Fundamentals of Big Data and Business Analytics - Assignment June 2021 K...
Fundamentals of Big Data and Business Analytics - Assignment June 2021 K...
Fundamentals of Big Data and Business Analytics - Assignment June 2021 K...
Q-1.
The emerging technological development of big data is recognized as one of the most
important areas of future information technology and is evolving at a rapid speed, driven in
part by social media and the Internet of Things (IoT) phenomenon. The technological
developments in big data infrastructure, analytics, and services allow firms to transform
themselves into data-driven organizations. IDC (2015) forecasted that the big data
technology and services market will grow at a compound annual growth rate of 23.1% over
the 2014—2019 period, with annual spending reaching $48.6 billion in 2019. While
structured data is an essential part of big data, more and more data are created in unstructured
video and image forms, which traditional data management technologies are inadequate to
process. A large portion of data worldwide have been generated by billions of IoT devices
such as smart home appliances, wearable devices, and environmental sensors.
To meet the ever-increasing storage and processing needs of big data, several new big data
platforms are emerging, including NoSQL databases as an alternative to traditional
relational databases and Hadoop as an open-source framework for inexpensive distributed
clusters of commodity hardware. *
Source: *https://e-tarjome.com/storage/panel/fileuploads/2019-02-27/1551256718_E10700-
e-tarjome.pdf
Q-1(a) a) Mention at least 2 possible business applications which are enabled by the existence
of big data platforms and how do these leverage big data?
Introduction Big Data Platform refers to IT solutions that combine several Big
Data Tools and utilities into one packaged answer, and this is then
used further for managing as well as analyzing Big Data. The
emphasis on why this is needed is taken care of later in the blog,
but know how much data is getting created daily. This Big Data if
not maintained well, enterprises are bound to lose out on
customers. Let’s get started with the basics.
This industry also heavily relies on Big Data for risk analytics,
including; anti-money laundering, demand enterprise risk
management, "Know Your Customer," and fraud mitigation.
Big Data providers are specific to this industry includes 1010data,
Panopticon Software, Streambase Systems, Nice Actimize, and
Quartet FS.
Conclusion Generally, most organizations have several goals for adopting Big
Data projects. While the primary goal for most organizations is to
enhance customer experience, other goals include cost reduction,
better-targeted marketing, and making existing processes more
efficient. In recent times, data breaches have also made enhanced
security an important goal that Big Data projects seek to
incorporate.
Q.1(b)
How do cloud platforms fuel the growth of big data and the benefits which companies seek
through cloud technologies to build data analytics solutions? Illustrate with examples.
Conclusion In order to analyze big data, you need to first identify the issues
that need solutions or answers. Then, attempt to identify the
answer to your question and ask yourself, ‘how can I get the data
to solve it?’ or ‘what can big data do for my business?’
Your big data solutions need to be user-friendly, match what you
had in mind for pricing, and flexible enough to serve your business
both now and in the future.
Research what the most reliable tool is for the problem you need to
solve. For example, if you want to launch more effective
promotions and marketing campaigns, you can use Canopy Labs,
which predicts customer behavior and sales trends.
There are many tools out there that are inexpensive or even free
that you can use. Google has user-friendly tools like Google
Adwords and Google BigQuery. Administering a survey is simple
and cheap using tools, such as SurveyMonkey and Doodle.
Q- 2.
State 3 use-cases of business analytics within the retail industry, highlighting usage of
descriptive, predictive, and prescriptive analytics (2 each). Give an example of how mobile
analytics has been implemented in the industry and the resultant impact.
Concepts and Retailers now making the leap into prescriptive analytics are
Application related to transcending descriptive and predictive analytics to make better
the question decisions at scale – setting the right pricing, promotions and
assortments in every store at finer levels of granularity to delight
their best customers and drive loyalty.
Descriptive Analytics
Analyzes past data, such as the results of promotions, to provide
insights on why they succeeded or failed, to help the retailer
launch more successful promotions. It categorizes consumers in
large groups, offering few insights into individual behavior.
Retailers now making the leap into prescriptive analytics are
transcending descriptive and predictive analytics to make better
decisions at scale – setting the right pricing, promotions and
assortments in every store at finer levels of granularity to delight
their best customers and drive loyalty.
Predictive Analytics
Analyzes current and historical data to make general forecasts and
predictions, such as the probability of an event recurring in a
region. Can guide some basic decision making but does not
provide specific recommendations.
Predictive analytics, do not provide with these types of granular,
aisle-by-aisle recommendations every week or keep up with the
constantly changing nature of the endless aisle. Instead, it would
give data scientists forecasts for a narrow range of scenarios, and
the scientists would need to translate those forecasts into simple
information category managers might be able to use. Prescriptive
analytics uses pattern recognition to anticipate opportunities and
recommend the timing of promotions and price and assortment
changes in specific categories to raise foot traffic, basket size or
any other KPI. In our experience, when managers try and test the
recommendations that go against their gut feeling and quickly see
clear improvements in metrics such as basket size and same-store
sales, they become champions of prescriptive analytics tools – and
they tend to have more influence over their peers than data
scientists. After all, nearly every manager knows that in the blur of
day-to-day category management, patterns can be hard to spot. In
certain cities, avocado and chip sales might rise 5% on the Friday
before a typical big game, for example, but the prescriptive tool
might recommend stocking 20% more avocados and chips in
stores where the local teams are likely to make the playoffs. In
assortment, humans can set parameters then run a range of
scenarios. Prescriptive analytics can then identify an optimization
curve, recommend specific assortment changes, and estimate the
dollar value of those changes. The simplicity and clarity of these
interactions is part of what makes prescriptive analytics so
powerful.
Prescriptive Analytics
Using machine learning and tapping into a wider array of internal
and external data, it reveals previously unknown patterns and links
that drive results at the individual store, product and shelf level.
Data management is automated, and the system can make real-
time, easyto-understand recommendations about pricing,
assortment and promotions in each category in each store.
The new, much more sophisticated tools have arrived just in time
for many retailers. Data is piling up faster than they can analyze it,
data science talent is harder to recruit and retain, and shoppers can
now compare the products and prices of a wider range of
competitors, including discount and specialty stores. Online
retailers, the biggest threat to many inherently brick-and-mortar
stores, are now gathering and crunching so much data that they can
adjust prices on thousands of products throughout the day to take
advantage of opportunities as they arise.
Today’s advanced analytics applications are possible because of
huge advances in computing power, avalanches of new data, new
data cleaning, storage and access methods, and more flexible
algorithms. Together, these advances allow retailers to automate
more of the data science originally performed by humans,
expanding their capacity for planning and management. Research
and experience show that in retailing, as in many other complex
activities, from flying jets to navigating traffic, humans and
machines working together are much more powerful than either
working alone. Each has information and abilities that are
inherently unavailable to the other.
Q-3.
“HURRICANE FRANCES was on its way, barreling across the Caribbean, threatening a
direct hit on Florida’s Atlantic coast. Residents made for higher ground, but far away, in
Bentonville, Ark., executives at Wal-Mart Stores decided that the situation offered a great
opportunity for one of their newest data-driven weapons, something that the company calls
predictive technology. A week ahead of the storm’s landfall, Linda M. Dillman, Wal-Mart’s
chief information officer, pressed her staff to come up with forecasts based on what had
happened when Hurricane Charley struck several weeks earlier.”
a. Which type of analytics will be best suited to solve this problem and which technique will
you apply in this case? Explain the data needed to solve this problem.
Concepts and Predictive analysis will be the most useful analysis for the wall-
Application related to Mart for forecasts based on what had happened when Hurricane
the question Charley struck several weeks earlier.
Big Data is the basis for all predictive modeling tools. Predictive
Analytics is only as good as the data it has to evaluate. This is why
it is important to combine and clean up data from disparate data
sources to produce accurate analyses. The key fact is that no single
data point should be allowed to assert an undue influence.
Concepts and BI helps companies predict patterns and prevailing trends from
Application related to their data. Improved knowledge of the market demand prevents
the question them from overstocking. It also helps supply chain managers track
shipments in real time and accurately predict delivery to
customers, which improves customer service.