Data & Data Culture
Big Data Fatigue?
Big data is far from a fad in modern business — it’s a method of managing information that’s here for the long haul.
Big data is far from a fad in modern business — it’s a method of managing information that’s here for the long haul.
Kaiser Permanente is crafting health care’s future with help from its Innovation and Advanced Technology group.
Using data analytics to reinvent health care requires more than just technical know-how — it also requires flexibility.
WellPoint’s efforts to change health care billing highlights the need for an effective innovation process.
Research into how the sports world uses data offers five lessons that almost any business could adopt.
The CIO Council makes the case that greater collaboration among top executives is required if companies are to reap technology’s benefits.
State Street gives itself a data and analytics makeover to meet the challenges of a changing industry.
The 2014 Data & Analytics Report by MIT Sloan Management Review and SAS finds that an analytics culture offers better outcomes.
Where the “gut” instinct of sports managers once ruled, analytic insights are fast becoming standard.
The way health care is billed in the U.S. system is part of the reason costs are so high. WellPoint is looking to analytics to play a strategic role in changing that.
A recent book by Thomas H. Davenport and Jinho Kim advises companies on how to capture the power of big data.
The implications of a chief analytics officer for strategy and for long-term planning.
Customer experience is what sets Rent The Runway apart. And it’s driven by data and analytics.
A recent report by MIT CISR details how comScore organizes internally to create value from big data.
Big data analysis can help geographically distributed companies monitor customer satisfaction.
To make better data-based decisions managers need smart data — and big data training.
Entravision, a Spanish-language media company, transformed its business model using big data.
The traditional broadcast business is being transformed through the use of data and analytics.
GE’s marketing division uses data to continuously improve performance — and democratize analytics.
Healthcare systems are coming back to their roots, using geographic information systems to shape healthcare.