Analytics & Business Intelligence
Innovating With Analytics
Data-savvy organizations are using analytics to innovate — and to gain competitive advantage.
Data-savvy organizations are using analytics to innovate — and to gain competitive advantage.
Keeping track of data and creating value from it may require more than technology.
How do the insights from big data differ from what managers generate from traditional analytics?
IBM SecondSight is being used at Wimbledon to track how players move on the court.
The rapid growth of data creates business opportunities — but only if IT and management work together.
Consumers want to know when they’re being watched, and have changing expectations about privacy and data mining.
The data investigation is all about how companies spot trends and how they figure out what’s going on in those trends.
Kirk Goldsberry’s research into who the NBA’s best shooter is put him into the sports analytics limelight.
A new wave of analytics-driven companies is making Massachusetts one of the hottest U.S. centers of big data.
To gain leverage from ever-improving technologies, companies need new processes and business models.
The second annual report by MIT Sloan Management Review and the IBM Institute for Business Value sees a growing divide in analytic sophistication.
Companies experienced in analytics use are increasingly gaining competitive advantage.
Police in Santa Cruz, California, are using a computer program to predict where crimes might take place and using that information to deploy resources.