik Sense users have already come to love. So, 4+ years ago we started a project,  QlikView.Next. We asked ourselves “How would we build the next generation of QlikView software?” Using today’s modern technology and open standards, Qlik Sense became that next generation product, therefore becoming a new product with most of the goodness of QlikView. QlikView allows me to feel really cool and powerful because I can make QlikView bend to my will, however that does not necessarily mean what I can create as a developer may necessarily benefit the user. If you need to be all that powerful and have so much control with Qlik Sense, there is a much better and modern way to do that using Web Mash-ups, APIs and open standards such as HTML, CSS, JavaScript and JSON.

Q: Is the QlikView product coming to an end?

Mike Tarallo: No. To put it simply, we delivered QlikView 12 in December, 2015, pretty much fulfilling our commitment to our continued investment in our proven, market-leading data discovery solution. QlikView 12 includes a number of enhancements including the next generation QIX engine, that is compatible with the Qlik Sense engine, as well as additional performance improvements. QlikView will also benefit from our planned investments in Qlik DataMarket and Qlik NPrinting. We plan to support and deliver SRs on QlikView 12 for a period of 24 months after the next major release of QlikView, or longer at our discretion. Support for QlikView 11.2 will be provided, for a period of 24 months following the release of QlikView 12, or longer at our discretion. Please note that Qlik‘s strategy and possible future developments are subject to change and may be changed by Qlik at any time for any reason without notice, and Qlik makes no commitment that any future functionality may be available as part of software maintenance. The foregoing information should not be relied on in making a purchase decision, and may not be copied, distributed, or otherwise shared with any third party. We plan on releasing another version of QlikView 12 later this year. Remember, QlikView is our flagship, industry proven product. It is a mature product with a huge feature set, going forward with future releases we are investing in performance, scalability and stability.

Q: How are companies dealing with the Qlik Sense, do they continue to create dashboards and guided analysis or is self-service BI becoming something real?

Mike Tarallo: This is a great question. First let me state that self-service always existed it just did not have a “label” on it and came in different forms. Whether it was using MS Office products, an off-the-shelf, packaged application, or a home-grown app – companies were always looking for better and faster ways to have business users get the information they need with little to no involvement from IT or others. Problem was, these apps offered to much or too little in the means of functionality and usually always required some sort of setup or involvement from technical staff. Whether it was getting the parameters to connect to the right data source, writing a SQL query statement, or creating a semantic layer – someone else had to help and that really isn’t the definition of self-service. Once those hurdles were overcome you still had multiple versions of the truth, spreadsheet chaos and lack of confidence in the data therefore delaying decisions. In many cases, there are still those companies that take the results of their BI system and have IT specialists execute SQL queries against the raw data to make sure the numbers reconcile. Organizations should be debating over the decisions and not where the data came from or if the numbers are correct. Many also use the BI tools to export the data into Excel and then use Excel to calculate and create reports. Exasperating the initial problem of creating multiple versions of the truth.  Is that really a smart way to leverage your investment in BI? No it’s not. With Qlik Sense – it provides true self-service analytics prepared from governed libraries all from within the same interface, without the need for cumbersome semantic layers, complex data models, or SQL queries.

In regards to what is being created, this answer will vary depending on the companys’ needs and use cases. Some are using both QlikView and Qlik Sense as they both can complement one another by taking advantage of existing skill sets in the organization. Some companies are migrating all QlikView applications over to Qlik Sense. Some companies are maintaining their QlikView applications but are developing only new applications with Qlik Sense.  It is somewhat related to the first question as Qlik Sense can be used to support a variety of customer use cases. Qlik Sense out-of-the-box is excellent for Self-service data preparation and visualization as well as guided applications, this of course depends on how one defines the user that will be consuming the application. Anyone can get started quickly. You can create dashboards in minuets as I show in this video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MARjUr2dZRs – but where Qlik Sense also shines is when it is used for other use cases like guided, embedded and custom analytics. We built Qlik Sense to leverage popular open standard developmental specifications and developmental syntax. JSON, CSS3, HTML5 and JavaScript to be exact. These are very common within the web world when developing apps. Basically, anyone who knows how to develop web apps using these can work with our robust set of APIs to create basically anything they can think of. We have an Engine API that allows you to interact with data at all levels. You can develop your own front-end client interface the way you want and leverage the benefits of our indexing engine (QIX). We also have what we call our Capability APIs which allow developers to easily embed Qlik content into their own web applications with just a few lines of code. These APIs consist of the Root API, App API, Visualization API, Selection API.  You can also simply call a Qlik Sense APP URL into an iframe and embed it into a CRM like Salesforce. I believe the simple answer here is … you have many choices of how you wish to deploy Qlik Sense and you are limited by your imagination, not the software. Don’t believe me? Check out our developer exchange network Qlik branch http://branch.qlik.com/#!/ and its sister site the Qlik Playground: http://branch.qlik.com/#!/blog/57e297eb34193fe96af041a0 - you will see some amazing “things” created by those with a thirst for making their dreams become reality.

Hope this information is useful to you.

When applicable please mark the appropriate replies as CORRECT. This will help community members and Qlik Employees know which discussions have already been addressed and have a possible known solution. Please mark threads as HELPFUL if the provided solution is helpful to the problem, but does not necessarily solve the indicated problem. You can mark multiple threads as HELPFUL if you feel additional info is useful to others.

Regards,

Mike Tarallo

Qlik

Regards,
Mike Tarallo
Qlik
Michael_Tarallo
Employee
Employee

Hello Guruprem - I updated the title to more accurately describe the OP's concern.

Regards,
Mike Tarallo
Qlik
robert99
Specialist III
Specialist III

Ive asked users what they prefer. View or Sense. (when Sense was still version 1)

Sense won hands down. Ok it was a fairly small sample size but it was such an easy win for Sense that I dropped View and moved to Sense. Even View users when shown a converted App said Sense was better

Moving from View to Sense was a joy. Moving back to View for one contract after just using Sense for 6 months wasn't. But if developers want to stay with View fair enough. But I think they are doing new users a disservice unless there is a very good reason to buy View instead.

The reason I prefer Sense is as follows. (I'm always happy to show users both. Pointing out the pro's and cons of each. When I do so far Sense has always been an easy winner -but not a huge sample size. I have also converted enthusiastic View users to Sense after showing them the difference.)

1          Best View features retained

2          Updating and developing Apps on the Server

3          A more Modern Product

4          Easier to Use especially for less skilled technology users.

5          Users like the ease of use of the Sense Pivot Table.

6          Screen adapts to screen sizes and form factors.

7          Easy automatic script writing option for simple loads (bubbles).

8          Story Telling

9          Self Service

10       Re-useable Master Items

11       Set up Visualizations and Sheets more quickly

12       Easier to set up professional looking sheets

13       Better looking more modern Graphical Visualizations

14       Personal Edition. Can share Apps

15       Free Cloud with 5 options to share


There are a few features missing in Sense. Like triggers. I would also like to see more color options, an adjustable column width for the pivot table, drill around for tables etc. but for me these are minor things that will be done in time

chetansehgal
Creator
Creator
Author

Thanks everyone for your inputs. I would really like work on both the tools as i really love the concept behind it and engine behind qlik tools which makes it robust tool and separates its from other BI tools.

I hope small things will soon be incorporated in the Sense as default features because customizing the extensions needs time and additional cost for the clients.

Regards,

Chetan

luiskeyrus
Partner - Contributor III
Partner - Contributor III

From my point of view all depends the kind of project you should to make. QlikView is really recommendable for medium and big project with a heavey stable dashboard and QlikSense is recommendable for clients who has technology skills for light queries

ArnadoSandoval
Specialist II
Specialist II

Vladimir,

This is an interesting thread, but you are the second person in it with clear suggestions that QlikView has no future, which is sad. Both tools at this stage share the same scripting language, with small differences, while fully understanding the benefit of QlikSense flexibility to work on any mobile platform that should not be the reason to forget QlikView.

I hope that Qlik keep both products, QlikView is a mature product, so there is not need to invest too much but, it will be fantastic for QlikSense to support features already present in QlikView.

Only time will answers our concerns.

Arnaldo Sandoval
A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step.
ArnadoSandoval
Specialist II
Specialist II

I want to add one more thing for those concerned about Qlik Sense and View; Qlik Sense is indeed friendly and end-users can really get the answers hidden in the business data, but our end-users are not IT professionals, getting the data, building the data model for Qlik Sense applications, still require developing the scripts, if the source data is not complex, some end-users will be able to help themselves, which is always a win-win scenario for any Business.

Now building Data Models in Qlik -either one- has its challenges, synthetic keys, circular references, data quality, duplicated records, dealing with dimensions, data security rules, etc, some end-users will face strong difficulties with these challenges and this will become the role for the IT team, assist end-users gathering the data needed.

It is not the end of the world, and Qlik, as a company is very aware of the challenges ahead, 1 year from now Qlik Sense will incorporate features currently present in Qlik View only, I am enjoying how Qlik Sense is growing up.

Arnaldo Sandoval
A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step.
luiskeyrus
Partner - Contributor III
Partner - Contributor III

I am totally agree with you. In Spain QlikSense is improving but until four or five years pass, qlikview will dominate the market.

Regards from Madrid.

vlad_komarov
Partner - Specialist III
Partner - Specialist III

Arnaldo,

Trust me, I like the idea to keep both products on the market (and Qlik will do it for some significant time), but at this point QV is closing to its limits in terms of supporting non-Windows platforms. I've been to last few Qonnections and several local Qlik forums and 90% of presentations there were related to QlikSense. It should tell you something about Qlik's intentions and focus....

My prediction: QV will be supported until somebody will create a tool converting QVWs into QVFs....

I know few companies who have spent few years building QV-based architecture and there is no way they will spend any significant time converting their UI into QS-based one (not to mention the lack of functionality, different set of UI components, etc)....

Most of new Qlik clients are utilizing QS now, and it will be interesting to see a statistics about QV vs. QS usage...

VK