- About the Author
- Acknowledgments
- Dedication
- Preface
- Chapter 1: Zara: Fast Fashion from Savvy Systems
- Chapter 2: Strategy and Technology
- Chapter 3: Netflix: David Becomes Goliath
- Chapter 4: Moore’s Law and More: Fast, Cheap Computing and What It Means for the Manager
- Chapter 5: Understanding Network Effects
- Chapter 6: Peer Production, Social Media, and Web 2.0
- Chapter 7: Facebook: Building a Business from the Social Graph
- Section 1: Introduction
- Section 2: What’s the Big Deal?
- Section 3: The Social Graph
- Section 4: Facebook Feeds—Ebola for Data Flows
- Section 5: F8—Facebook as a Platform
- Section 6: Advertising and Social Networks: A Work in Progress
- Section 7: Beacon Busted
- Section 8: Predators and Privacy
- Section 9: Walled Garden or Open Field?
- Section 10: Is Facebook Worth It?
- Chapter 8: Google: Search, Online Advertising, and Beyond…
- Section 1: Introduction
- Section 2: Understanding Search
- Section 3: Understanding the Increase in Online Ad Spending
- Section 4: Search Advertising
- Section 5: Ad Networks—Distribution beyond Search
- Section 6: More Ad Formats and Payment Schemes
- Section 7: Customer Profiling and Behavioral Targeting
- Section 8: Profiling and Privacy
- Section 9: Search Engines, Ad Networks, and Fraud
- Section 10: The Battle Unfolds
- Chapter 9: Understanding Software: A Primer for Managers
- Chapter 10: Software in Flux: Partly Cloudy and Sometimes Free
- Section 1: Introduction
- Section 2: Open Source
- Section 3: Why Open Source?
- Section 4: Examples of Open Source Software
- Section 5: Why Give It Away? The Business of Open Source
- Section 6: Cloud Computing: Hype or Hope?
- Section 7: The Software Cloud: Why Buy When You Can Rent?
- Section 8: SaaS: Not without Risks
- Section 9: The Hardware Cloud: Utility Computing and Its Cousins
- Section 10: Clouds and Tech Industry Impact
- Section 11: Virtualization: Software That Makes One Computer Act Like Many
- Section 12: Make, Buy, or Rent
- Chapter 11: The Data Asset: Databases, Business Intelligence, and Competitive Advantage
- Section 1: Introduction
- Section 2: Data, Information, and Knowledge
- Section 3: Where Does Data Come From?
- Section 4: Data Rich, Information Poor
- Section 5: Data Warehouses and Data Marts
- Section 6: The Business Intelligence Toolkit
- Section 7: Data Asset in Action: Technology and the Rise of Wal-Mart
- Section 8: Data Asset in Action: Harrah’s Solid Gold CRM for the Service Sector
There are no key terms for this page.
Introduction
Learning Objectives
After studying this section you should be able to do the following:
-
Understand how increasingly standardized data, access to third-party datasets, cheap, fast computing and easier-to-use software are collectively enabling a new age of decision making.
-
Be familiar with some of the enterprises that have benefited from data-driven, fact-based decision making.
The planet is awash in data. Cash registers ring up transactions worldwide. Web browsers leave a trail of cookie crumbs nearly everywhere they go. And with RFID, inventory can literally announce its presence so that firms can precisely journal every hop their products make along the value chain: “I’m arriving in the warehouse,” “I’m on the store shelf,” “I’m leaving out the front door.”
A study by Gartner Research claims that the amount of data on corporate hard drives doubles every six months,[463] while IDC states that the collective number of those bits already exceeds the number of stars in the universe.[464] Wal-Mart alone boasts a data volume well over 125 times as large as the entire print collection of the U.S. Library of Congress.[465]
And with this flood of data comes a tidal wave of opportunity. Increasingly standardized corporate data, and access to rich, third-party datasets—all leveraged by cheap, fast computing and easier-to-use software—are collectively enabling a new age of data-driven, fact-based decision making. You’re less likely to hear old-school terms like “decision support systems” used to describe what’s going on here. The phrase of the day is business intelligence (BI)business intelligence (BI)A term combining aspects of reporting, data exploration and ad hoc queries, and sophisticated data modeling and analysis., a catchall term combining aspects of reporting, data exploration and ad hoc queries, and sophisticated data modeling and analysis. Alongside business intelligence in the new managerial lexicon is the phrase analyticsanalyticsA term describing the extensive use of data, statistical and quantitative analysis, explanatory and predictive models, and fact-based management to drive decisions and actions., a term describing the extensive use of data, statistical and quantitative analysis, explanatory and predictive models, and fact-based management to drive decisions and actions.[466]
The benefits of all this data and number crunching are very real, indeed. Data leverage lies at the center of competitive advantage we’ve studied in the Zara, Netflix, and Google cases. Data mastery has helped vault Wal-Mart to the top of the Fortune 500 list. It helped Harrah’s Casino Hotels grow to be twice as profitable as similarly sized Caesars, and rich enough to acquire this rival. And data helped Capital One find valuable customers that competitors were ignoring, delivering ten-year financial performance a full ten times greater than the S&P 500. Data-driven decision making is even credited with helping the Red Sox win their first World Series in eighty-three years and with helping the New England Patriots win three Super Bowls in four years. To quote from a BusinessWeek cover story on analytics, “Math Will Rock Your World!”[467]
Sounds great, but it can be a tough slog getting an organization to the point where it has a leveragable data asset. In many organizations data lies dormant, spread across inconsistent formats and incompatible systems, unable to be turned into anything of value. Many firms have been shocked at the amount of work and complexity required to pull together an infrastructure that empowers its managers. But not only can this be done; it must be done. Firms that are basing decisions on hunches aren’t managing; they’re gambling. And the days of uninformed managerial dice rolling are over.
While we’ll study technology in this chapter, our focus isn’t as much on the technology itself as it is on what you can do with that technology. Consumer products giant P&G believes in this distinction so thoroughly that the firm renamed its IT function as “Information and Decision Solutions.”[468] Solutions drive technology decisions, not the other way around.
In this chapter we’ll study the data asset, how it’s created, how it’s stored, and how it’s accessed and leveraged. We’ll also study many of the firms mentioned above, and more; providing a context for understanding how managers are leveraging data to create winning models, and how those that have failed to realize the power of data have been left in the dust.
Data, Analytics, and Competitive Advantage
Anyone can acquire technology—but data is oftentimes considered a defensible source of competitive advantage. The data a firm can leverage is a true strategic asset when it’s rare, valuable, imperfectly imitable, and lacking in substitutes (see Chapter 2, Strategy and Technology).
If more data brings more accurate modeling, moving early to capture this rare asset can be the difference between a dominating firm and an also-ran. But be forewarned, there’s no monopoly on math. Advantages based on capabilities and data that others can acquire will be short-lived. Those advances leveraged by the Red Sox were originally pioneered by the Oakland A’s and are now used by nearly every team in the major leagues.
This doesn’t mean that firms can ignore the importance data can play in lowering costs, increasing customer service, and other ways that boost performance. But differentiation will be key in distinguishing operationally effective data use from those efforts that can yield true strategic positioning.
Key Takeaways
-
The amount of data on corporate hard drives doubles every six months.
-
In many organizations, available data is not exploited to advantage.
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Data is oftentimes considered a defensible source of competitive advantage; however, advantages based on capabilities and data that others can acquire will be short-lived.
Questions and Exercises
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Name and define the terms that are supplanting discussions of decision support systems in the modern IS lexicon.
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Is data a source of competitive advantage? Describe situations in which data might be a source for sustainable competitive advantage. When might data not yield sustainable advantage?
-
Are advantages based on analytics and modeling potentially sustainable? Why or why not?
-
What role do technology and timing play in realizing advantages from the data asset?
[463] Babcock, 2006.
[464] L. Mearian, “Digital Universe and Its Impact Bigger Than We Thought,” Computerworld, March 18, 2008.
[465] Derived by comparing Wal-Mart’s 2.5 petabytes (E. Lai, “Teradata Creates Elite Club for Petabyte-Plus Data Warehouse Customers,” Computerworld, October 18, 2008) to the Library of Congress estimate of 20 TB (D. Gewirtz, “What If Someone Stole the Library of Congress?” CNN.com/AC360, May 25, 2009). It’s further noted that the Wal-Mart figure is just for data stored on systems provided by the vendor Teradata. Wal-Mart has many systems outside its Teradata-sourced warehouses, too.
[466] T. Davenport and J. Harris, Competing on Analytics: The New Science of Winning (Boston: Harvard Business School Press, 2007).
[467] S. Baker, “Math Will Rock Your World,” BusinessWeek, January 23, 2006, http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/06_04/b3968001.htm.
[468] J. Soat, “P&G’s CIO Puts IT at Users’ Service,” InformationWeek, December 15, 2007.

Cite this Content
Citation Information
APA Format:Gallaugher, John., Information Systems: A Manager's Guide To Harnessing Technology. Retrieved Mar 13, 2010 from http://www.flatworldknowledge.com/node/41126 .
MLA Format:Gallaugher, John. Information Systems: A Manager's Guide To Harnessing Technology. 1969 . Flat World Knowledge. 13 Mar, 2010. <http://www.flatworldknowledge.com/node/41126> .
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