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Techaisle Blog

Insightful research, flexible data, and deep analysis by a global SMB IT Market Research and Industry Analyst organization dedicated to tracking the Future of SMBs and Channels.
Anurag Agrawal

Whiptail: A friend of big data, foe of storage vendors

Whiptail, the first company to successfully commercialize multi-level flash recently announced its second-generation family of NAND Flash storage products, Accela and Invicta. Accela is an enterprise class, single chassis, and standalone flash storage product. On the other hand Invicta is a modular storage array. It has some very impressive specifications:

  • 6-72 TB of NAND Flash capacity

  • Up to 650,000 IPOS

  • Upto 7 GB/Sec bandwidth

  • Asynchronous replication

  • VMWare and Citrix ready


The products are completely scalable. A mid-market customer can begin with Accela and can add Invicta through InfiniBand as the needs grow. Even within the Invicta chassis, a toup to 6 storage nodes with 6 to 12TB and one router can be added as lego blocks as the data needs evolve.

Analyst Speak

Whiptail’s announcement comes at a time when the buzz about big data has reached a crescendo.  And along with big data, vendors and analysts have started to talk about data obesity and therefore need for storage capacity. Granted that storage capacity needs are multiplying but big data poses a bigger challenge – extremely high throughput and read-to-write performance. Traditional storage vendors have tried to make higher-performing storage either by using as many spindles or constricting drives. None of them technically really address the velocity problem – real time streams of high volume information that is both structured and unstructured. Whiptail is taking the conversation away from storage-capacity play to velocity play thereby reducing the cost of transactions.

Even the channel partners wanting to develop or expand their datacenters and offer cloud-based services can use Invicta because of its multi-tennant, multiple addminstrators, and role-based security capabilities.

Invicta is an application acceleration platform that big data purveyors will love to the bane of other other storage vendors.

Anurag Agrawal
Techaisle
Anurag Agrawal

Intuit brings data-driven insights to small businesses with the launch of Intuit Small Business Revenue Index

Rapid fire announcements from Intuit, all directed towards the betterment of small businesses. Today Intuit announced the availability of Intuit Small Business Revenue Index, which is based on aggregated data from QuickBooks Online. By the very meaning of the term “aggregated” it should be understood that the data is anonymous, that is democratized across 200,000 small businesses. This index is the first of its kind in the market that provides current information on monthly small business revenue. It complements Intuit’s monthly Small Business Employment Index to provide a more complete picture of the economic health of US’s small businesses based on revenue, hiring and compensation trends.

With its latest announcement, Intuit has demonstrated that it is bringing data-driven insights to small businesses, sole-proprietors; insights that were previously only available to large enterprises. This information should empower small businesses to compare themselves against benchmarks and thereby effect changes in their organizations.

It certainly places in the hands of Intuit’s small business customers, power of the data. Both the Employment and Revenue Indexes are updated monthly by Intuit which is far more often than government stats and take a snapshot that is more targeted and pertinent to small business owners. They could use it as a signal for whether it’s time to hire, cut back or increase employee salaries.

As Techaisle had mentioned in its own press release on big data on April 26, 2012, data analytics is equally relevant for small businesses. 12 percent of small businesses using business intelligence are interested in big data analytics. However, they are looking for an IT vendor or partner to collect, collate, and analyze big data and present to these small businesses as a resource, in other words, democratization of big data. The collected data is an aggregation of information being created by other small businesses within the same vertical segment or employee size category. Intuit to my mind, just did it.

Timing by Intuit could not be more perfect.

Anurag Agrawal
Techaisle
Anurag Agrawal

Big Data is the Answer - What was the Question?

The Big Data Analytics' promise: enable “data monetization” through timelier, more accurate, more complete, more granular, more frequent decisions. So, what exactly are the types of business problems big data analytics likely to solve? For this one may need a mini-MBA in Big Data Use Cases.

First let’s define what makes data Big.

Big Data, Little Data
We live in a world of data: transactions, feedback and real-time interaction with customers, partners, suppliers, and employees. In addition to brick, click and mobile transactions, the new variable in the mix is Human generated data – explosive growth of blogs/reviews/messages/emails/pictures. Social graphs such as product recommendations based on circle of friends, jobs you may like, products you have looked at, people who are your contacts etc. also create “second order” data that can be mined for sentiment analytics on products or companies or fact discovery.

Another new variable is computer generated data. Computers generate data as byproduct of interacting with people or with other devices. More the interactions, more is the data and this data comes in a variety of formats from semi-structured log files to unstructured binaries. This “exhaust fumes” of data can be extremely valuable. It can be used to understand and track application or service behavior so that one can find patterns, errors or sub-optimal user experience. One can mine it for statistical patterns and correlations to generate insights.

However, if one listen to the hype, companies can harness this information learn faster, make better decisions, and stay one step ahead of their competitors. Unfortunately, harnessing big data (and separating the signal-from-noise) is trickier than it looks. It takes a lot of skill and superb understanding of use cases.

Big Data Use Cases
The key to exploiting Big Data Analytics is focusing on a compelling business opportunity as defined by a use case — What (What exactly are we trying to do?). Use cases are emerging in a variety of industries that illustrate different core competencies around analytics.

E-tailing/E-Commerce – Online Retailing Use Cases

  • Recommendation engines

  • Cross-channel analytics

  • Event analytics

  • Right offer at the right time


Retail/Consumer Use Cases

  • Merchandizing and market basket analysis

  • Campaign management and customer loyalty programs

  • Supply-chain management and analytics

  • Event- and behavior-based targeting

  • Market and consumer segmentations


Financial Services Use Cases

  • Compliance and regulatory reporting

  • Risk analysis and management

  • Fraud detection and security analytics

  • CRM and customer loyalty programs

  • Credit risk, scoring and analysis

  • High speed Arbitrage trading

  • Trade surveillance

  • Abnormal trading pattern analysis


Web & Digital Media Services Use Cases

  • Large-scale clickstream analytics

  • Ad targeting, analysis, forecasting and optimization

  • Abuse and click-fraud prevention

  • Social graph analysis and profile segmentation

  • Campaign management and loyalty programs


New Applications

  • Sentiment Analytics

  • Mashups – Mobile User Location + Precision Targeting

  • Machine-generated data, the exhaust fumes of the Web


Health & Life Sciences Use Cases

  • Health Insurance fraud detection

  • Campaign and sales program optimization

  • Brand management

  • Patient care quality and program analysis

  • Supply-chain management

  • Drug discovery and development analysis


Telecommunications Use Cases

  • Revenue assurance and price optimization

  • Customer churn prevention

  • Campaign management and customer loyalty

  • Call Detail Record (CDR) analysis

  • Network performance and optimization

  • Mobile User Location analysis


So, What’s the Big Deal?

The big deal is that if analytics is done well there is room for margin expansion and additional profit.

Shirish Netke
(Republished with permission)
Tavishi Agrawal

SMB Business Intelligence Spend & Adoption: Market Ripe for Growth

Global SMB Business Intelligence spend is estimated to be US$2.9 Billion in 2011, a little more than half of estimated spend by Enterprises at US$5.7 Billion. However, confusion abounds because of proliferation of front-end analytics tools and back-end Business Intelligence tools, analytical platforms, as well as data marts. And now more than ever the need for business intelligence is strong, especially among SMBs as they have to increasingly carry an added burden of managing, maintaining and developing insights from raw data.

Business Intelligence is among Top 5 investment solutions planned by SMBs. The current economic scenario has businesses of all sizes focused heavily on identifying profitable customers to improve the ROI on marketing dollars spent. While a number of SMBs have already deployed formal CRM solutions and many others have internally developed CRM processes, the next focus is on making sense of the data captured, linking it to business objectives and monitoring business performance. Large businesses have over the last decade spent billions in improving data analytics capabilities; however, typical business intelligence solutions have been out of reach for majority of SMBs due to cost and deployment complexity. But there are a host of new entrants in the field that are resetting the price bar and filling the gap between low-end MS Excel based solutions and high end solutions such as SAP Business Objects and IBM Cognos.

For example in the US alone, when Techaisle asked 850 SMBs:
Please tell us which of the following technologies you are either “investing in”, “investigating”, or “Ignoring”; [Investing: Have completed purchase, Post purchase deployment phase; Investigating: researching or in pilot phase; Ignoring: not considered important]


Results below for US SMBs shows that the market is ripe for growth and adoption.
Analytics and AI - Techaisle - Global SMB, Midmarket and Channel Partner Market Research Organization - Techaisle Blog - Page 27 Business-Intelligence

Historically, businesses have used a hub-and-spoke model, that is, an enterprise-level data warehouse with dependent data marts.  But this poses a problem as business intelligence and analytics are required by businesses to have high quality and incredible execution speeds because time-to-market is of essence.

As per Techaisle research, 50 percent of mid-market businesses (100-999 employees) and 53 percent of Enterprises (1000+) say that “Improving effectiveness of sales, marketing and business decision making through investments in data mining & business intelligence solutions” is critical. In such a dramatic scenario it becomes more useful for businesses to utilize a virtual data warehouse that pulls data dynamically from various applications as needed.

Similarly, on a scale of 1-9 where 9 is extremely critical, SMBs rate “Improving responsiveness to changing customer needs” as 6.5. These data points cannot be ignored.

Many upper-mid-market businesses use on an average of 6.1 different types of business intelligence solutions. These could be in-house development or a combination of SAS, IBM-Cognos, SAP Business Objects, Microstrategy, Oracle-Hyperion and several other players that provide point solutions. This leads to unclear KPIs, conflicting dashboards and only few metrics that are actionable. These mid-market businesses are trying to turn to analytics-as-a-service.

It would do well for vendors that are targeting the business intelligence to focus on analytics-as-a-service offering for SMBs. However, a key of aspect of any such solution would be the ability to quickly integrate applications or if not, ability to seamlessly pull data for the stakeholders in an easy to use format.

Tavishi Agrawal
Techaisle

Research You Can Rely On | Analysis You Can Act Upon

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