COLUMBUS, OH, December 18, 2012 (Press-News.org) Big data may not be a term often discussed outside the CIO's office today, but according to experts at ICC, a leader in business technology services with a focus on big data and application development, that will change in 2013. That's the year big data will find its way out of the data center and back rooms - typically populated by statisticians and business analysts - and into the offices of the chief financial officer (CFO), chief marketing officer (CMO) and chief sales officer (CSO) who are charged with growing revenue. Everyone will soon be busy making sense of the mountains of information big data technologies like web site traffic logs, RFID, social media, online transactions and medical records have made available for analysis. ICC big data experts have identified the top five reasons that big data is poised to provide insights that c-suite executives will find too important to ignore in 2013.
"Technology advances in hardware and software have converged to allow average business folks to begin asking questions against the mountain of data once thought impossible to analyze if for no other reason than its sheer size," says Jim Gallo, National Director of Business Analytics for ICC. "New insights will come from sources that were previously impossible to analyze. Today, businesses can leverage the entire web as a data source, and that's huge."
Top Five Reasons Big Data Means Big Business in 2013
Today, an ecosystem of predictive analytics firms is building solution sets around Hadoop, the de facto standard for managing massive, unstructured data sets. This is allowing big data to come out of the statistical closet to start answering real-world business problems as well as providing insights into everything including the correct inventory of shoes to maintain based on correlations between sales trends from big box stores, twitter feeds from "Project Runway" and possibly current hair styles.
In 2013, ICC believes there are five reasons big data will offer big opportunities to businesses that invest in collecting and understanding the massive amounts of information that now comprises their worlds. ICC experts say that during 2013, big data will:
1. Move out of the tech shadows. Like virtualization and cloud computing, the business rationale for big data spending will quickly become obvious. The cost for big data analytics is pennies-on-the-dollar compared to the cost for a traditional data warehouse. Big data is leaner, significantly reduces data integration costs and opens the door for data exploration like never before.
2. Go mainstream. In addition to the well-respected open-source Hadoop community, established players like IBM, EMC, SAP, SAS, and Oracle have joined the big data game, enabling companies to have faith that their investment in big data won't be a lost as start-ups come and go and the hype-cycle inevitably fades.
3. Overcome skeptics. Companies big (and small) will begin to see positive ROI from the insights big data provides into their businesses and the businesses of their competitors, ultimately delivering positive ROI with bottom- and top-line impact.
4. Break down walls between the CIO and CMO. Once company executives experience the unrivaled insights big data analytics brings to marketing campaigns, and how big data enables them to wrap their arms around customers like never before, they will be hooked.
5. Bring the power of analytics to the masses. Big data-as-a-service (BDaaS) providers like ICC will emerge offering more than just platforms, analytics or human resources. By including the entire stack rolled up into an easily consumed service, companies of all sizes - from start-ups to mature organizations - will be able to take advantage of this emerging business.
As the ROI of projects begins to emerge in 2013, it will become readily apparent that those embracing and leveraging big data will be in a much stronger position to thrive in today's economy due to increased customer loyalty, better products, and ever-improving client relationships.
"Technology and big data will combine to help businesses make sense of and profit from the 'new normal' of slow economic growth and global competition," says Steven Glaser CEO of ICC. "Big data and analytics promises to shine a bright light into dark corners of data so business leaders can back up the gut-feel decisions that have led them this far with solid data and metrics that will take them to the next level."
About ICC
ICC (www.icctechnology.com) is a leader in business technology services with a focus on big data and application development. Based in Columbus, Ohio, ICC works with clients to improve operational efficiencies and increase revenues. The company's 480+ consultants use proven processes, to deliver innovative, business-critical solutions that enable its Fortune 1000 clients to maintain competitive advantage. ICC is committed to serving its clients, community and country by developing talented leaders who work hard to strengthen the American economy. More information is available at http://www.icctechnology.com.
Media Contacts:
Theresa Hodgson
ICC
thodgson@iccohio.com
614-523-3070 x106
http://www.icctechnology.com/
Arthur Germain
Communication Strategy Group for ICC
agermain@gocsg.com
866-997-2424
http://www.communicationstrategygroup.com
ICC Identifies Top Five Reasons Big Data Means Big Business in 2013
IT solutions provider says next year will be a big one for big data and analytics.
2012-12-18
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Todd Doors to Release New Brochure Next Year
2012-12-18
Todd Doors, one of the UK's leading suppliers of timber doors, have taken the decision to delay the release of their eagerly anticipated new brochure - it was announced today.
The brand new brochure, which was set for release in December, in time for Christmas, has now been delayed until January, allowing a more expansive range of timber doors to be printed and introduced inside the catalogue, according to a spokesperson for the company.
The scheduled December release was supposed to exclusively unveil the brand new 2013 collections of internal and external doors ...
IRS Problems? Tax Results Celebrates Great Reviews in 2012
2012-12-18
TaxResults.com is an online tax consultancy and is proud to celebrate successful outcomes for its clients. Many people find themselves in difficulty with the IRS - for a number of reasons - perhaps owing back taxes or even undergoing salary garnishment. Tax Results has been able to offer its clients solutions that can both vastly reduce their tax obligation and provide them with a reasonable payment plan.
"Our goal is to provide the best customer service and results in the industry," says the VP Brad Patrick. "Our mission is to provide an aggressive response ...
Exploding star missing from formation of solar system
2012-12-17
A new study published by University of Chicago researchers challenges the notion that the force of an exploding star forced the formation of the solar system.
In this study, published online last month in Earth and Planetary Science Letters, authors Haolan Tang and Nicolas Dauphas found the radioactive isotope iron 60 — the telltale sign of an exploding star—low in abundance and well mixed in solar system material. As cosmochemists, they look for remnants of stellar explosions in meteorites to help determine the conditions under which the solar system formed.
Some ...
JCI early table of contents for Dec. 17, 2012
2012-12-17
Harnessing the ID in glioma
Gliomas are the most common form of brain tumor. They are highly aggressive and effective treatments are not currently available. The tumors contain glioma initiating cells (GICs), a population that is highly similar to neural stem cells. GICs drive tumor progression and must stay in a particular extracellular niche in order to maintain their cancer-promoting, stem cell-like characteristics. In this issue of the Journal of Clinical Investigation, researchers led by Antonio Iavarone at Columbia University report on the role of ID proteins in ...
Harnessing the ID in glioma
2012-12-17
Gliomas are the most common form of brain tumor. They are highly aggressive and effective treatments are not currently available. The tumors contain glioma initiating cells (GICs), a population that is highly similar to neural stem cells. GICs drive tumor progression and must stay in a particular extracellular niche in order to maintain their cancer-promoting, stem cell-like characteristics.
In this issue of the Journal of Clinical Investigation, researchers led by Antonio Iavarone at Columbia University report on the role of ID proteins in glioma. ID proteins allow ...
Physicians should not prescribe ADD drugs to healthy people
2012-12-17
Physicians in Canada should consider refusing to prescribe cognitive enhancement medications — also used to treat attention deficit disorder (ADD) — to healthy patients, states an analysis article in CMAJ (Canadian Medical Association Journal). Lack of evidence for benefits and possibility of harm, limited health care resources and professional integrity of physicians are reasons why this use is not acceptable.
Prescription stimulants such as methylphenidate and dextroamphetamine are often used by people for "cognitive enhancement" to increase focus, concentration and ...
Rationing soft drink sizes: A good public health move
2012-12-17
New York City's limit of a maximum 16-ounce size of sugar-sweetened drinks for sale in eating establishments is a positive public health move and should be replicated in Canada, argues an editorial in CMAJ (Canadian Medical Association Journal).
"Because sugary drinks are the leading source of dietary calories in North America, New York City's latest measure is a rational strategy to combat obesity on a population level," writes Dr. Matthew Stanbrook, Deputy Editor, Practice, CMAJ. "The scientific case for reducing sugar consumption is stronger than ever. Recent evidence ...
New technology allows scientists to capture and preserve cancer cells circulating in the bloodstream
2012-12-17
Scientists from the RIKEN Advanced Science Institute in Japan and University of California Los Angeles report a new nanoscale Velcro-like device that captures and releases tumor cells that have broken away from primary tumors and are circulating in the bloodstream.This new nanotechnology could be used for cancer diagnosis and give insight into the mechanisms of how cancer spreads throughout the body. The device provides a convenient and non-invasive alternative to biopsy, the current method for diagnosis of metastatic cancer. It could enable doctors to detect tumor cells ...
Surviving sepsis with LECT2
2012-12-17
Failure to launch an adequate immune response may be at the root of septic shock, according to a study published in The Journal of Experimental Medicine on December 17th.
Bacterial sepsis is a potentially deadly blood infection that results in massive immune activation and inflammation. Sepsis therapies have traditionally focused on quelling this exaggerated inflammatory response. But a recent study challenged this approach by showing that patients with sepsis had abnormally low levels of an inflammatory protein called LECT2.
The new study by Jiong Chen and colleagues ...
Study uncovers mechanism used by BRCA1 to suppress tumors
2012-12-17
WASHINGTON -- A new study by Georgetown University Medical Center researchers reveals how a well-known tumor suppressor gene may be functioning to stop cancer cell growth.
The findings, published online today in Oncogene, focus on the gene BRCA1, which is mutated in a majority of families who have hereditary breast and/or ovarian cancers, according to senior author Ronit I. Yarden, PhD, assistant professor in the Department of Human Science at the School of Nursing & Health Studies.
"There is a debate in the scientific community about whether BRCA1 enzymatic activity ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Imagining future events changes brain to improve healthy decision-making, new study indicates
Turning plastic waste into valuable resources: A new photocatalytic approach
Sea otters help kelp forests recover — but how fast depends on where they are
Study links intense energy bursts to ventilator-induced lung injury
Uncovering the protein complex critical to male fertility
Scientists discover how a naturally occurring mechanism hampers fertility
Integrated framework for ecological security: A case study of the Daqing river basin
New design paradigm boosts reconfigurable intelligent surface efficiency
Long-term cocaine use may increase impulsivity
How London’s Ultra Low Emission Zone is changing the school run
Breakthrough CRISPR-based test offers faster, more accurate diagnosis for fungal pneumonia
3D-printed knee implants improves quality and reliability
UC San Diego innovators to spotlight transformative science at SXSW 2025
Burning question: How to save an old-growth forest in Tahoe
SwRI, U-Michigan engineers create more effective burner to reduce methane emissions
Dental implants still functional after forty years
A hot droplet can bounce across a cool pan, too
Synthetic microbiome therapy suppresses bacterial infection without antibiotics
New mouse study: How to trick the body's metabolism
Rates of population-level child sexual abuse after a community-wide preventive intervention
Rural-urban disparities in cervical cancer incidence and mortality among US women
Tele-buprenorphine initiations for opioid use disorder without in-person relationships
Researchers reveal key mechanism behind bacterial cancer therapy
Who carries and uses Naloxone in the U.S.?
Complete breakdown of Plexiglas into its building blocks
New study suggests a shift in diabetes testing after pregnancy to improve women's health
FOME alliance pioneers VR innovation in management education
Evidence expanding that 40Hz gamma stimulation promotes brain health
Teaching kids how to become better citizens
Pusan National University researchers develop a novel 3D adipose tissue bioprinting method
[Press-News.org] ICC Identifies Top Five Reasons Big Data Means Big Business in 2013IT solutions provider says next year will be a big one for big data and analytics.