23 February 2026
Once the decision to implement Power BI has been made, the next question is how to get started. In this article, we explore two common approaches — a quick start and a step-by-step journey — and how to choose the setup that delivers results based on your needs, your pace, and your level of maturity.
Once the decision to implement Power BI has been made, the next question often arises: should we move fast — or take it step by step?
There’s no right or wrong answer. Getting started with Power BI can look different depending on your needs, your pace, and your organization’s level of maturity.
What matters most is not how quickly you start — but that you start in a way that delivers real value.
A quick start suits organizations that:
In this approach, the focus is often on ready-made reports and standardized dashboards. The result is faster insight and early value, without long preparations.
A step-by-step journey is a good fit when:
You start small, learn along the way, and expand as needs and confidence grow.
Regardless of the path you choose, a few success factors remain the same:
Power BI delivers the most value when it’s used — not just built.
The decision isn’t really about moving fast or slow — it’s about what fits your organization right now. The important thing is to get started in a way that feels relevant and sustainable.
Companies choose Microsoft Power BI because it’s scalable, reliable, and built for both business users and IT. The solution combines ease of use with advanced analytics, strong security, and long‑term development. This makes Power BI a safe and future‑proof choice for organizations that want to work more data‑driven — both today and tomorrow.
At NAB Solutions, we’re more than a vendor — we’re a partner. That means we start with your business, not the product. We focus on understanding your needs, goals, and challenges to create a solution that actually solves them, rather than selling features you don’t need.
Yes. We support you all the way from planning to a finished solution. This can include setting up data sources, building your first reports, and ensuring the structure is scalable over time. The goal is for you to quickly realize value from Power BI without unnecessary complexity during rollout.
Yes. Power BI is designed to be flexible and scalable. You can start with a limited number of reports or users and gradually expand with additional data sources, more advanced analytics, and broader use cases. This makes Power BI a long‑term platform for data‑driven decision‑making.
Contact us and we’ll tell you more.
Contact us