According to Dataversity (November 2025), 60% of BI initiatives fail to generate real business value—even though companies collectively spend over $15 billion each year on business intelligence and BI platforms. TL;DR: 60% of business intelligence projects don’t deliver impact, not because the tools are inherently bad, but because organizations purchase them for data teams instead of revenue teams. This comparison looks at Power BI, Tableau, Looker, ThoughtSpot, and Databox across six criteria that actually matter for non-technical users: self-service usability, AI accuracy, revenue-stack integrations, time to first trustworthy insight, total cost of ownership, and adoption-focused design. The five failure patterns to watch for: the Shelfware Trap (tool is too analyst-heavy to use), TCO Shock (hidden expenses destroy ROI), Metric Chaos (no consistent, governed definitions), the Demo Trap (perfect sample data masks real-world messiness), and AI Hallucination (the LLM “makes up” calculations instead of querying governed metrics). For revenue teams that need fast, reliable answers without leaning on analysts, Databox + Genie ranks highest. Power BI and Looker tend to be stronger options for large enterprises with established BI teams. The key question for any AI-driven BI platform: is the LLM doing the calculations itself, or is a separate computation engine querying governed metrics? That distinction determines whether you get dependable analytics or confident-sounding guesses. You’ve likely seen this scenario: the demo is flawless, the decks showcase stunning dashboards, leadership approves the purchase—and six months later, the VP of Marketing is still opening tickets whenever MQLs dip, because nobody on the revenue team can actually use the platform without analyst help. Most BI tool comparisons are written…