Tag: pattern based analytics

March 15, 2010   Posted by: Emcien

What is Pattern Based Analytics?

Quickly See Customer Buying Patterns in Sales Data Like Google Analytics on Sales Data

Emcien's Pattern Based Analytics Automatically Reveals Choice Combinations and Trends in Sales Transactions

A fast emerging area of business analytics is Pattern Based Analytics (PBA). This has been launched due to the very large amounts of data and need for analytics that can reveal meaningful patterns that businesses can act on. A typical reaction to the large amount of data is “If I had seen this coming sooner, I could have acted faster, decreased my risk and enhanced my opportunities for growth. Pattern Based Analytics typically requires focus on a business areas, e.g. Sales, Marketing, Finance, etc. The key to Pattern Based Analytics is automatically revealing intelligence that is hidden in the data/information.

This is a fast growing area because of key value points:

Instant Use - The inherent nature of Pattern Based analytics is that it does not require models and it accepts unstructured data. Hence, one of the greatest value points is Instant Use!

Accepts unstructured data –  A key value point that drives down implementation time, barriers and cost, and dramatically increases applicability of the analytics.   The ability to detect patterns in unstructured data makes it very easy for applications from sales data, marketing data, to twitter strings.

Big Problems are easy – Problem size and data size are not an issue with PBA. On sales data, Emcien’s PBA will easily solve buying patterns on 250,000 to 500,000  SKUs in a few minutes. This offers the ability to solve problems that were too large/expensive to solve previously.  This is a game changer, when the closest alternate solution requires complex models and has serious size limitations of a few hundred SKUs.

Works on problems big and small – On problems big and small, PBA is a natural fit. PBA dramatically lowers the price of analytics, enabling smaller companies to gain immediate value from business analytics.

No data-models, No data-cube, No set-up – This is one of the single biggest value points for PBA.  This eliminates the need for specialized analysts, statisticians and technical staff  to interact and maintain the system.  The  ability to accept unstructured data and not require a model means No Setup. This also means you can go live now!  No more 18-month implementation cycles!!!

Intuitive for non-technical users – Pattern Based Analytics can present results naturally in a very intuitive way.  This is because the patterns that are pop are typically the top categories that need attention. There is not need to drill down and ask questions – the ultimate bain of every BI user.

When Pattern Based analytics is pointed at sales data, the patterns that pop are “what are the top selling items”, “what is the pattern of choices combination”, “where is this happening”? Any non-technical business user can use this report to stock better and drive more sales.

Always up to date – Patten Based Analytics does not use models and cubes. Hence there are no cubes to maintain and update. Even as time passes, the analytics are always up to date, due to the ability to input non-structured data.

Gartner has rightfully established Pattern Based Strategy as the next frontier for capitalizing on large volumes of data and deriving value fast and continually.

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February 16, 2010   Posted by: Emcien

BI is for IT, But Analytics is for the Business User!

I’ve just come out of a meeting with a business user who is passing up on a well-known BI software package. “It takes too many IT resources to implement. My IT guys love it but I cannot afford the cost/time,” he said.

As companies drown in data, BI is a very expensive route to try and gain value from the data. Mark McDonald, head of research for Gartner Executive Programs, has a very nice article titled Without the Business in Business Intelligence, BI is Dead!. Sounds like – “The King is Dead. Long Live the King.”

BI has been built for the IT community. It is an old-school solution built on the heavy weight model of technology. That model rests on the acquisition, installation and operation of technology based on a significant upfront investment that is earned out over a period of time. This has been the investment/implementation path for enterprise ERP/SCM/CRM/PDM software packages. BI is in this class of software solutions, and results in an expensive and less responsive solution.  Mark McDonald calls this the “old ‘heavy weight’ model of technology”.

The top two categories for Gartner’s predictions for 2010 are Cloud Computing and Analytics – these are both directions that are a far cry from the old world of heavy/expensive/pay upfront software. BI in its current form is completely out of step with these predictions and where the market is heading. So, why did Gartner renamed BI to Analytics? In doing so is BI going to magically transform from its old heavy weight form to a new lean enterprise 2.0 form? Long Live the King?

Emcien offers pattern-based analytics that easily takes sales data in any form to reveal customer buying patterns and trends.  The technology has completely eliminated the need for data models, structures, mapping, etc. Emcien’s pattern based analytics technology was created explicitly to overcome the ‘old heavy weight model of technology’. Pour your sales data in, and watch the customer buying patterns. “Like Google analytics for sales data”, our customers told us.

Mark McDonald has prophecy for BI that I think is dead-on (pun!?). “On a radical note, we are seeing some early signs that companies are looking to use social media/web 2.0 technologies to address business issues that were previously assigned to BI.

Lighter weight technologies handle tacit information and semi-structured process support better than BI solutions that rely on structured and standardized information.

Lighter weight technologies handle tacit information and semi-structured process support better than BI solutions that rely on structured and standardized information.

Our customers completely agree with Mark McDonald. Quoting a VP from a Fortune 500 company, “We have lost the appetite for million dollar software and long implementations that consume IT resources”.

However, the need for harvesting intelligence from data is not going away. On the contrary, it has never been more important than it is now. The data hides jewels of intelligence that companies need to act on NOW. But that is only possible if Business Intelligence is not a technology but a capability for the enterprise. Long Live the King!

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