The Predictive Analytics Revolution- Are you sitting on the sidelines?

October 18, 2012

Predictive analytics (or Big Data) is here to stay. You may not understand it. You may not believe that it really works. But the reality is this: your competitors (and it may be just one or two of them) are using predictive analytics to chew up market space as you remain on the sidelines.

Don’t believe me? Consider the retail space. Who is the undisputed king of retail? That’s right, Wal-Mart. What’s their secret? What has given them the edge for so many years over their competitors? Data analysis. They live and die by data and have been for decades. Wal-Mart knows their customer data better than anyone and have the market share to prove it.

Recently the Dollar stores took on Wal-Mart by providing cheaper supplies like toiletries and medicine. Their strategy started to see some success and Wal-Mart even started to lose market share. But the retail giant went back to their data for a solution. The data said that many Wal-Mart customers started pinching pennies at the end of each month and needed a few basic items to get them over until payday. The solution, stocking shelves with thousands of items under $1 at the end of each month. Customers lured to the Dollar stores for such items were back in the Wal-Mart fold.

Target has also jumped into the game with their own consumer analytics program. The most famous example is how they used in-store data to pick out pregnant women through their shopping habits. They used this information to send marketing material promoting baby products. It worked…almost too well.

Wal-Mart, Target, and online stores like Amazon have forced everyone in this market make a decision, if you want to compete in retail you had better jump into the data science and predictive analytics game or a going-out-of-business-sale is in your near future. Sitting on the sidelines is not an option.

This isn’t isolated to just retail. There are stories everyday in the news about companies in a variety of markets taking a second look at their data and finding a treasure trove of valuable information.

Despite the hype and the proof that predictive analytics can give companies a competitive edge, the sidelines are full of businesses that are still not sure about getting in the game.

The New York Times reported that a handful of universities are using their data and predictive analytics to help them find students who are about to drop out of school. These schools know that higher enrollment means more money. These early adopters are reaping the benefits and aren’t afraid to tell everyone. Why? The vast majority of their competitors haven’t given this type of data analysis a second thought. Just like the example above, a few colleges will charge ahead and reap the benefits of higher enrollment while other universities…sit on the sidelines.

You can find the same thing in the health care industry. The Wall Street Journal published an article by Dr. Marty Makary of Johns Hopkins pleading with hospitals to make better use of their data to save lives. You can almost hear the frustration in his voice when he writes, “Medical mistakes kill enough people each week to fill four jumbo jets.” Even though there are 98,000 deaths due to medical errors in the United State, most hospitals and medical facilities are slow to adapt any type of data analytics.

A few forward thinking hospitals and health care facilities will see the opportunity and do what Dr. Makary suggests. Using the data visualization and predictive analytics, the trend setters have improved patient care, are keeping costs down – and most importantly – saving lives in the process. But just like the universities, the majority of hospital will remain on the sidelines. (I hope I can take my family to the forward thinking hospital!)

Why are so many still sitting on the sidelines?

The Harvard Business Review may have the answer. In an an eye opening survey they reveal the source of the bottleneck. (I highly recommend reading this entire study.) The study shows that the hype and awareness about data analytics is at an all time high.

According to the survey, a vast majority of companies are planning Big Data initiatives:

  • 85% of organizations reported that they have Big Data initiatives planned or in progress.
  • 70% report that these initiatives are enterprise-driven.
  • 85% of the initiatives are sponsored by a C-level executive or the head of a line of business.
  • 75% expect an impact across multiple lines of business.
  • 80% believe that initiatives will cross multiple lines of business or functions.

But here is where the rubber meets the road. HBR reports that:

  • Only 15% of respondents ranked their access to data today as adequate or world-class.
  • Only 21% of respondents ranked their analytic capabilities as adequate or world-class.
  • Only 17% of respondents ranked their ability to use data and analytics to transform their business as more than more than adequate or world-class.

The majority of companies are on the sidelines because they think they can’t readily access the data they have, they don’t have in house tools or talent to analyze it and don’t have the ability to put the data to use anyway. In other words, they don’t think their data is good enough.

Don’t let this kind of thinking keep you on the sidelines. I talk to business owners everyday who think they don’t have enough data for predictive analytics or even just analytics. Most of time, just the opposite is true. Many of our clients were pleasantly surprised when we told them they had more than enough data to jump into the game.

Don’t be one of crowd still sitting on the sidelines. Be one of those early adopters in your market space that uses predictive analytics to jump ahead of the competition. Would you like to learn more?

Thanks to http://blog.canworksmart.com/predictive-analytics/the-predictive-analytics-revolution/?buffer_share=e125e

 


Big Data in the cloud…the ability to make business decisions

September 27, 2011

It’s no secret that while our devices may be shrinking, the amount of information we put on them is growing exponentially. In a study published in June 2011, IDC predicted that by the end of this year, the amount of information created and replicated will surpass 1.8 zettabytes, or 1.8 trillion gigabytes (this amount of data would fit onto about 28,125,000,000 iPods, each with 64 gigabytes of storage), and will grow by a factor of 9 in five years.

What is becoming more apparent is that big data is turning into big money, for enterprises and small businesses alike. So how can channel partners and cloud services providers (CSPs) help customers to manage navigate this trend?

With the development of big data trends and forecasts, a number of companies and groups have been formed to help manage, analyze and leverage it. According to an article by Stefan Groschupf, mining big data for business intelligence has led to the development of innovations like FlightCaster, a company that is able to predict flight delays by factoring in real-time conditions and using historical information on domestic flights.

In addition, many experts believe analyzing large datasets can be the precursor to more practical and cost-effective ways of doing business. A report by the McKinsey Global Institute, for example, estimates that retail firms that ‘maximize their use of big data’ could ‘increase operating margins by more than 60 percent…’.

The report mentions how Wal-Mart used electronic data to give suppliers a view of demand in its stores. With the collection of even more information on each store and buying habits of customers, retail chains like Wal-Mart can use the information they gather to tailor their business to the customer and improve operations.

And in a recent blog post on how companies are making money from the growth of data, Loraine Lawson noted that large tech security companies are crediting big data in part for boosting their company’s revenues.

Perspectives for Channel Partners

Executive Vice President at Asigra, Eran Farajun, says that cloud service providers are partly responsible for the explosion of data. With cloud computing and cloud services becoming more popular, the general public and small businesses are creating more and more data online, thanks to Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter and others, being solely based online requires all the information created on those sites to be stored online.

So while data is being made, monitored and mined, who’s worrying about what happens if and when that information is lost?

Although most small businesses might not be thinking about big data problems now, Asigra’s Senior Director of Strategic Alliances, Ashar Baig says that in five to 10 years, big data is going to be a problem. In addition, having more, highly valuable information increases the vulnerability of what happens when that data is destroyed in an accident, irrecoverable or hacked. In this sense, being able to protect, backup and recover information becomes akin to insuring your house and car.

The debate over whether or not the public cloud is the answer to big data storage problems continues to unfold. For end-users, security in the cloud is already a touchy subject, much less backup and recovery. But with big data issues coming to the forefront,security becomes even more divisive.

Standardizing encryption in the cloud backup and recovery field is a start to ensuring the cloud can meet the demand that huge datasets will put on cloud storage providers, as more and more businesses rely on the cloud to store big data.

Considering the issues outlined above, cloud storage providers need to ensure their data encryption standards are consistent with industry leaders, such as the National Institute of Science and Technology in the United States, to be prepared for the oncoming challenge of big data.

Thanks to the guys at Asigra for the post.


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