ManpowerGroup: managing knowledge

Even after valuable data have been collected, analysed and distilled into insights, they need to be effectively disseminated throughout an organisation. To encourage employees to connect with these data on a personal level requires more than a company-wide e-mail.

Lyse Energi upgrades to smart sensors and meters

Lyse Energi, a small power utility in south-western Norway, has been working on a plan since early 2011 to upgrade its meter data management systems and in parallel look for new revenue streams. The new operation will enable more storage of the sensor data that will increase in volume as smart sensors and meters expand in the coming years.

Ovo Energy engages with its customers

For an example of how data can provide a competitive advantage, take Ovo Energy, a start-up company that entered the UK power market in 2009. “As an energy supplier, we’re essentially in retail,” explains Stephen Fitzpatrick, the firm’s founder and CEO. “So we started off from the customer’s point of view”.

IBM: Watching workers

In 2004 IBM, a global technology and consulting organisation, introduced a workforce management system that allows the company to oversee its global resources while employees manage their own careers.

Two-hundred fifty distinct roles (eg, project manager, IT architect) were identified across the global organisation and given descriptions. The descriptions comprise skills, which are also defined uniformly across the organisation. Each role description is “owned” by a practitioner of that job, who updates it as necessary.

Scripps Health: fostering a data-driven culture

“In healthcare, it’s not ’big data’,” says Dr Jim LaBelle, corporate vice-president of quality, medical management and physician co-management at Scripps Health, the San Diego-based health system that includes 5 hospitals, 2,600 physicians and more than 13,000 employees. “It is a tidal wave of data. And our ability to restructure and change our culture is almost entirely informed by these data,” he says.

The data sceptics

Peter Fader and Eric Bradlow are professors of marketing at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School. They are also co-directors of the Wharton Customer Analytics Initiative, an academic research centre that focuses on the development and application of customer analytic methods and data-driven business decision-making. And they are both critical of the approach businesses are currently taking to big data. The Economist Intelligence Unit conducted a joint interview with these thought leaders on the meaning of big data, and what needs to change.

P&G: Fashioning a "decision cockpit"

At Proctor & Gamble, executives decided that providing a data-rich environment to its managers meant creating a "decision cockpit" that focuses on a specific business function or market segment. The idea, says P&G's director of business intelligence, Patrick Kern, is "to get at operational business strategies, like how to run a plant from day to day".

In Latin America, good data use means big advantages

According to survey respondents in Latin America, companies in that region seem to derive more value from data than their peers in North America. Seventy three percent of respondents in Latin America say they derive great competitive advantage from their use of data. In North America, the number of executives who say their data efforts are "extremely valuable" is significantly lower, at 63%.

Suncorp uses data to manage insurance risks

All insurance firms use statistics to assess various types of risk, from the possibility of floods to car crashes or fires. Suncorp, Australia's biggest insurer, goes a lot further in using data to gain an advantage over rivals. David Stewardson, Suncorp's executive manager in the commercial insurance business technology department, says the company analyses data to anticipate which customers might be on the verge of switching to a competitor. The point is not to keep every customer in the fold; rather, it is to hold on to the most profitable customers and let the unprofitable ones go.

BT uses data to get it right the first time

BT is a former monopoly that still has a large share of the telecommunications market in Britain, but in order to compete with smaller rivals that can offer fixed line and broadband service for less, it emphasizes customer care and the quality of its telecommunications services.

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