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Facebook thwarts intruders

Defenders of today’s corporate networks should put barriers in front of hackers—but get out of the way of employees. So says Facebook, the social-networking giant, which in January 2012 began an overhaul of its approach to network security. The company decided to emphasise network monitoring and rapid response to attacks while minimising onerous security controls that might slow employees.

Terror-bite: Small companies come under attack

Smaller businesses are traditionally considered to be less of a target for cyber-attacks and consequently less prepared for these threats. During a study of Austrian organisations, Stefan Fenz, a researcher at the Vienna University of Technology, found that size of a business is much more of a useful indicator of preparedness levels than industry or sector.

Tomorrow’s workplace? The emergence of hubs for the untethered workforce

Working from home sounds idyllic. No unpleasant commute, no office politics, no need to put on the business suit. There are downsides, however: no access to big-office facilities such as a photocopier, no colleagues to mull over ideas with, nowhere to hold meetings.

Big data getting bigger: What the Internet of Things means for data

The amount of information flowing across networks has mushroomed in recent years, and its varieties multiplied, thanks to the growth of social media, peer-to-peer websites, mobile Internet use and other modes of digital communication. Data is now termed “big” not only due to its enormous quantities and multiplicity of types (photos and video, for example, in addition to conventional spreadsheet data). “Big” also refers to the potential opportunities for organisations that can mine the data mountains and extract the insights they contain. 

Managing “always on”: Mobility and the work-life balance in organisations

The era of the always-on workforce is upon us. Mobile technologies have created an environment of ubiquitous connectivity in which employees can be accessible at any time of the day, any day of the week.

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”.

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.

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