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TIBCO Software: Niche services, broad opportunities

TIBCO Software is an American provider of infrastructure software that enables companies to capture and process time-sensitive information, aiding their decision-making processes. Asia contributes about 10% of TIBCO’s global revenues, and is the firm’s fastest-growing region today, with year-on-year revenue growth of 45% in 2010.

Wipro: Opportunities in Asia

Wipro, an Indian conglomerate with a large IT services business, has expanded across the world over the past decade. Wipro’s IT business today employs some 131,000 people across the world.

Data for secondary markets

Many companies build a big data strategy with the aim of improving their existing lines of business. Yet sometimes those plans should extend to encompass completely new revenue streams, says Gareth Price, head of new business strategy at the European division of NEC, a Japanese technology giant.

Data democratisation at dunnhumby

Having invested time and money collecting them, few companies want to share data with other businesses. Yet sharing data with others is exactly what experts at dunnhumby, a multinational brand retail consultancy, recommend. It is advice that should be taken seriously, as dunnhumby has an excellent track record when it comes to big data. In the 1990s the firm promoted the idea that data from loyalty cards could be used to better understand customers. Tesco--one of the firm’s clients--liked dunnhumby’s work so much that it bought a stake in the company.

EMI Music: data-driven marketing

In 2011, managers at EMI Music spotted something interesting. It concerned one of their new artists who boasted a strong following among young people, but little recognition in other demographic groups. EMI observed that other music fans were starting to take notice of the artist. Eventually, the company’s research showed that the artist had gained recognition among casual consumers, ie, those who listen to and watch mainstream radio and television. At that point EMI decided to back the artist with a major marketing campaign. It was subsequently rewarded with a number-one hit.

BMS and ipilimumab: Co-operation with academia and other companies yields success

A new metastatic melanoma product, ipilimumab (sold as Yervoy), from Bristol-Myers Squibb (BMS), has the potential to be a blockbuster. Malignant melanoma is increasing in frequency and this is the first new drug approved for the condition since 1998. Unlike previous treatments, it has been shown to increase life expectancy in patients by several months on average, and 28% are alive after two years, compared with just 14% using the previous treatment. Rather than the story of a single innovation, ipilimumab’s development shows how co-operation can yield a

Smart design for an ageing market

The world is getting older. In Europe, for example, the median age in 1950 was 30 years. Today, it is 40. Over 65s will make up almost 25 per cent of the UK population by 2034, according to the Office for National Statistics, and by 2025 almost 1.5 million people in the UK will be living with an age-related disability.

The pharma sector and the search for emotional branding

The pharmaceuticals industry is bland, defensive and fails to foster loyalty among its customers. These were some of the thoughts going through the mind of brand design guru Jonathan Sands, chairman of Elmwood, a design consultancy as he sat through the Economist Pharma Summit earlier this year.

Technology and the urban citizen

The immense popularity of smartphone apps has not only helped to create better interaction between businesses and their customers, but also between cities and their citizens. One example comes from the UK capital, London, with the launch in 2011 of a “Love Clean London” app, which the mayor, Boris Johnson, hopes will help to clean up the city’s streets and parks. Residents can snap a photo of an offending item of litter, graffiti or vandalism; the app files it and records the exact location.

Robotics on the rise

Robots are hardly new to manufacturing. By the end of 2010 over 1m industrial robots had been installed globally. Ongoing improvements in artificial intelligence, as well as faster and cheaper computing, are all helping to drive new advances. The automotive sector has long been the biggest source of robotics demand, but as robots have become cheaper and more sophisticated, other industries are starting to adopt them.

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