Services for Organizations

Using our research, best practices and expertise, we help you understand how to optimize your business processes using applications, information and technology. We provide advisory, education, and assessment services to rapidly identify and prioritize areas for improvement and perform vendor selection

Consulting & Strategy Sessions

Ventana On Demand

    Services for Investment Firms

    We provide guidance using our market research and expertise to significantly improve your marketing, sales and product efforts. We offer a portfolio of advisory, research, thought leadership and digital education services to help optimize market strategy, planning and execution.

    Consulting & Strategy Sessions

    Ventana On Demand

      Services for Technology Vendors

      We provide guidance using our market research and expertise to significantly improve your marketing, sales and product efforts. We offer a portfolio of advisory, research, thought leadership and digital education services to help optimize market strategy, planning and execution.

      Analyst Relations

      Demand Generation

      Product Marketing

      Market Coverage

      Request a Briefing


        Analyst Perspectives

        << Back to Blog Index

        IBM Gets Big and Personal with Business Analytics



        IBM’s Information on Demand (IOD) event showcased its products for both information management and business intelligence. I’ve covered the information management aspects of IOD in a separate post. In this post I’ll look at the business intelligence aspects. Earlier this year IBM made predictive analytics a major focus of its Business Analytics analyst summit, an event that often foreshadows the IOD messages. In addition to predictive analytics, IBM emphasized both large-scale “big” data and a concept it calls “personal analytics” at the summit. Both of these received more attention at IOD.

        In the run-up to IOD, IBM released SPSS 20, which includes new mapping features, some modeling and performance improvements, file compression in temporary tables and the ability to launch server jobs and then disconnect while the jobs run. But the emphasis at IOD was on the “decision management” capabilities of SPSS and embedding predictive analytics in software and services across the IBM portfolio. Decision management refers to automating routine operational decisions using a combination of predictive analytics and business rules. IBM combines the capabilities of its SPSS and ILOG products to provide decision management. Since only 13% of 2,600 organizations participating in our business analytics research currently use predictive analytics, IBM may be ahead of the market with these capabilities. We’re collecting more information about how organizations are managing their predictive analytics in a benchmark research project currently in progress.

        IBM already has a big presence in big data, but it has not yet permeated the company’s business intelligence product line. For example, you can use IBM BigSheets, a spreadsheet-style tool, to interact with big data in Hadoop, but you cannot do the same in the Cognos products. In certain point applications, such as Cognos Consumer Insight, IBM has brought together Hadoop-based processing of social media content with the Cognos presentation layer to categorize and display what people are talking about in public channels. IBM also introduced the first application based on Watson, the data-processing technology used to compete on Jeopardy. IBM has announced Content and Predictive Analytics for Healthcare, a product designed to examine unstructured data such as notes and comments in addition to structured healthcare data such as lab results. Our benchmark research into Healthcare finds a large opportunity for improvement. Overall then, IBM is making strides bringing big data and predictive analytics to the masses, but to date the efforts are confined mostly to point applications and custom consulting engagements. I expect that the experience that IBM gains from these activities will give it a competitive edge in big-data analytics for the near term.

        The third theme, personal analytics, although nascent, seems to be gathering some momentum in the market. MicroStrategy recently introduced Cloud Personal, which I covered in a previous post. At IOD IBM devoted a significant portion of its Business Analytics keynote to personal analytics including an in-depth demo of some capabilities that are still in the labs. Personal analytics means more than visualization to IBM. It also includes the ability to update data and perform what-if analysis to enable driver-based planning, which my colleague Robert Kugel explained in this post. IBM also plans to support disconnected usage so users can work with analytics offline. Many users would also consider mobile access a form of personal computing. At the event, IBM introduced its first native iPad application in the Cognos product line, which my colleague Mark Smith recently reviewed.

        In the weeks before IOD, IBM introduced extensions to its Smart Analytics systems, which are bundled business intelligence hardware and software appliances that provide operational intelligence or real-time analysis of data generated in an organization. These bundles include InfoSphere Warehouse and Cognos BI software. (Oracle recently introduced similar capabilities in its Exalytics appliance, but the Oracle version only comes in one configuration.) IBM’s configurations available now range from a single-server version on System X (x86 architecture) and Power Systems to mainframe-based systems based on z/OS. Solid-state disks (SSD) are available on some of the larger configurations for higher performance.

        IBM continues to provide a broad range of analytics capabilities that are reasonably well integrated. It has work to do to integrate the pieces fully, and individual products from other vendors may be better at specific analytic tasks. Even so, in my opinion, IBM has claimed a leadership position with its vision for analytics.

        Regards,

        Ventana Research

        ISG Software Research

        ISG Software Research is the most authoritative and respected market research and advisory services firm focused on improving business outcomes through optimal use of people, processes, information and technology. Since our beginning, our goal has been to provide insight and expert guidance on mainstream and disruptive technologies. In short, we want to help you become smarter and find the most relevant technology to accelerate your organization's goals.

        JOIN OUR COMMUNITY

        Our Analyst Perspective Policy

        • Ventana Research’s Analyst Perspectives are fact-based analysis and guidance on business, industry and technology vendor trends. Each Analyst Perspective presents the view of the analyst who is an established subject matter expert on new developments, business and technology trends, findings from our research, or best practice insights.

          Each is prepared and reviewed in accordance with Ventana Research’s strict standards for accuracy and objectivity and reviewed to ensure it delivers reliable and actionable insights. It is reviewed and edited by research management and is approved by the Chief Research Officer; no individual or organization outside of Ventana Research reviews any Analyst Perspective before it is published. If you have any issue with an Analyst Perspective, please email them to ChiefResearchOfficer@isg-research.net

        View Policy

        Subscribe to Email Updates

        Posts by Month

        see all

        Posts by Topic

        see all


        Analyst Perspectives Archive

        See All