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IBM chief executive officer Ginni Rometty regards analytics as a new source of competitive advantage for her company’s enterprise clientele.
“I want you to think about data as the next natural resource,” Rometty told an audience of business leaders and lawmakers during a recent speech in front of the Council on Foreign Relations in New York. She pointed out how data analytics helped reduce crime by 30 percent in Memphis, and said that IBM correctly predicted the outcome of swing states for President Barack Obama’s campaign.
Abhishek Mehta, the founder of Tresata, weighed in on the CEO’s comments and explained her particular choice of words:
“Just like oil was a natural resource powering the last industrial revolution, data is going to be the natural resource for this industrial revolution. Data is the core asset, and the core lubricant, for not just the entire economic models built around every single industry vertical but also the socioeconomic models.”
See Abhi’s full commentary on IBM’s Big Data strategy in the video below, recorded from this morning’s NewsDesk broadcast with Kristin Feledy.
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Besides comparing data with oil, Romenty also noted that “you will see the death of the average,” by which she meant that organizations will be able to tap into their Big Data in order to track audiences – whether consumers, voters or employees – based on individual metrics.
Companies need more than just willingness to make use of their raw information – they require the proper tools for the jobs, and the know-how to apply these tools to business problems. IBM happens to be offering both.
Building Big Data: IBM’s early story
Big Blue’s analytics portfolio is one of the largest in the industry, thanks to its famously strong R&D organization and a series of acquisitions it made in recent years. The vendor maintains an equally strong presence in the Services arena, which is ever-more profitable thanks to the growing number of Big Data practitioners.
Companies are turning to IBM for much-needed advice on how to govern their information. And while recent years have provided the time to explore all Big Data has to offer, 2013 has been dubbed the year of Big Data Implementation, with IBM among the handful of major vendors leading the charge. Now that we’re in the middle of a transition from exploratory Big Data to its execution, there’s far more factors that can now be considered and applied in a desired solution.
Wikibon analyst Jeff Kelly outlines three extremely important points a Big Data practioner should keep in mind:
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