Posts Tagged ‘Business Intelligence’

SAS offers FREE software for college statistical enthusiasts

Sunday, April 18th, 2010

Are you a stat’s fan?, then pick up your copy of SAS for free starting this fall at your university!

On-Demand for Academics is an online program for teaching and learning data management and analytics. It allows professors and students to use several applications, including SAS Enterprise Guide and SAS Enterprise Miner for free. More applications may be added in the near future.  Is SAS Institue following in the foot steps of software giants?, its something which we should wait and watch!

[Bizjournals]

  • Share/Bookmark

Can academia projects help businesses? UoA professor says yes!

Monday, March 29th, 2010

Text mining tools can summarize and look for patterns within large electronic documents. Such tools are still expensive and difficult to use on large scale. But a group of researchers, including one’s at the University of Alberta, are hoping to change that.

A University of Alberta professor is helping to create text analysis tools to deeply examine historical trial accounts from the U.K.’s famous Old Bailey criminal court. While the research project is important to academia, the Edmonton-based researcher said that improving the quality of text mining tools could have benefits for businesses as well.

While academia are developing tools like TAPoR, a textual analysis tool that can summarize a body of text, find collocates, identify important dates, and discover the co-occurrences of two target words, the same could be applied to business records as well. Some of the tools in TAPoR use forms of visualization to help researchers grasp the data even clearer.

[IT Canada]

  • Share/Bookmark

Ex-Yahoo Executives Launch nPario

Friday, March 19th, 2010

nPario, a data mining company that promises to increase ‘insights into customer behavior, with Bassel Ojjeh(Ex-SVP Strategic Data Solutions at Yahoo) as CEO, and Krishna Uppala (Ex- Senior Director/Architect at Yahoo) is the CTO.

nPario plans to offer data products and services that enable companies to understand and market consumer commercial intent.

About nPario Inc.
With operations in North America and the EMEA region, nPariooffers data products and services that enable organizations to understand and market consumer intent. Led by CEO and co-founder Bassel Ojjeh, nPario’s management team has been on the forefront of harnessing the power of data for organizations such as Microsoft, SAS and Yahoo. For additional information visit www.npario.com

[Read More at nPario]

  • Share/Bookmark

More “Business Intelligence” and less “Business Negligence” for businesses

Thursday, February 18th, 2010

Data Mining when implied smartly and correctly in your day to day business,is named Business Intelligence. According to Mr. Kevin Falconer, GM of local storage and networking distributor, Channel Data,” Most dealers and resellers are awash with valuable data that could make a significant difference to their bottom line, if used correctly.”

Data mining means extracting patterns from existing data. If this extraction process is applied to corporate industry many fruitful results can be seen. If, in a business administration or organisation, one keeps a note of the Sales, Market research, Customer’s requirements and complaints encountered and then mine this data to predict or identify patterns to understand the correct requirements of the customer and further fulfilling them. This will help boost the business and improve customer relationships.

This combination of data ming and business management is becoming cheaper as the computers and large storage disks used in this process are easily available now and at affordable prices. But, this process may also lead to the shifting of focus of providing service from the most profitable (minority) less percentage of customers to less profitable (majority) highly demanding customers. It is therefore vitally important to recognise profitable customers, and the characteristics that define them, Falconer argues. For example, changes in their purchasing behaviour can either present an opportunity to follow the trend, or a threat the company will promptly have to address. Accurate, up-to-date customer information will give sales staff many cross-sell, up-sell, and repeat-sales opportunities, he concludes. Unfortunately, this data is rarely analysed or put to productive use because many small business owners often neglect to apply core marketing principles to attract and retain clients.
As more and more data is mined and converted into knowledge historical patterns will crystalline and trend lines will become evident. Data mining, integrated into modern customer relationship management solutions are already enabling IT reseller businesses to grow the ‘lifetime value’ of their customers and so assume leadership positions in the IT industry – whether their target market is individual end users or corporate clients. Now which strategy will you choose? The good old Business Negligence or the fast developing Business Intelligence. When you have success at your door step.. Why not opening up the door instead of ignoring it?

[IT WEB]

  • Share/Bookmark