Monday, August 13, 2012

Context Generates Big Data

Where does "Big Data" come from?

Lots of discussion these days about "Big Data."  A technical term that made its way fairly rapidly into the daily discourse.   Simply put, big data is the result of the increasing velocity, variety and volume of information being generated as we act like cyborgs.   A recent NYT article describes how we got here and what the opportunities might hold for businesses.  

On the one side of the real are the half-empties who worry that the term 'big' is another nefarious character who wants to control our lives - brother, government, and oil come to mind.  This is the central argument around behavioral targeting - too much data is a bad thing.  For the half-full's amongst us, big data allows for some interesting concepts for marketers, not only in terms of relevance but also in terms of incentive. 

One current idea being tested is the creation of personalized pricing where everything that is known, inferred or surmised about an individual is used to set the prices a specific customer sees. These price differences may be in flyers, coupons, or at the shelf. And since smart phones are the new decision support platform prices could be different in and out of the store. 

The mantra of delivering relevant content to the right person at the right time in the right place means context matters.

And thus it is context, and the need to understand it in real time, that drives big data.


2 comments:

Alison Bolen said...

I definitely come form the half-full perspective. We're seeing a lot of interesting big data uses in finance and retail, in particular. SAS has been working with big data for over 35 years and recently launched an informational page about “big data” that might be relevant for your readers. The page answers the overarching question of “What is big data?” with definitions, contributing factors, customer examples and more. As a leader on this topic, we are attempting to provide more basic information that is custom-tailored to Web visitors who are just starting to research big data. If you’re interested, check it out at http://www.sas.com/big-data.

Alison Bolen said...

Definitely from the cup half-full perspective here. SAS has been working with big data for over 35 years and recently launched an informational page about “big data” that might be relevant for your readers. The page answers the overarching question of “What is big data?” with definitions, contributing factors, customer examples and more. As a leader on this topic, we are attempting to provide more basic information that is custom-tailored to Web visitors who are just starting to research big data. If you’re interested, check it out at http://www.sas.com/big-data.