How Time-to-Insight Is Driving Big Data Business Investment

For many corporations, obtaining insights rapidly is the true value of Big Data.

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How does data inform business processes, offerings, and engagement with customers? This research looks at trends in the use of analytics, the evolution of analytics strategy, optimal team composition, and new opportunities for data-driven innovation.
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They say that time is money, but Fortune 1000 executives polled in the fourth annual Big Data Executive Survey conducted by NewVantage Partners have boldly confirmed that reducing time-to-insight rather than saving money is the primary driver for their Big Data business investment.

Conducted in November and December 2015, and published on January 11, 2016, the survey confirms that Fortune 1000 firms believe that Big Data will deliver competitive advantage by enabling their firms to act faster when it comes to analyzing data, gaining insights, making critical decisions, and bringing new capabilities to market. The survey reflects the evolving perspectives of chief data officers, business presidents, chief information officers, and the heads of Big Data initiatives for nearly 50 prominent Fortune 1000 firms.

Survey participants included Fortune 1000 top 50 mainstays such as CVS Health, JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, and Johnson & Johnson. Large financial services firms were heavily represented, and as an industry group, have long been at the forefront of investments in data management solutions.

As measured by investment and business adoption, it has taken just four short years for Big Data to assert itself as an essential component of the corporate mainstream. Among the Fortune 1000 firms surveyed by NewVantage, 62.5% reported having Big Data initiatives in production or operationalized across the enterprise — nearly double the 31.4% of firms at this stage in 2013. While only 5.4% of firms reported Big Data investments in excess of $50 million in 2014, the number of firms that project investments in Big Data of greater than $50 million leaps to 26.8% by 2017, a steep and rapid increase. For the first time, a majority of firms (54%) reports having appointed a Chief Data Officer, up from just 12% in 2012, providing further corroboration that data has become a corporate priority.

What is driving the sharp increase in Big Data investment? According to the NewVantage survey, a clear pattern has emerged. Organizations feel a need to learn quickly and act faster. While only 5.6% of firms identified cost savings and operational reductions as the primary driver of Big Data investment, 83.5% of survey respondents named factors relating to speed, insight, and business agility as the primary reasons for Big Data investment. Of this total, 46.5

Topics

Competing With Data & Analytics

How does data inform business processes, offerings, and engagement with customers? This research looks at trends in the use of analytics, the evolution of analytics strategy, optimal team composition, and new opportunities for data-driven innovation.
More in this series

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Comment (1)
Thomas Warden
Randy:

There's no doubt that corporations are moving up the experience curve with big data initiatives and good for them.  Though I'm not sure that trumpeting those who are spending all the money on these initiatives saying they are getting a good deal is great research.  Businesses are getting faster "time-to-answer" etc. but how many of them are truly acting on those "answers" and are they capturing the immense returns they expect?  My experiences suggest that there is a significant gap between what big data/advanced analytics promises and what is being realized...at least so far.

If all the CEOs who claim they are getting big value from big data really are telling the truth then I'd expect corporate cash-flows to be zooming and the S&P500 to be closer to 2,900 not 1,900.

Tom Warden
Bridge Strategy Partners