Real Time Research REPORTS Real-Time Enterprise Stories Adobe Systems • Alliander • ARI • CareFusion • City of Boston, Massachusetts • City of Cape Town, South Africa • Commonwealth Bank of Australia • ConAgra • eBay • EMC • Florida Crystals • Globus • Hewlett-Packard • HSE24 • Johnsonville Sausage • Kaeser Compressors • Maple Leaf Foods • Mercedes-AMG • NFL • Nomura Research Institute • Norwegian Cruise Line • Southern California Edison • T-Mobile • More than 20 detailed case studies from Bloomberg Businessweek Research Services and Forbes Insights featuring leading-edge enterprises across industries to explore the real value of the in-memory platform: SAP HANA. Sponsored by: October 2014 Real-Time Enterprises A Research Collection Contents Forward: Making Decisions in the Moment.................................................. 5 Adobe Systems: “Adobe Gets Personal With Customers” (high tech)........ 6 Alliander: “Alliander Energizes Its Business with Real-Time Analytics” (utilities)...................................................................................................... 10 ARI: “In-Memory Computing Drives Fleet Savings at ARI” (automotive)................................................................................................ 14 CareFusion: “Real-Time Business Leads to Healthy Performance at CareFusion” (healthcare) ........................................................................... 18 City of Boston, Massachusetts: “Boston’s Better Community Connections Through Big Data and Analytics” (public sector) ...................................... 22 City of Cape Town, South Africa: “Real-Time Data Speeds Services in ‘The Mother City’ of Cape Town” (public sector) ...................................... 25 Commonwealth Bank of Australia: “CBA Offers More Personalized Banking Through Big Data and Analytics” (banking)................................................ 28 ConAgra: “Real-Time Business Leads ConAgra to Profitable Insights” (consumer products).................................................................................. 31 eBay: “Big Benefits from Big Data at eBay” (high tech)............................ 35 Page 2 Real-Time Enterprises A Research Collection Contents EMC: “The Key to EMC’s Technology Growth: Integrated Acquisitions” (high tech)................................................................................................... 39 Florida Crystals: “Real-Time Business Sweetens Performance at Florida Crystals” (consumer products)................................................................... 44 Globus: “Globus Is Always in Style with In-Memory Technology” (retail).. 48 Hewlett-Packard: “HP Paves the Future with Real-Time Insights” (high tech)................................................................................................... 51 HSE24: “Using Real-Time Insights, HSE24 Gets Closer to Customers” (retail).......................................................................................................... 55 Johnsonville Sausage: “Johnsonville Cooks Up a Real-Time Recipe” (consumer products).................................................................................. 59 Kaeser Kompressoren: “Kaeser Puts Customers First with Big Data and Real-Time Business” (industrial machinery & components)...................... 63 Maple Leaf Foods: “Maple Leaf Foods Turns Over a New Leaf with Up-to-the-Minute Insights” (consumer products)...................................... 67 Mercedes-AMG: “Mercedes-AMG: A Showcase for Real-Time Business Decisions” (automotive).............................................................................. 71 National Football League: “The NFL’s Advanced Analytics Score with Football Fans” (sports & entertainment) .................................................... 75 Page 3 Real-Time Enterprises A Research Collection Contents Nomura Research Institute: “Tokyo Drivers Avoid Traffic Jams with NRI’s Big Data and Analytics” (high tech)............................................................ 79 Norwegian Cruise Line: “Norwegian Cruise Line Sets Its Course for Real-Time Insights” (travel & transportation).............................................. 82 Southern California Edison: “How Southern California Edison Harnesses Big Data’s Power” (utilities)........................................................................ 86 T-Mobile: “Using Social Media to Improve Customer Loyalty at T-Mobile” (telecommunications)................................................................................. 90 COPYRIGHT AND DISCLAIMER NOTES Real Time Research Reports, a subsidiary of Triangle Publishing Services Co., does not make any guarantees or warranties as to the accuracy or completeness of this report. Real Time Research Reports shall not be liable to the user or anyone else for any inaccuracy, error or omission, regardless of cause, or for any damages resulting therefrom. In no event will Real Time Research Reports nor other companies or third-party licensors be liable for any indirect, special or consequential damages, including but not limited to lost time, lost money, lost profits or lost good will, whether in contract, tort, strict liability or otherwise, and whether or not such damages are foreseen or unforeseen with respect to any use of this document. This document, or any portion thereof, may not be reproduced, transmitted, introduced into a retrieval system or distributed without the written consent of the copyright owner. © Copyright 2014 Real Time Research Reports, a Triangle Publishing Services Co. Inc. company, except for material previously copyrighted to either Bloomberg LP or Forbes Insights. All rights reserved. The names of actual companies, publications and products mentioned herein may be the trademarks of their respective owners. E L E C T R O N I C V E R S I O N AVA I L A B L E To see or use an electronic copy of this document in PDF format, please visit the following Web site: www.saphana.com Page 4 Real-Time Enterprises A Research Collection Forward: Making Decisions in the Moment Many different factors impact the decisions companies make everyday. Being a real-time business means being able to make those decisions when they matter most. For most companies today, however, batch processes must run before any decision can be made. In retail, for example, personalized offers in stores aren’t common. Instead, stores offer a generic 25 percent off. But what if something personal and relevant for individual shoppers could be delivered when they walk in the door? There will be a time when we walk into a store and our experience will be radically different. That’s why the SAP HANA platform exists: to enable companies to do business in the moment. Steve Lucas, President Platform Solutions, SAP For large companies, three main drivers deliver value. First, simplify: Reduce the complexity of the systems required to produce existing results. In fact, massive IT simplification was one of the key design motivations behind SAP HANA. You can use the platform to feed data from all different sources into one system. Second, enable agility: Give customers insights in real time to aid decision-making. Third, innovate: Unlock the true potential of real-time business innovation through new business processes and models. SAP HANA deployments began more than three years ago. Since then, companies have added the SAP Business Suite powered by HANA. Now there are more than 4,000 SAP HANA customers. So far, business transformations have been process by process based on the time it takes to get data and then analyze it. When you eliminate the latency, you have to think through how you want to work differently. Real-time planning, for example, is the “game changer” for one SAP customer. Using HANA has reduced the time it takes to process one financial report from 40 hours to 20 seconds— a 7,000 times improvement. I envision the SAP HANA platform not only enabling customers to make today’s decisions but also providing them a powerful predictive engine for tomorrow’s choices. Most companies make decisions by looking in the rearview mirror, but a rearview mirror offers only a tiny piece of the puzzle versus the forward view a windshield provides. Eventually, operating models will include built-in forward-looking decisions. Real-time business transformations are not just about technology, though. SAP HANA is extraordinarily innovative, but the first thing we do is look at where the opportunities are to transform business processes. Then, SAP helps customers rethink how those processes are designed and how they can be remodeled. You have to start at zero. If you don’t have to wait for information, there’s an opportunity for massive reinvention and value creation across industries. n —Steve Lucas Page 5 Real-Time Enterprises A Research Collection Adobe Systems at a glance Producer of desktop publishing and graphics editing programs as well as a wide array of products made for creative and marketing professionals Industry: high tech Founded: 1982 Headquarters: San Jose, Calif. 2013 revenue: $4.06 billion Employees: More than 11,000 worldwide Products: Software for creative and marketing professionals www.adobe.com Source: Adobe Systems Page 6 RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Enterprise Case Studies Adobe Gets Personal With Customers With in-memory computing and predictive analytics tools, the high-tech company is anticipating customer needs and developing more personalized programs. BY JOE MULLICH T hroughout high-tech, long-time business models are falling by the wayside as products become digitized, customer demands rise and the need for speed increases. Few companies know this better than Adobe Systems, best known for its Adobe Systems at a Glance } Founded: 1982 } Corporate headquarters: San Jose, Calif. } Revenue: $4.06 billion, fiscal 2013 } Employees: More than 11,000 worldwide } Products: Software for creative and marketing professionals www.adobe.com Source: Adobe Systems desktop publishing and graphics editing programs Acrobat and Photoshop, as well as a wide array of products made for creative and marketing professionals. Over the past few years, Adobe’s business model FIGURE 1 has fundamentally changed. Instead of selling boxed software, its business is now driven by Changes to Adobe’s Business Model The company’s business model has fundamentally changed. cloud-based subscriptions. And instead of products being released every 18 months, new offerings and upgrades are a constant. The company’s customer Past Present Offerings Sold by the box Sold by the subscription Distribution Sold through partners Sold directly Product releases 18-month cycles Continuously updated Periodic Ongoing relationship interactions—once periodic and performed through resellers or partners—are now continuous and occur across multiple channels, including social media, display ads, e-mail, the call center, direct sales and the Web (see Figure 1, “Changes to Adobe’s Business Model”). Customer Source: Adobe Systems These shifts have transformed the types of Source: Adobe Systems interactions customer, product and sales data to which Adobe 1. Prasad Bhandarkar spoke at a recent Webinar. FEBRUARY 2014 | has access. Whereas customer information used to the exact data they needed rather than sorting be limited to name, address and billing information, through data dumps. To accomplish both of these Adobe now collects data on how customers use goals, Adobe needed to enable cross-functional its products, and in what context. Used correctly, collaboration, integrate silos of data, deliver one such data can lead to a better understanding of version of performance metrics, react to customer customer behavior and even future needs. signals in milliseconds and enable data-driven action. The problem was, while each of its engagement According to Prasad Bhandarkar, director channels provided customer insights, the views of Adobe Information Services, these goals were fractured and channel-specific. Adobe needed were accomplished by leveraging in-memory to gain a more holistic view of customers, as well computing,1 which rapidly aggregates and analyzes as real-time insights into their behavior to deliver a vast amounts of numerous types of data. The highly personalized, engaging experience. It had use of in-memory computing and analytics tools also become essential for the company to quickly is the centerpiece of the company’s vision of obtain up-to-the-moment business performance “revolutionizing the way Adobe engages with information so that workers could quickly find information,” Bhandarkar said. © Copyright 2014. Bloomberg L.P. All rights reserved. RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Business Case Studies FIGURE 2 Respondents were asked, “How would you rate your ability to quantify the impact of one channel’s performance on another (e.g., online display advertising’s impact on search marketing)?” 600 million desktops, and 90 percent of the world’s creators use the graphics program. The company also offers Creative Cloud, which enables access to Adobe applications, and Adobe Marketing Cloud, which provides analytics and other marketing tools. Adobe’s Business Challenges Adobe faced many of the issues common to } Transforming into a cloud business } Using real-time data to tailor personalized customer experiences } Creating company-wide performance KPIs and holistic customer views } Enabling consistent messaging across numerous marketing channels } Aggregating structured and unstructured data from multiple sources Channel Quagmire A Fractured Data Environment Adobe’s Photoshop software is currently installed on technology businesses grappling with this new age I don’t know 7.7% Very good 4.8% Poor 18.8% of producing and marketing software. Although the Good 16.8% Fair 51% company could see how a customer responded to a specific marketing initiative, for instance, it could not easily combine that information with that customer’s e-mail messages and social media sentiment. A *Total does not equal 100% due to rounding recent study found that most marketers do not Source: The CMO Club 2 have a holistic view across channels (see Figure 2, and dynamic access to data. Real-time data “Channel Quagmire”). acquisition puts instant decision-making at the fingertips of people throughout the organization. Further, performance reports were often inaccurate and inconsistent. Analytics was highly • Versatility. The platform enables employees to fragmented across the company, with different visualize data using a wide variety of charts and groups producing different numbers. And because graphs, so they can make connections in the executives relied on IT to query data, they had to data more easily and share their insights readily wait for results. The time delay was increasingly throughout the enterprise. unacceptable for an Internet-based business in which second-by-second customer activity can To ensure that the dashboard optimizes influence marketing and sales efforts. decision-making, the team drew inspiration for its visualization techniques from the Louvre in Developing a Dashboard Paris. “There is art and poetry to make this work,” A key piece of Adobe’s data strategy is Adobe Bhandarkar said. Users now get answers and Dash, a business intelligence platform that connects insights rather than tables and numbers, enabling data across multiple sources in real time. Because them to discover something new about the traditional databases cannot aggregate data on the business every time they use the system. fly, the company turned to in-memory computing. Adobe had used in-memory computing in the past to Presenting data effectively is a key component of real- analyze large data sets to stem software piracy, and time analytics. In a 2013 study by TDWI Research, the effort had quickly uncovered enough information respondents named several business benefits of about software misuse to suggest that the technology data visualization technologies, including improved offered significant revenue opportunities. Adobe Dash operational efficiency (77 percent), faster response to offers several benefits: business change (62 percent) and the ability to identify • Trust. Business performance KPIs are now timely, new business opportunities (59 percent).4 3 2. The CMO Club and Visual IQ. “Building Bridges to the Promised Land: Big Data, Attribution & Omni-Channel—A CMO Perspective.” 2014 http://goo.gl/DaItYQ 3. SAP. “Adobe: HANA Customer Testimonial Video.” http://goo.gl/LD5Yxx 4. Stodder, David. “Data Visualization and Discovery for Better Business Decisions.” TDWI Research, 2013. http://goo.gl/xBYyLi accurate and undisputed. With a single set of KPIs, Adobe can now work from a single version New Business Insights of the truth. With the ability to quickly aggregate information • Speed. Business leaders now have direct 2 Bloomberg Businessweek Research Services from all channels via in-memory computing, Adobe RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Business Case Studies FIGURE 3 Preference for Personalization promotions. In the past, it was necessary to wait Consumers increasingly expect personalized interactions. in-memory computing, that data is available within (Percent of respondents) Would trust businesses more if they explained how they are using personal information to improve their online experience 77% Adobe’s IT Solutions Get frustrated with Web sites that display content, offers, ads, promotions, etc., that have nothing to do with their interests 74% } Fully integrated and realtime customer profiles across channels } Easy-to-use dashboard with a variety of visualization tools } In-memory computing for instantaneous data aggregation and analysis Are OK with providing personal information on a Web site as long as it is for their benefit and being used in responsible ways 57% Source: Janrain/Harris Interactive, 2013 24 hours to ascertain a promotion’s impact. With minutes, enabling Adobe to tweak the promotion immediately to improve results. Knowing what is happening with promotions within a 15-minute window is far more powerful than having a one-day delay, and the agility for executive decision-making is game changing, according to the company. The best forward-looking measure for any cloud business is how actively customers are using the product. For example, if a customer’s usage of the Marketing Cloud or Creative Cloud starts to decrease a few months before the annual subscription ends, that is a clear warning sign, and the sooner that Adobe can see this trend happening and respond to it, the better chance it can now provide more personalized customer has of retaining customers. interactions and a consistent experience across channels. For instance, when customers click on Adobe executives can easily see everything in the e-mails or display ads, the company can create an digital pipeline, including top customer issues, and identity composite for them, and tailor the message for further information, they can drill-down on the based on that information, as opposed to providing fly. The company plans to enable this capability on them with generic messaging. Such personalization mobile devices in the future, as well. In fiscal 2013, aligns with customer preferences; in a recent Adobe saw an uptick for its efforts. Creative Cloud study, consumers said they prized personalized subscriptions grew by 1.1 million, and subscriptions marketing that catered to their interests (see Figure to Document Services doubled to more than 1.6 3, “Preference for Personalization”). million. Adobe Marketing Cloud achieved a record $1.02 billion in annual revenue, representing 26 On the business performance side, when percent year-over-year growth. Adobe employees have questions about order management and booking, they can slice and dice Using in-memory computing, data visualization data in many ways—such as by financial quarter and advanced analytics, Adobe is able to fully or certain geographies—and receive an answer operate as a cloud-based company. It can see a in three seconds. “That capability never existed complete and updated view of customers across before,” Bhandarkar said. “As our business changed channels, personalize customer interactions and to a subscription model, it’s become even more make profitable business decisions based on in- important for us to know on a day-to-day basis the-moment data. By leveraging real-time big data what customers are doing inside the product.” analytics, high-tech companies such as Adobe are With Adobe’s in-memory system, an order that laying the foundation needed to compete today and was booked five seconds before shows up in the in the future. • aggregated numbers. Additionally, Adobe can quickly analyze customer acquisition and usage patterns to optimize 3 Bloomberg Businessweek Research Services Joe Mullich is a freelance business and technology writer based in Sherman Oaks, Calif. This research project was funded by a grant from SAP. Real-Time Enterprises A Research Collection Alliander at a glance A regional grid operator for gas and electricity in the Netherlands Industry: utilities Headquarters: Arnhem, Netherlands Business units: Alliander manages the gas and electricity grids in many areas of the Netherlands; Liandon works on energy infrastructures for high-voltage, complex medium-voltage and industrial installations 2013 Revenues: €1,744 million Employees: 6,000 www.alliander.com Source: Alliander Page 10 RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Business Case Studies Alliander Energizes Its Business with Real-Time Analytics A Netherlands utility is using real-time business insights based on big data to boost reliability, lower costs and transform customer relationships. BY JOE MULLICH A lliander, a regional grid operator for gas and electricity in the Netherlands, is grappling with an issue that is becoming widespread among utilities: unpredictable demand due to rapid changes in customers’ energy consumption Alliander at a Glance behavior. Energy-hungry devices such as plug-in electric vehicles (PEVs), as well as Headquarters: Arnhem, Netherlands Business units: Alliander manages the gas and electricity grids in many areas of the Netherlands; Liandon works on energy infrastructures for high-voltage, complex medium-voltage and industrial installations 2013 Revenues: €1,744 million (US$2,386 million) Employees: 6,000 www.alliander.com unconventional energy sources such as solar and FIGURE 1 wind, have fundamentally changed the energy Respondents were asked in which areas they see analytics having the greatest impact on smart solutions deployment. (% responding) Source: Alliander landscape. Case in point: There are now over 1,030 public charging points for PEVs in the regions where Alliander is active, of which more than 300 were realized just last year. 1 Such changes are heightening the need for Alliander to improve peak load forecasting in its networks quickly and accurately. Failing to do so could lead to higher operating costs or, worse, network outages that leave customers angry and without power. Consequently, a good part of Alliander’s future hinges on using real-time data to make “unpredictable demand” more predictable by leveraging the information that smart meters, smart grids and enhanced customer relationship management systems provide. The utility is applying this great mass of data to other real-time uses, as Wide Range of Analytics Value Grid operations 96% Asset management Outage management AMI operations 92% 85% 77% Demand response 73% Customer operations 73% Revenue protection/theft reduction 52% well. Jill Feblowitz, vice president at consultancy IDC Energy Insights, said that as utilities work to realize Base: 54 utilities in 13 countries Source: Accenture, 2013. http://goo.gl/mwjiLS more value from their smart meter implementations, “analytics will be the trend that has the most impact Lots of Data, Big Payoff over the next five years.” In the utility industry, lots of data is accumulating rapidly: Smart meters in consumer homes gather usage data; 1. Alliander. “Alliander is working on a sustainable future.” Alliander press release, Feb. 14, 2014. 2. Accenture. “Unlocking the Value of Analytics.” Research report, 2013. http://goo.gl/mwjiLS. MARCH 2014 | Indeed, a 2013 Accenture survey revealed a broad the smart grid collects data from the devices in the array of business functions that utilities say would network; and a significant amount of data comes benefit from better analytics (see Figure 1, “Wide courtesy of those who generate energy with solar Range of Analytics Value”). The need to use panels or wind power. And utilities expect a big return dynamic and granular data to make decisions in the from all this data. A 2013 survey by Tata Consultancy moment is fast becoming an industry imperative. Services found that both utilities and energy/resources 2 © Copyright 2014. Bloomberg L.P. All rights reserved. RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Business Case Studies FIGURE 2 generating returns on investment in big data3 (see Figure 2, “Big Data Expectations”). Of all industries, utilities expects the biggest returns on its big data investment. (mean percentage of expected ROI for 2012 big data investments) Alliander itself has been on a data quest. The utility Utilities dramatically increased the number of sensors Alliander’s Business Challenges throughout its grid, enabling it to gather larger data volumes for analysis. Measurement data is sent at five-minute intervals, and the sensors generate 3.15 } Improve forecasting of peak energy usage. } Provide customers with greater insight into energy consumption. } Gain fast access to large volumes of measurement data for analysis. Big Data Expectations companies have the highest expectations for billion records every year—a huge repository to mine for information and insights.4 To analyze the data quickly enough to apply insights computing, technology that enables very large volumes of diverse sources of data to be rapidly and easily analyzed. The utility has seen a number of benefits, including more accurate forecasting of } Expanded network to 22,000 sensors spread across 400 substations. } Implemented in-memory computing to speed data analysis. } Set up wireless mobile telecommunications network. manual tasks, improved auditing and reduced 60.6% High tech 52.4% Average 45.5% Banking/financial services 43.7% in a timely fashion, Alliander turned to in-memory Alliander’s IT Solutions Energy/resources 73.0% Insurance 38.9% Travel/hospitality/airlines 37.9% energy demand, greater efficiency by automating energy costs for customers.5 Telecommunications 37.9% Transforming Customer Relations Source: Tata Consultancy Services, 2013 According to a 2013 IDC Energy Insights study, the highest business priority for utilities today is meters send granular data on energy consumption directly increasing customer satisfaction, followed closely by to utility companies, and some utilities use small wireless reliable service delivery and operational cost displays to show people how much energy and money reductions. Analytics helps utilities achieve this goal they are spending in real time. A survey by uSwitch, an by changing the customer relationship to a energy price comparison service in the United Kingdom, partnership. For instance, using smart meter data, found that consumers with smart meters are more likely utilities can work with customers on using energy to partake in energy-saving behaviors 8 (see Figure 3, more efficiently and reducing their bills. “Satisfaction with Smart Meters”). Customers can also play a role in helping utilities At Alliander, customers who have real-time access to achieve their own conservation goals. Robin data about their energy usage have reduced energy bills Hagemans, manager of grid information and control at by 10 to 20 percent per month. “We need to help our Alliander, noted the utility’s aggressive goals of reducing customers at the household level to use their energy carbon emissions by 20 percent by 2020 and boosting much more wisely,” said Jeroen Scheer, manager renewable energy use by the same amount. That taskforce energy transition IT at Alliander.9 6 3. Tata Consultancy Services. “The Emerging Big Returns from Big Data.” Research report, 2013. http://goo.gl/NhEUgW. 4. Tekurkar, Shailesh. “Leveraging the ‘Smart Grid’ for Smart Decisions on Network Asset Replacements.” Analytics from SAP blog, Nov. 13, 2012. http://goo.gl/E5PD6V. 5. Shailesh Tekurkar. 6. Feblowitz, Jill. “The Digital Utility.” IDC Energy Insights executive summary. September 2013. 7. Koster, Stefan. “How Alliander is accelerating its load forecasting process using SAP Analytics.” SAP presentation. May 28, 2013. goal, he said, can be reached only if consumers Forecasting Peak Loads become more active participants in the process of conserving energy and balancing their energy use. 7 Perhaps an even bigger advantage of analyzing data from smart grids and smart meters in real time is the capability 2 The rapid speed of in-memory computing produces to accurately forecast demand, which enables utilities to the insights needed to do just that, and it helps predict and head off likely outages, as well as to identify Alliander better engage with its customers. Smart leaks and fraud. Better forecasting enables utilities to plan Bloomberg Businessweek Research Services RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Business Case Studies Satisfaction with Smart Meters future investments that prevent network overloads. FIGURE 3 Such forecasts are tricky, though, because the Customers with smart meters report high satisfaction with their provider. (% responding) substation load depends on numerous variables— demographic growth, seasonality, consumption forecasts, specific events and more. Are happy with their smart meter Real-Time Business Benefits at Alliander In the past, collecting and analyzing the enormous Would recommend having a smart meter installed 87% } Reduced time for forecasting and grid optimization from 10 weeks to three days. } Implemented 85 new business models to analyze operations. } Helped customers reduce monthly energy bills by 10 to 20 percent. grid optimization once a year. With in-memory amounts of data required 10 weeks of effort. As a result, Alliander would only perform forecasting and computing, that process can be accomplished in a mere three days. Consequently, the utility can 92% Use it to monitor energy usage and reduce consumption 81% Are more likely to turn off lights when not in use 51% monitor the transformer stations, detect sensor problems automatically and forecast future power loads once a month. This provides a more accurate forecast, much deeper insight and greater opportunities to drive efficiency.10 Better understanding of which actions consume the most energy 41% Base: 5,057 U.K. households with a smart meter installed Source: uSwitch, 2013 “We can optimize our grid and create new models we couldn’t think of a year ago,” Scheer said. Such efforts include setting up a wireless mobile Indeed, as a result of the efforts, Alliander has telecommunications network to facilitate the exchange created 85 new models to analyze its operations of all information within the utility’s grids. “The impact of more effectively. “We found out that 5 percent of the energy transition is becoming increasingly visible,” the peaks determined last year were inaccurate,” he said. “For instance, more and more renewable according to Stefan Koster, BI & analytics solution energy is being generated, and this will have major architect at the utility. The new algorithms help consequences for the networks in the long term.”14 detect more errors, leading to more efficiencies. 11 In the IDC Energy Insights report, Feblowitz 8. Martinelli, Michele. “New research shows consumers are happy with smart meters.” USwitch news, Dec. 12, 2013. http://goo.gl/0UDnUi. 9. Scheer, Jeroen. “Alliander and SAP HANA.” SAP customer testimonial video. http://goo.gl/cS0CoV. 10. Courtney, Martin. “How utilities are profiting from Big Data analytics.” Engineering and Technology Magazine, Jan. 20, 2014. http://goo.gl/r60uhi. 11. Stefan Koster. 12. Martin Courtney. 13. Alliander press release. 14. Alliander press release. 15. Hagemans, Robin. “Alliander Smart Grid Analytic Use Cases Based on a Live Mid-voltage Grid Lab.” OSIsoft EMEA industry session, 2013. http://goo.gl/ubKnOy. 16. Szirtes, Tamas. “Business Innovation Experience – a resounding success.” Intenzz blog, Feb. 6, 2013. http://goo.gl/O9D3Wc. Business Reinvention recommended that utilities fortify their information Market analyst firm GTM Research predicted and telecommunications infrastructure and global utility company expenditures on data and applications so they can support advanced analytics analytics will grow from $700 million in 2012 to such as forecasting, predictive load, simulations and $3.8 billion in 2020, with gas, electricity and water optimization. One specific capability she cited is suppliers in all regions of the world increasing integrating demand information with geospatial their investment. This will result in “a complete visualization tools. Alliander is already going down reinvention of the utility business,” according to this track. 15 analyst David J. Leeds. 12 As Pieter den Hamer, manager of business intelligence As Alliander looks to the future, it is seeking to boost and analytics at the utility, put it: In the current utility the insights gained from network data. Peter landscape, “Innovation is not just something extra, but Molengraaf, Alliander CEO, said the company’s main it’s a necessity.”16 • focus is “making the right choices for the future of our networks. Whilst continuing to maintain and replace our existing electricity and gas networks, we are also preparing for the radically changing energy landscape of the future.” 3 13 Bloomberg Businessweek Research Services Joe Mullich is a freelance business and technology writer based in Sherman Oaks, Calif. This research project was funded by a grant from SAP. Real-Time Enterprises A Research Collection ARI at a glance Largest privately held fleet management services company in the world Industry: automotive Parent company: Holman Automotive Group Employees: 2,400 worldwide Headquarters: Mount Laurel, New Jersey www.arifleet.com Source: ARI Page 14 RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Business Case Studies In-Memory Computing Drives Fleet Savings at ARI The world’s largest privately held vehicle management company is turning big data into real-time insights and predictions that deliver unprecedented business value to customers. BY ESTHER SHEIN WISHNOW A n employee driving a company car or truck may think he is doing the business a big favor by purchasing gas at a low-cost fuel station a few miles out of his way. What he cannot know is that the station has a higher incidence rate of accidents because it is located at a dangerous intersection. But ARI knows. Thanks to can be made in minutes, not months. With its data AN EXCLUSIVE in-memory technology, the company is quickly turning volume doubling every 14 months, that has become an RESEARCH REPORT seemingly unrelated datapoints into insights its customers ever-greater challenge, which is why ARI invested in an FROM BLOOMBERG can use to optimize fleet efficiency—before they make a in-memory database. The solution has reduced response BUSINESSWEEK wrong turn. times on delivering information to customers and solved RESEARCH SERVICES AT A GLANCE its “data latency problem,” says Tony Candeloro, vice ARI manages more than 950,000 vehicles in North president of product development (see Figure 1, “In- America and the United Kingdom. With its two million Memory Computing: The Payoff for ARI”). worldwide associates, the company collects up to 14,000 datapoints on each vehicle, including specifications, Real-time analysis of very large date sets is possible with ARI at a Glance maintenance, fuel, safety and value. It also captures high-performance, in-memory database technology, says Industry: telematics information through onboard computers, Hyoun Park, principal analyst at Nucleus Research. HANA Vehicle fleet management including how fast a vehicle is moving, when it makes a from SAP, for example, provides orders of magnitude Company description: left- or right-hand turn and where it has stopped. performance increases by accelerating information delivery and queries, he says. “A lot of processes that have slowed Largest privately held fleet management services In the past, ARI used this information to provide reports down as companies deal with huge amounts of data company in the world and recommendations to customers. But staying are now being brought back to operational levels where Parent company: competitive today means delivering insights so decisions companies can get data quickly again.” Holman Automotive Group Employees: 2,400 worldwide Headquarters: Mount Laurel, N.J. Web site: www.arifleet.com FIGURE 1 In-Memory Computing: The Payoff for ARI Running a report or query before in-memory Up to two hours; some reports were so complicated technology they would time-out after 24 hours Running a report or query with in-memory technology Three seconds Number of datapoints captured per vehicle 14,000 (late 2011 into early 2012) Number of vehicles in ARI’s fleet Roughly 950,000 in North America ROI 5% efficiency improvement in the call center Source: ARI JULY 2013 | © Copyright 2013. Bloomberg L.P. All rights reserved. RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Business Case Studies Speed Equals Value Moving those large silos into a real-time environment was This was the situation at ARI: the need to drive the a challenge, says Bob White, senior vice president of information it captured to its fullest potential—quickly. client and fleet relations at ARI. “Before we implemented “Once you have all the data, it’s about how you analyze this technology, working with the data on a real-time and correlate it to make better decisions,” Candeloro basis to draw correlations and spot trends was difficult,” says. “While we have always helped our clients manage he says. The in-memory system provides employees ARI’s Data Challenges their fleets efficiently and worked to deliver the lowest with new real-time insights to create more value for total cost of ownership possible, the time it took to customers. “[We can] leverage that data in a timeframe Manage data growth: decipher all of the data and make day-to-day decisions that meets the business need,” White says. With 14,000 datapoints was becoming more difficult as our data volumes grew.” Now, if a technician is told that a brake fix on a truck collected per vehicle, ARI’s data volumes are doubling For example, to manage the cost of vehicle repairs, will cost $500, he can see 25 similar repairs on similar every 14 months. ARI’s technicians need to authorize the right repair at the vehicles within an identified geographical radius. This Speed decision-making: right cost. “Historically, a vendor would call us seeking information makes negotiating on the fly a lot easier. Data volumes were authorization for a repair. If our techs agreed with the Before, “we were doing millions of transactions, so we increasing the time it took to diagnosis, they would negotiate the best possible price didn’t even attempt it,” White says. When customers run reports and queries. for that repair by using their own expertise and the best needed more granular data, it required a lot of manual Improve insights: information they had on hand at that time,” Candeloro says. work. “Now, we can leverage more data to make better decisions,” he says, “and we’ve also improved the overall ARI wanted to arm fleet transaction time by a little more than five percent.” managers with real-time As time went on, he says, ARI wanted a solution insights so they could make that would enable better and quicker decisions. The decisions that optimized company implemented a data warehousing strategy A majority of ARI’s employees are using the system on efficiency. that ported data from its transactional database into a a daily basis, and 80 customers are using it through real-time in-memory database, built some data models the customer portal, ARI insightsTM. When customers and conducted a pilot with one of its customers. Then, submitted inquiries in the past, employees would search with the help of HP, ARI moved the system in-house in for information in the various systems and create reports, December 2011. By the start of 2012, Candeloro says, which could take several days to produce. “Now, our ARI was up and running, building queries and “data frontline employees can run the queries themselves,” universes” based on detailed data previously segmented White says. “By putting the tool in a customer’s hands, into separate silos on disparate systems. we are empowering our clients to make better decisions.” FIGURE 2 ARI’s In-Memory Technology: What the Future Holds Capability Example Predictive data mining: Spotting trends and patterns Recommending a repair before a failure occurs. ahead of time to be proactive rather than reactive. Benchmarking: Designing models that gather trend data Calculating a cost-of-ownership baseline across on all vehicles to create a baseline and then identifying fleets with similar vehicles and identifying those that outliers. exceed the baseline. Changing driver behavior: Finding correlations between Discovering a link between fueling locations and events that seem unrelated at first glance and using that accidents. information to make recommendations. Source: ARI 2 Bloomberg Businessweek Research Services RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Business Case Studies ARI’s salespeople can also work more effectively with FIGURE 3 customers and prospects, he adds. And in its call centers, which include about 400 employees, ARI has A Surge in Predictive Analytics increased efficiencies by about 5 percent, White says. Primarily using predictive analytics 12% 33% “That one area alone has probably more than covered our investment, and we’ve just begun to discover all of the Elements of ARI’s Real-Time Analytics Solution ways to leverage it,” he says. Looking Ahead In-memory database: Candeloro says the company has only skimmed the Using an in-memory surface in terms of realizing the full potential of in- database, ARI can quickly turn memory technology (see Figure 2, “ARI’s In-Memory data into insights that help Technology: What the Future Holds”). ARI is planning its customers optimize fleet to use data mining capabilities to spot trends and efficiency. patterns “so we don’t just react to a phone call but Integrated data: get ahead of it and use the predictive angle,” he says. Data “universes,” created For example, White says, employees have already within the in-memory detected trends that predict needed repairs on a truck database, integrate data from before a major failure occurs. “We can recommend to disparate systems. our customer that they preemptively have that repair Customer portal: done,” he says. A majority of ARI’s employees Primarily using retrospective analytics 31% 29% Using both equally 28% 2009 2012 50% Don’t know 1% 10% Base: 600 companies in the United States and United Kingdom with 1,000-plus employees Source: Accenture station example. “If, for example, you know a driver fuels at a particular gas station, and you also know this use the system daily, and Another goal is to begin benchmarking, building models group of vehicles has a higher percentage of accidents, select customers run their to look at all similar vehicles managed by ARI and once you look at those two together, you may make a own queries using the determining their baseline cost. This way, the company recommendation not to fuel at that location depending on customer portal. can easily identify the outliers and take corrective action, what the data actually reveals,” he says. Data mining: Candeloro says. ARI plans to use predictive According to a 2013 study by Accenture, more than analytics to spot trends and Keeping up with all of the variables involved in the cost twice as many respondents are now using analytics patterns among seemingly of fleet management—where vehicles are used, who is primarily as a predictive tool than in 2009 (see Figure 3, unrelated data points. driving them, the environment in which they operate, the “A Surge in Predictive Analytics”). “This surge reflects time of day, accidents, driving patterns and the amount a growing sophistication in analytics capabilities that of idle running time—is ARI’s main challenge. “We try anticipate tomorrow rather than explain yesterday,” to track and manage those variables, but a lot of them according to Accenture. interact with and impact each other,” Candeloro notes. “If you’re idling a vehicle a lot, you may need to do White says ARI is continuously thinking about whether the preventive maintenance more often. And because we data it is collecting can predict an outcome. “The ability have the ability to look at that information, we can push has always been there,” he says. Until now, “we just out recommendations to our customers. That was very didn’t have the tools to unlock it.” • difficult to do in the past.” As the company moves further into predictive analytics, Candeloro says ARI hopes to find the not-so-obvious correlations between seemingly unrelated events, such as how fuel patterns impact accidents, as in the gas 3 Bloomberg Businessweek Research Services Esther Shein Wishnow is a freelance writer and editor whose work has appeared in several online and print publications including Computerworld, InformationWeek, BYTE, Network Computing and CIO. This research project was funded by a grant from SAP. Real-Time Enterprises A Research Collection CareFusion at a glance Makes products that help reduce medication errors and reduce health-associated infections Industry: healthcare Headquarters: San Diego, California Customers: more than 25,000 worldwide, including hospitals, surgery centers, long-term care facilities, outpatient and ambulatory clinics, governments and insurance providers Focus areas: medication management; infection prevention and surveillance; operating room effectiveness; device connectivity; data and analytics; respiratory care Revenues: $3.55 billion (fiscal 2013) Employees: more than 14,000 www.carefusion.com Source: CareFusion Page 18 RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Business Case Studies Real-Time Business Leads to Healthy Performance at CareFusion CareFusion employs in-memory computing to transform its business, improve operating margins and accelerate revenue growth. BY JOE MULLICH CareFusion at a Glance Headquarters: San Diego, Calif. Customers: More than 25,000 worldwide, including hospitals, surgery centers, longterm care facilities, outpatient and ambulatory clinics, governments and insurance providers Focus areas: Medication management; infection prevention and surveillance; operating room effectiveness; device connectivity; data and analytics; respiratory care Revenues: $3.55 billion (fiscal 2013) Employees: More than 14,000 A round the globe, demands for healthcare reform are causing the life sciences industry and its customers, the care providers, to look for efficiencies. CareFusion, the $3.5 billion maker of products that help reduce medication errors and reduce health- Meeting the Challenge to Change associated infections, intends to be at the front line FIGURE 1 of this transformation, promising quality and safety at reasonable cost. Life sciences CEOs view data and analytics among the initiatives that are critical to transformation. (% responding) In its efforts to achieve this goal, CareFusion has Channels to market averaged one major acquisition annually since its spinoff from Cardinal Health in 2009. To date, the acquisitions have bolstered CareFusion’s product line with technologies that improve respiratory care and deliver intravenous drugs to patients. But they have also created management challenges. Each of the acquired companies had its own systems for strategic planning, which made it difficult for CareFusion to get a global view of its data. Yet comprehensive planning was essential for 57% Use and management of data and data analytics 56% M&A strategies, joint ventures or strategic alliances 55% Customer growth and retention strategies 50% Approach to managing risk 50% Source: PricewaterhouseCoopers, 2014. http://goo.gl/QgoZwG the company to reach its aggressive goals. “The first www.carefusion.com two years of growth we called a ‘standup’ phase, CareFusion found a way to assemble a global view of its Source: CareFusion which was the separation” from Cardinal Health, operations to improve the collection and consolidation of CareFusion CEO Kieran T. Gallahue told analysts in information it needs for better planning and strategic 2013. “The last two years began what we call the decision-making. The company is using financial ‘building the foundations for growth’ stage,” which, forecasting and planning software in combination with he said, could only be achieved by streamlining the in-memory computing, a new database and analytics organization and reducing costs.1 platform that enables very large volumes of data to be aggregated and analyzed quickly to answer any question 1. Nasdaq information on CareFusion. http://goo.gl/1Ncrfb. 2. PricewaterhouseCoopers Global CEO Survey: Pharmaceuticals and Life Sciences. 2014. http://goo.gl/QgoZwG. MAY 2014 | The same theme resonates throughout the life almost instantly. Organizations frequently use in-memory sciences industry. An annual global survey of technology to make more accurate budget forecasts, run pharmaceutical and life sciences CEOs by “what-if” scenarios faster and gain better insight into PricewaterhouseCoopers found transformation on customer relationships. their corporate agendas, including new business structures, technology investments, and the use of “The entire healthcare industry has been inefficient data and analytics2 (see Figure 1, “Meeting the relative to other industries,” observed Mike Zill, executive Challenge to Change”). vice president and CIO at CareFusion. “That needs to © Copyright 2014. Bloomberg L.P. All rights reserved. RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Business Case Studies CareFusion’s Complex Operations change, and we are dedicated to being a force that FIGURE 2 helps lead the change.” The company needs to consolidate and analyze data about two dozen major brands in four product areas. A Unified View More than 14,000 CareFusion employees around the world manufacture products purchased by more than CareFusion’s Challenges 25,000 healthcare providers. That makes the } An acquisition spree resulted in disparate ERP systems that could not share data. } Financial, employee and customer data was difficult to consolidate and analyze in a timely way. } Executives lacked confidence in the accuracy of the data used to make decisions. explained (see Figure 2, “CareFusion’s Complex company’s operations complex to manage, Zill Operations”). Meanwhile, the pace of business demands that CareFusion be able to run multiple business scenarios quickly, using the most accurate Product area Number of brands Infection prevention 4 Respiratory care 6 Medication management 8 Operating room effectiveness 6 Source: CareFusion. http://goo.gl/rtgQkn data possible. it would take to run one, Zill said. Current numbers CareFusion’s Solutions } Deployed realtime planning and consolidation software that automates and streamlines planning, budgeting, forecasting and consolidation activities. } Adopted in-memory computing to speed data collection and analysis. Yet data from each unit had to be pulled out manually. lead to better estimates, more precise analysis and Only averaged, historical numbers were available for improved decisions. CareFusion can determine analysis. As a result, reports were produced slowly, within minutes how departments are performing and and their reliability was hard to assess. “Data is a the potential impact of adjustments. Michael DeLeo, reflection of the organization,” said Wayne Eckerson, financial manager for financial systems at director of the research, business applications and CareFusion, said the company’s efforts are in line architecture group at consultancy TechTarget. “If you with an industry trend to compile and consume data have fragmented, autonomous business units, you’ll more rapidly.3 have fragmented data.” More Timely Action So the CareFusion finance team led the charge to What is more, because CareFusion executives can unify the company using real-time analytics. “There is now accurately track, in real time, how their a saying: Time kills all deals,” Zill continued. “If the adjustments play out, they can more quickly agree on executives are having a discussion, they won’t accept specific actions that different groups need to take to waiting while you pull together the data they need.” achieve financial goals. A survey by IDG Enterprise found improving the quality of decision-making, making quicker decisions, When building a budget or forecast, for example, and improving planning and forecasting to be the top CareFusion often needs to model changes to business drivers for investing in analytics (see Figure employee-related costs, like benefits, tax rates and 3, “Better Decisions Through Data”). international currency changes. Previously, adding a new benefit or calculating the impact of a health During each fiscal year, CareFusion compiles and insurance cost increase required a lot of manual reviews several iterations of its budget, adjusting for work. Information would be gathered from local business results. Before the company was able to controllers and payroll groups to determine which quickly assemble and analyze its financial data, it employees would be affected. The financial was difficult to determine whether departments were department then would forecast the impact of the meeting their individual targets. Without this proposed changes and apply the anticipated cost for information, CareFusion could not make timely each group to its budget. course corrections. 3. “Controlling 2013 Speaker Profile: Michael DeLeo, Finance Systems Manager at CareFusion, Inc.” ERP Corp. blog, 2013. http://goo.gl/PZGAZx. The process took a week or more, and verifying the 2 With real-time data, however, the company can run accuracy of the data was difficult. “There was no easy more—and more sophisticated—models in the time method to ensure that all required employees and cost Bloomberg Businessweek Research Services RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Business Case Studies centers have been accounted for in the adjustment,” Zill said. If the actual costs turned out to be different than the forecast, it was equally challenging to determine exactly why. The variance could be due to one or more factors—including incorrect calculation methods or changes in expected FIGURE 3 Better Decisions Through Data Business drivers for investment in analytics include the following. (% responding) Improving the quality of decision-making Benefits of RealTime Business at CareFusion employee headcount or benefit eligibility. Making quicker decisions Now, the company can make more precise } Increased availability: Information to make key decisions that took more than a week to pull together can now be delivered in minutes. } Deeper insight: Analysts can explore questions of profitability in detail at both the customer and the product level, as well as run more “what-if” scenarios. } Improved forecasts: By using real-time data, and gaining flexibility to include more data sources in its analyses, CareFusion can create more accurate forecasting models. forecasts at the enterprise level, and make them in Improving planning and forecasting near real time. And when variances between planned and actual costs occur, CareFusion can determine the reason more easily, according to Zill, and decide quickly the best way to bring the budget 59% 53% 47% Developing new products, services and revenue streams 47% Source: IDG Enterprise Big Data Study, 2014. http://goo.gl/BNImWX back in line. That is essential to achieving the efficiencies the life sciences industry seeks, he said. big payoff, both to expanding margins and the bottom line.4 Now that the company has proven that New Perspectives and Insights the in-memory platform and advanced analytics Zill added that the most valuable benefit of having models enable it to understand its costs at a greater real-time data is obtaining new insights. For level of detail, with more accuracy and in less time, it example, CareFusion can model profitability down to intends to expand these capabilities to other models both product and customer levels, giving it a more and other data sources, Zill said. granular view to aid decision-making. For example, he added, for consumable products, In the past, Zill said, the company might have only CareFusion plans to model sales based on historical been able to get a partial view of its relationship trends and seasonality. with a customer. Now that it can consolidate and analyze all the data from different units, “These revenue models will provide us with a basis CareFusion will use this technology to discover, in for forecasting manufacturing costs and profit the moment, which units customers purchase margins,” Zill said. “They will allow us to further from and how best to allocate company resources improve our accuracy, efficiency and ability to plan to properly serve customers. for changing business needs.” “We can approach the model-making at a much Zill envisions expanding the use of in-memory greater level of detail,” Zill explained. “This happens computing to many additional areas—including because we no longer have to worry about the size mergers and acquisitions, research and of the data anymore. In the old days, you had to development, sales and marketing—which will bring think in terms of the minimum amount of data you the enterprise-wide improvements that are needed could bring together and still answer the question. to propel CareFusion, and its healthcare customers, Now we don’t have to be so smart about eliminating to a new era of higher efficiency. • information, so we don’t throw away nuggets. That’s mind-freeing and time-freeing.” Consider More Data According to CareFusion’s Gallahue, the intense 4. Nasdaq information on CareFusion. http://goo.gl/1Ncrfb. business integration work has already produced a 3 Bloomberg Businessweek Research Services Joe Mullich is a freelance business and technology writer based in Sherman Oaks, Calif. This research project was funded by a grant from SAP. Real-Time Enterprises A Research Collection City of Boston, Massachusetts at a glance Capital of the State of Massachusetts, founded in 1630 Industry: public sector Population: 626,000 Size: 48 square miles City employees: 16,173 Education: 53 institutions of higher education Firsts: U.S. public school, subway system www.cityofboston.gov Source: City of Boston Page 22 RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Enterprise Case Studies Boston’s Better Community Connections Through Big Data and Analytics With in-memory computing and analytics tools, the City of Boston is providing better service to citizens and engaging more with the community. BY JOE MULLICH M any government agencies talk about the transformational power of big data and analytics. Bill Oates, chief information officer for the City of Boston, is doing something about it. He says this starts with making better connections—between citizens and the community, multiple government departments and even other cities. Boston at a Glance } Founded: 1630 “Business process change is table stakes at this point,” Oates says. “The importance of the technology is its ability to engage and empower our constituents.” } Population: 626,000 Citizens Connect: Empowering Constituents with Big Data and Analytics } 34% of citizen reports via mobile and online app } 89% of citizens would recommend it } 21% rise in constituent satisfaction } Pothole repair time cut in half } Size: 48 square miles For Boston, a new form of engagement began in 2008 } City employees: 16,173 with the launch of Citizens Connect1, a system that } Education: 53 institutions of higher education enables citizens to report potholes, graffiti, damaged } Firsts: U.S. public school, subway system their smartphones. A unique twist of the technology, then and now, is that citizens do not simply report Like many cities, Boston has a growing number of sources www.cityofboston.gov/ the problems to the government. Rather, reports and of data to analyze. To help it cope, the city is ahead in Source: City of Boston photos are published anonymously online, spreading taking visual analytics to a new level. For example, in 2010 word of the issues and inviting discussion and the Boston Police Department opened a “real-time crime participation in Citizen Connect. center” that receives dozens of feeds from street cameras signs and other issues through the Internet and, later, around the city. The resulting data gives researchers Since then, Boston has introduced Street Bump , the potential to visually analyze and match videos from which enables people to use their smartphone’s incidents to help identify suspects, mobilize resources and accelerometer—a motion detector in the device—to even map evacuation routes during emergencies. 2 record road conditions and send data to public works employees. Unlike Citizens Connect, the Street Bump Big Data Makes More Satisfied Citizens app does not require a citizen to take action to report Boston’s experience with in-memory computing and issues. He simply turns on the app and, as he drives, big data analytics reveals intriguing insights about data is automatically collected and sent to the city. the opportunity for collecting and using big data. For example, residents were polled on why they failed to Street Bump was expected to identify the location of contact the city about maintenance issues before the potholes—a top concern of Boston residents. Thanks to Citizens Connect app. Their answer: When they call the analytics, the early data has provided some unexpected city, they feel like they are complaining; when they use the insights: trouble spots are eight times more likely to be app, they feel like they are helping. “castings,” those manhole covers, grates and other cast- 1. Citizens Connect: Making Boston Beautiful. http://tinyurl.com/642ymk3 2. Street Bump. http://tinyurl.com/mjeb4q8 metal lids that are supposed to be flush with the roadway The ability to rapidly share data and analytics has had a surface but instead heave up due to the extreme cold of measurable effect. Today, 20 percent of citizen reports a New England winter. Hundreds of these castings have come through the Citizens Connect app and another been repaired as a result. 14 percent through the city’s Web site. The number of SEPTEMBER 2013 | © Copyright 2013. Bloomberg L.P. All rights reserved. RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Business Case Studies citizen reports has doubled, as well, from 40,000 a year prior to the technology to 80,000 a year today. A reason Boston’s IT Challenges for the greater participation may be the quick results that } Quicken innovation follow. Since the city implemented Citizens Connect, the } Encourage citizen involvement response time to fill a pothole has been cut from three } Share big data across departments days on average to half that amount. “We met with interested Similarly, the original prototype of Street Bump could not researchers, technol- distinguish between potholes, manhole covers, bridge surfaces and other obstacles, so the app generated a lot ogists and community of false positives in the field.3 A crowdsource challenge members to figure out enabled the city to implement a new algorithm to analyze how we could use data the big data coming in more accurately. } Speed repair of potholes and other issues Boston’s IT Solutions } Formed the Office of New Urban Mechanics— an incubator that pilots new ideas quickly } Partnered with citizen groups, businesses and universities to share data and ideas } Developed apps that enable citizens to report issues easily } Developed apps that enable citizens to collect data to improve quality of life In Oates’ view, big data is all about information sharing in the issues. Being able to about road conditions automatically as they drive public sector. He has found that the combination of the right connect newly available data, timely analysis and visualization is most effective when city data with some of information and analytics are shared across departments. It also indicates the new thinking that is needed to the real big data out “In the past, an agency might crunch its own data to leverage the power of big data. Oates points to the Office there in the world can get a historical comparison on how quickly it is fixing of New Urban Mechanics, an initiative that began in potholes,” he says. “Now, by combining data, we can see Boston and is now shared with the City of Philadelphia what areas of the city aren’t getting phone calls, which and serves as each city’s innovation incubator. The may indicate problems no one knows about yet.” office builds partnerships between city agencies, outside make city government more proactive—and more effective.” institutions and entrepreneurs to pilot projects in the two Boston has put significant effort into making data and cities that address resident and business needs.5 Several INFORMATION OFFICER, CITY analytics available to both agencies and the community. projects have involved data sharing and analytics, such OF BOSTON Oates points to the Boston Area Research Initiative4 as as the Street Bump initiative. —BILL OATES, CHIEF an example. Here, the city confers with the many universities in the area about original urban research on “Government agencies on the whole aren’t great in the cutting edge of social science and public policy. For responding to unsolicited ideas and opportunities, and us, “this is a matter of digging a little deeper,” Oates says. they are engineered to put tightly prescribed solutions out “We met with interested researchers, technologists and to bid,” Oates says. But “we have a model that allows community members to figure out how we could use data us to respond quickly to opportunity.” The city is now to improve quality of life issues. Being able to connect collaborating with the Commonwealth of Massachusetts newly available city data with some of the real big data to deliver a Citizens Connect-like mobile app that will out there in the world can make city government more engage citizens and produce important performance data. proactive—and more effective.” Boston officials are also talking with cities around the 3. Bertolucci, Jeff. “Smartphones, Big Data Help Fix Boston’s Potholes.” InformationWeek, July 25, 2012. http://tinyurl.com/a9nfkdp 4. Boston Area Research Initiative. http://tinyurl.com/kgu2q46 5. New Urban Mechanics: a city movement focused on civic innovation. http://tinyurl.com/a3jodpv Planning for Tomorrow world about similar initiatives. “All of us in city govern- Oates contends that what has been accomplished so far ment are looking at ways to our data move valuable,” is just the beginning. By using information to interact better Oates says, “and to be part of these exciting cross-ju- with neighborhood leaders and citizens, for example, the risdictional initiatives.”• city can respond faster and better to local events, enabling it to more efficiently deploy police to ensure public safety. “Our ability to engage in those conversations is a critical part of successfully using technology,” he says. 2 Bloomberg Businessweek Research Services Joe Mullich is a freelance business and technology writer based in Sherman Oaks, Calif. This research project was funded by a grant from SAP. Real-Time Enterprises A Research Collection City of Cape Town, South Africa at a glance Second largest city in South Africa, whose government was forged in 2000 by a consolidation of seven municipalities into one “unicity” Industry: public sector Population: 3.7 million Size: 950 square miles City employees: 25,500 Number of police stations: 60 Number of fire stations: 29 www.capetown.gov.za Source: City of Cape Town Page 25 RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Enterprise Case Studies Real-Time Data Speeds Services in “The Mother City” of Cape Town With in-memory computing and analytics tools, Cape Town is improving public safety and energy/water management at the same time. BY JOE MULLICH C ape Town, the second largest city in South Africa, has long been called “The Mother City.” Andre Stelzner, chief information officer for Cape Town, provides a tongue-in-cheek explanation for the nickname: “People say that’s because everything here takes nine months” to accomplish. Jokes aside about the slow pace of government, Cape Cape Town at a Glance } Population: 3.7 million } Size: 950 square miles } City employees: 25,500 } Number of police stations: 60 } Number of fire stations: 29 Town realized that many pressing issues—such as improving public safety and managing water and energy use more effectively—required faster action than is typical of large bureaucracies. Research by the city’s IT team indicated that success could only be achieved by collecting and analyzing real-time data. Cape Town’s government, which was forged in 2000 by a consolidation of seven municipalities into a single “unicity,” www.capetown.gov.za/ delivers all the services that are used by its population Source: City of Cape Town of 3.7 million. This includes electricity, water, healthcare, sanitation, transportation, refuse collection, libraries, and police and fire protection, to name a few. In 2003, the city started down a path toward better use of information by implementing an enterprise FIGURE 1 Tech Hit Parade Respondents were asked: Currently, how important are each of the following capabilities to your agency, institution or organization now and in two years? (percent of respondents indicating “important”) Currently Important Important in Two Years Share data and analytics across organization 85% 89% Provide field staff with data from internal systems on apps 84% 87% Offer constituents access to operational systems 83% 85% Ability to understand stakeholder sentiment via social media analysis 72% 81% resource planning (ERP) system. It is now one of the largest ERP deployments in any city government in the world, encapsulating 450 business processes. Tangible benefits include providing insight for reducing debt and enabling Cape Town to achieve an A+ credit rating. The need for faster response times has led the city to big data analytics and in-memory computing, which can analyze huge amounts of data quickly. Ability to correlate location and other asset data 73% 77% Communicate with stakeholders via social media 73% 74% Real-time sensor feeds from assets 61% 71% Base: 103 executives at small, midsize and large public agencies worldwide Source: Bloomberg Businessweek Research Services 2013 Agency Analytics Study It Starts with Smart Metering Cape Town’s initial foray into in-memory computing For example, “If we have real-time information about will most likely come from the need to analyze large the supply and demand for water and power, we quantities of data gathered by smart meters that can keep them in sync with dynamic tariffs,” Stelzner monitor water and energy use. Currently, the system is says. By raising tariffs in times of rising demand, the limited to large corporate users, but over the next two city can encourage conservation and reduce the risk years it will expand significantly and result in a host of of unstable power supplies that can lead to national new services. blackouts. “We need to find ways to get people to DECEMBER 2013 | © Copyright 2013. Bloomberg L.P. All rights reserved. RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Business Case Studies change their behavior about the amount of water and electricity they use,” he says. Cape Town’s Challenges } Improve water/energy conservation Real-time access to water and energy data will provide other benefits, as well. “We will be able to pick up a leak in a main water line immediately,” Stelzner says. “In the past, it could take us days to identify a leak in a remote area, which resulted in a significant amount of spillage.” } Provide better waste management to over one million households } Increase citizen safety and provide “intelligent policing” Cape Town’s IT Solutions Cape Town’s Government Milestones For waste management, trash containers will be } Equip trash containers with RFID tags equipped with RFID tags so the citizens can be charged } Consolidate emergency services/data into a } Fiscal management for garbage collection based on the weight of their refuse. } Implement real-time smart metering “At the moment, everyone pays the same, so the costs and A+ credit rating are not divided equitably and there is no incentive for } Use of big data single platform } Implement big data analytics and in-memory computing people to behave more efficiently,” Stelzner points out. analysis to conserve water and energy Consolidating Emergency Information are many of the types of activities already underway in to optimize waste Stelzner sees what may be an even bigger payoff by Cape Town, including sharing data and analytics across management applying in-memory computing to emergency services. the organization and correlating location with other data At present, the city’s emergency services—from law assets (see Figure 1, “Tech Hit Parade”). } Use of RFID tags } Near-real-time response to public- enforcement to disaster management—tend to operate safety events in silos. As a result, information from one department that In Cape Town, the use of in-memory computing is being could potentially be used by another is not shared. To expanded to also enable more “intelligent policing,” solve the problem, the city is developing an emergency meaning the city can use more data sources to respond control platform that will consolidate data sets, leveraging more clinically to security events. “In some areas, security the power of in-memory computing across agencies. issues are a perception,” Stelzner says, “and in some cases, they are a reality.” If by using real-time sensors As an example, the city currently collects information and other sources “we have the ability to get a better on 1.5 million non-emergency events a year. “There understanding of the true situation, then we’ll be able to is a lot of information that is not now visible to the apply resources more effectively,” he says. emergency controller, even though this information is interrelated to the work they do,” Stelzner says. He As an example of future public safety benefits, Stelzner goes on to explain: “A traffic probe that shows highway uses a fireman and a burning building. The fire captain traffic has slowed to almost zero speed could inform back at headquarters will be able to pull up the you of another event, like a major accident before the building plan from the land-use management system, accident is reported. By consolidating this information instantly locate potentially dangerous gas cylinders in on a single platform, we can be more proactive and not the structure, note how to avoid them and then alert depend entirely on the community to report events.” the fireman on his handheld device as he enters the building. “That is the future we envision,” Stelzner says. The idea of sharing access to real-time public data and “It’s a future that depends on enormous and rapid analytics across public agencies is not unique to Cape computing power—because you can’t wait for a batch Town. In fact, some 81 percent of managers among job to run when a building is on fire.”• government entities around the world responding to a 2013 global survey by Bloomberg Businessweek Research Services strongly agree that big data is crucial to meeting their mission. High on their list of requirements 2 Bloomberg Businessweek Research Services Joe Mullich is a freelance business and technology writer based in Sherman Oaks, Calif. This research project was funded by a grant from SAP. Real-Time Enterprises A Research Collection Commonwealth Bank of Australia at a Glance Australia’s leading provider of integrated financial services Industry: banking 2012 revenue: $47.2 billion Profits: $7.09 billion Number of employees: 51,000 Markets: Australia, New Zealand, China, Vietnam and Indonesia, with branches in New York, Tokyo and Hong Kong www.commbank.com.au Source: Commonwealth Bank of Australia Page 28 RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Banking Case Studies CBA Offers More Personalized Banking Through Big Data and Analytics With new data sources and tools, Commonwealth Bank of Australia is providing more personalized service to customers and building loyalty within the community. BY TOM GROENFELDT C ommonwealth Bank of Australia (CBA) knows a lot about its customers. That is partly because it has a huge footprint in the country—it processes nine million transactions per day, handles 40 percent of the card transactions in Australia and maintains 12 million account profiles. More important than company size or number of transactions is how CBA uses its wealth of customer data, along with Commonwealth Bank of Australia at a Glance } Description: Australia’s leading provider of integrated financial services } 2012 Revenue: $47.2 billion real-time analytics, to build loyalty and provide superior customer service. Like CBA, “Most banks have incredibly rich data sets, especially those derived from payments and credit data,” notes Andy Lark, CBA’s outgoing chief marketing officer. Far fewer have learned how to combine this “big data” with other information resources and then put it to work to create better products and services. } Profits: $7.09 billion } Number of Employees: 51,000 } Markets: Australia, New Zealand, China, Vietnam and Indonesia, with branches in New York, Tokyo and Hong Kong What has put CBA out front in this area is a recent Key Features of CBA’s New Web Site } Magazine-style section provides content based on customers’ key life events } Integrates data from social interactions, on-site behaviors and browsing history } Support forum where customers seek support and advice about the bank’s products and services } Uses principles of responsive Web design to look good on all devices, including PCs, smartphones and tablets modernization of its IT systems, followed by strategic investments in social media, analytics and mobility. All of that prospect has been looking at properties, the site is able this has unified the bank’s data foundation and “put us to display more relevant offers—home loan, insurance and in an enviable position,” Lark says. Thanks in part to big other related product information. The site can even analyze data and real-time analytics, CBA has reduced check a customer’s Web searches to provide a very specific offer fraud by 50 percent and Internet fraud by 80 percent. on the spot, in real time. www.commbank.com.au Equally important, he says, is how analytics now “gives our Source: Commonwealth Bank of Australia customer service the advantage of clarity of purpose.” The CBA site is a good example of how customers want to communicate with banks on their terms, when and All banks strive to provide superior customer service. where they are ready. According to Andrew Hagger, CBA made real progress once it realized customers general manager—head transformation and analytics at want individualized attention. “I guess one of the largest CBA, “Analytics underpins the ability to offer the right surprises to us was the extent to which customers wanted products to clients.”1 the site personalized to them,” Lark says of the bank’s Web service, NetBank. “So the strategy became making More Than a Smarter Web Site the entire site relevant and meaningful for the customers.” But CBA’s focus on customer service extends well beyond the Web. The more accounts a customer has with the 1. Wisniewski, Mary. “5 Takeaways from SAP’s Client Conference: Reporter’s Notebook.” American Banker, October 25, 2012. http://goo.gl/noH0qI Visitors can see the difference. For example, say a prospect bank, the more helpful CBA can be with pricing and has been viewing properties online and then visits the CBA advice. If a household has its mortgage, checking, savings site. Not too long ago, “you might have gotten a banner with and credit cards with CBA, the bank’s analytical tools can a standard offer for a travel money card—something far from suggest the most appropriate products and offer pricing to interesting at that point in time,” Lark says. Today, knowing fit the customer’s needs, both in person and online. CBA SEPTEMBER 2013 | © Copyright 2013. Bloomberg L.P. All rights reserved. RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Business Case Studies can even offer them a report on their spending through a visual and interactive hub site called Signals.2 To be customer centric, it is important to provide access to data across the enterprise to individual users at the point of decision-making, in addition to having clean data and an integrated analytics platform that enables collaboration across the various departments and processes. CBA’s IT infrastructure demonstrates this well. “We have the strength of the relationship data and the customer-centric architecture, which I believe will set us CBA’s Products and Services } Retail Banking: Home loans, credit cards, personal loans, transaction accounts, and demand and term deposits } Commercial Banking: Business loans, equipment and trade finance, and rural and agribusiness products } Corporate Financial Markets Services: Securities underwriting, trading and distribution, corporate finance, equities, payments and transaction services, investment management and custody services apart from the competition on an enduring basis,” says CBA CIO Michael Harte.3 CBA has also been working on incorporating innovations such as in-memory computing to power up its strategy. that, together with analytics, runs well and looks good on desktop, tablet and smartphone devices. Harte says the bank has developed a strategy to collect transaction and other data, analyze it and use it to determine Conclusion the right pricing and financial strategies for an individual or As CBA demonstrates, the future is bright for banks that an entire household. As Lark puts it, “The more information learn to use big data and analytics to gain a competitive you have, the more inclined you will be to make better edge. However, dealing with all that data is not always informed financial decisions.” The ability to forecast trends, easy and progress can take time, says David Tanis, model options and predict outcomes is another important manager of information systems and frontline analytics at aspect of gaining customer trust and loyalty. CBA. At the Gartner Business Intelligence & Information Management Summit 2013 in Sydney in February, Tanis Increasingly, more customer and prospect data is coming said every analytics project is a learning experience, from sources outside the bank. An early and active user of especially when it involves big data.4 social media, CBA has dedicated social media teams who monitor social sites 24 hours a day looking for prospects “We’re still trying to understand what the capabilities and who might be dissatisfied with another bank and seeking skills are in terms of pulling as much out of the big data a new financial services home. The teams also look for as we can,” Tanis says. CBA deals with the wide varierty potential problems within CBA and respond to them of big data sources every day as it tries to derive business quickly. “I was surprised at how much benefit we could get intelligence from that data. from social data,” Lark says. According to Lark, many institutions are still in the early 2. Langlois, Christophe. “BIG DATA: Top Australian Banks Launch Social Media Spending Comparison Sites.” Visible Banking, March 7, 2013. http://goo.gl/0MEoxE 3. “We’re changing the game: CommBank.” The Sydney Morning Herald, May 29, 2012. http://goo.gl/zEq8w 4. Lui, Spandas. “Half of analytics investments will be a waste: Commonwealth Bank.” ZDNet, February 25, 2013. http://goo.gl/h385jv Skyrocketing use of smartphones and other mobile stages “of being able to fully utilize their data” to develop devices is also quickly filling the bank’s data coffers. CBA insights and better meet customer needs. “It’s not just the saw its mobile users jump from 19 percent to 32 percent new data sets, or the size of the data, that is driving this,” in less than a year. “Mobile is going to be even more he says. “It’s also the awareness that in the future, you’ll significant in the future, as more and more happens on need to meet the customer before they start the search. the smartphone,” Lark predicts. “Being relevant isn’t just That’s where the winners will win.” • going to be about the relevant offer; it also means being contextually relevant to where I am and what I am doing.” CBA uses a combination of ad serving, smart media buying and personalization engines on its mobile Web site 2 Bloomberg Businessweek Research Services Tom Groenfeldt is a freelance writer in based in Sturgeon Bay, Wis., who has written for many financial, business and technology publications. This research project was funded by a grant from SAP. Real-Time Enterprises A Research Collection ConAgra at a glance Consumer products giant produces brand-name foods such as Healthy Choice, Marie Callender’s and Orville Redenbacher’s, among others Industry: consumer products Category leaders: 27 of its consumer brands are No. 1 or No. 2 in their category; 23 consumer brands generate more than $100 million in retail sales each year Founded: 1919 Headquarters: Omaha, Nebraska Sales: $18 billion Employees: 36,000 www.conagra.com Source: ConAgra Page 31 RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Business Case Studies Real-Time Business Leads ConAgra to Profitable Insights The consumer products giant is reducing costs, improving pricing and forging closer relationships with retailers using in-memory computing. BY JOE MULLICH ConAgra at a Glance Segments: Consumer foods, private brands, commercial foods Category leaders: 27 of its consumer brands are No. 1 or No. 2 in their category; 23 consumer brands generate more than $100 million in retail sales each year Founded: 1919 Headquarters: Omaha, Neb. Sales: $18 billion Employees: 36,000 www.conagra.com Source: ConAgra C onAgra, the $18 billion consumer products (CP) giant, produces brand-name foods such as Healthy Choice, Marie Callender’s and Orville Redenbacher’s, among others, that can be found in almost everyone’s refrigerator or pantry. Yet it faces the same challenges that pressure the entire food industry: figuring out the optimal pricing for its products in an environment where consumers are hyper-sensitive, while coping with the everfluctuating costs for 4,000 raw materials used in FIGURE 1 How Analytics Contributes to Business Decisions Areas where food and beverage companies use data and analytics to support strategic decisions (percent responding) some 20,000 products. Customer insights According to a 2013 study by KPMG,1 51 percent of Brand and product management 58% 59% food industry executives said pricing pressures remain the highest barrier to growth, up from 42 percent a year earlier. Volatile commodity prices— the amount manufacturers pay for ingredients—are another major obstacle. “If the price of beef goes up on the commodity Pricing decisions 56% Operating model optimization 52% Market expansion 43% exchange, what is that going to do to our margin?” asked Mindy Simon, ConAgra’s vice president of IT. Being able to answer such questions is of paramount interest to the company, because commodity prices affect its earnings and its stock Portfolio rationalization 42% Source: KPMG 2013 Food and Beverage Industry Outlook Survey. http://goo.gl/me3va8 price. In the past, ConAgra has warned that ConAgra decision-makers have real-time insight into earnings would be impacted by materials prices that the company’s costs and consumers’ demands. were rising faster than expected.2 “We’ve developed much better capabilities in pricing 1. KPMG. 2013 Food and Beverage Industry Outlook Survey. PDF. http://goo.gl/me3va8. 2. Rappeport, Alan. “ConAgra hit by surging raw material costs.” Financial Times. Sept. 20, 2011. http://goo.gl/yih35b. 3. Thompson Reuters Streetevents. “ConAgra Foods at CAGNY Conference. ” Edited transcript. Feb. 18, 2014. http://goo.gl/QGrc9a. March 2014 | So ConAgra puts great emphasis on optimizing its analytics as part of an overall revenue growth prices, which in turn requires getting ever better management approach,” ConAgra CEO Gary prices for commodities such as wheat, corn, oats, Rodkin told analysts in February 2014.3 Rodkin’s soybean meal, soybean oil, meat, dairy products and remarks echoed the KPMG survey findings: Food sugar. The company turned to in-memory computing, and beverage executives reported they rely more on which loads extremely large volumes of data from data and analytics to support their pricing decisions, multiple sources into one database and enables understand customers better, and support brand users to answer questions almost instantly. Access to and product management decisions (see Figure 1, great volumes of rapidly processed data means “How Analytics Contributes to Business Decisions”). © Copyright 2014. Bloomberg L.P. All rights reserved. RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Business Case Studies ConAgra’s Challenges Real-Time Data Means Faster Decisions ConAgra has priced products appropriately when it } Gain in-the-moment insight into the cost of raw materials. } Acquire more accurate consumer purchase information to improve merchandizing. } Forge closer ties with retailers. FIGURE 2 Consumer Products Companies’ Data Challenges delivers value to consumers and earns a profit. For They want timelier information. (percent responding) example, the company has 140 meal products, such as Timeliness for decision-making 69% potpies, that sell for less than $3. “Banquet potpies sell for less than $1, and Marie Callender’s potpies are around $2.50,” Rodkin explained.4 Having a variety of products at different price points makes ConAgra competitive within the categories it serves, as does doing a better job of getting retail prices right than its ConAgra’s Solutions competitors. Any price increases prompted by rising } Implemented in-memory technology to speed analysis. } Gathered new sources of data about consumer behavior. } Shared data-driven insights with retailers. consumer expectations, observed Bob Nolan, manufacturing costs have to take into account ConAgra’s vice president of customer insights and Quality 67% Integration 57% Availability 53% Source: Accenture, “Building an Analytics Driven Organization,” 2013. http://goo.gl/KBfJnv analytics. Consumers might be willing to pay 10 percent more for a gallon of gas, he said, but not for popcorn.5 Improving their ability to model alternative business scenarios is becoming a critical goal for CP CP companies have traditionally approached key companies that want to stay ahead. A recent business decisions, such as pricing, through a Aberdeen Group study10 looked at how behavior periodic planning process. However, as the cost of differs among companies that are aware of the manufacturing and consumer demand become more business drivers, such as costs or pricing, that volatile, so do revenues. Business risks also impact their performance compared to those who increase. Companies now realize that planning are not aware. The results found companies that should be a continuous activity based on real-time take business drivers into account when creating information. Yet the majority of CP companies are their business plans are nearly three times as likely failing, thus far, to put real-time analytics at the heart to make what-if analyses a priority. of their decision-making processes, according to a 4. Thompson Reuters Streetevents. 5. Nolan, Bob. “ConAgra’s VP of Analytics on Big Data & Careers in Retail.” Video. Jan. 9, 2014. http://goo.gl/PS1ozI. 6. Accenture. “Building an Analytics-driven Organization: Organizing, Governing, Sourcing and Growing Analytics Capabilities in CPG.” PDF. Feb. 19, 2014. http://goo.gl/KBfJnv. 7. Henschen, Doug. “Can SAP Master Cloud & On-Premises?” InformationWeek. Feb. 5, 2014. http://goo.gl/G1yJoA. 8. SAP. “SAP HANA: An InMemory Data Platform for RealTime Business.” PDF. 2012. http://goo.gl/gDicpN. 9. Doug Henschen. 10. Castellina, Nick. “Don’t Fly Blind When Budgeting and Forecasting: The Value of Being Driver-Conscious.” Aberdeen PDF. November 2014. http://goo.gl/7VWSGj. 11. Bob Nolan. 12. Accenture. new Accenture study.6 The top challenge for CP By focusing on a key pain point—costs—ConAgra companies, cited by 69 percent, is lack of timely has convincingly demonstrated the business value of data (see Figure 2, “Consumer Products Companies’ its in-memory computing investment, observed Chris Data Challenges”). Cicarello, senior director, pricing and customer analytics at ConAgra.11 Choosing an important To gather more timely data and enable faster business problem to address, as ConAgra did, is a decision-making, ConAgra turned to in-memory savvy strategy for CP companies that are engaging in computing in numerous areas of its business. The cutting-edge analytics. According to Accenture, “most revolutionary” use now is forecasting materials companies often launch such efforts without knowing costs, Simon offered. what they want to accomplish, and they end up 7 spending a lot of time—and money on technology— ConAgra has been able to speed up the collection of without having much impact on the business.12 its data related to commodities purchases from 9 hours to 20 minutes8 and to reduce its month-end forecasting Capitalizing on New Data Sources process by three days. By collecting and analyzing the Another reason why ConAgra needs to process data more quickly, the company is able to consider massive amounts of data quickly: the company timelier what-if scenarios, giving it more ways to adjust uses more types of data in its analysis. For its strategies for buying materials, observed Simon example, the CP giant is adding shopper-specific (see Figure 3, “Better Decisions Through Data”). data that it gets directly from retailers and 9 2 Bloomberg Businessweek Research Services RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Business Case Studies analyzing that data in new ways to better understand consumers and respond to their needs. That goes beyond how ConAgra uses internal data to forecast demand and increase sales, and speaks to how it applies aggregated retail data to plan promotions and strengthen its The Benefits of Real-Time Business at ConAgra include the following. (% responding) Improving the quality of decision-making supply chains. Making quicker decisions As ConAgra searches these new data stores, it is Improving planning and forecasting finding surprising insights that enable better } Expanded options: ConAgra is able to analyze multiple “what-if” scenarios when considering its strategies for purchasing commodities. } Better merchandizing: Using external data, such as consumer data provided by retailers, delivers real-time insight into how to merchandize products more effectively and increase margins. } Closer relationships with retailers: Sharing data-driven recommendations with retailers helps ConAgra build trust and become an indispensible partner. FIGURE 3 Better Decisions Through Data Business drivers for investment in analytics product merchandizing. For example, the company learned that people who buy one type of single-serving frozen food tend to buy several other single-serving varieties at the same time. 59% 53% 47% Developing new products, services and revenue streams 47% Source: IDG Enterprise Big Data Study, 2014. http://goo.gl/BNImWX Because of that, ConAgra suggested that retailers group the packages with smaller portions Enhancing Relationships together, instead of stocking single-serve pizzas To develop a strong relationship with retailers, with family-size pizzas. ConAgra realized that it could not simply provide self-serving data about its own products. Nolan Such findings enable ConAgra to forge stronger pointed out that data sharing requires ties with retailers: The company is giving the transparency: Retailers should fully understand retailers data that, in turn, enables them to improve why ConAgra is making recommendations about their own operations. The deeper understanding which products to put on the shelf. In some cases, about prices ConAgra gains not only helps the the company’s recommendations might even company manage itself efficiently, it also helps include adding a competitor’s products. “We try to ConAgra guide retailers on how to price products be objective and give recommendations that allow on the shelf. That, along with controlling costs, is [retailers] to grow their entire store, not just our the other crucial element in maximizing profits, business,” he said. “It’s almost like being a according to ConAgra executives. consultant. We want to become the indispensable 13 partner to our customers.”14 Aberdeen Group Analyst Nick Castellina said best-in-class companies—the ones that shape Nolan said this objectivity demonstrates to their plans around business drivers—are twice as supermarkets and retailers that ConAgra’s data- likely to share information with suppliers, driven suggestions are based on what will most customers, resellers and regulatory bodies. But the benefit the retailers’ bottom lines. This tactic builds data has to be accurate and recent, or it is not trust as ConAgra develops relationships with the useful. The high-performing companies that retailers. As a result, he thinks ConAgra will profit and Aberdeen identified as sharing information are “win the ties” when retailers debate whether to add nearly three times more likely to have real-time ConAgra products or those from another company.15 financial metrics. It is another innovative way that data drives “Having accurate demand forecasting and inventory is important in consumer goods,” Castellina said. “This is especially important in the food industry because of shelf life and the 13. Bob Nolan. 14. Bob Nolan. 15. Bob Nolan. capability for materials to go bad.” 3 Bloomberg Businessweek Research Services ConAgra’s sales and boosts the bottom line. • Joe Mullich is a freelance business and technology writer based in Sherman Oakes, Calif. This research project was funded by a grant from SAP. Real-Time Enterprises A Research Collection eBay at a glance Leading online retailer provides consumer-toconsumer sales services via the Internet Industry: high tech Founded: 1995 Headquarters: San Jose, California Brands: eBay, PayPal, eBay Enterprises, StubHub Buyers worldwide: 145 million Active users worldwide: 128 million Number of items listed for sale: 650+ million 2013 revenue: $16.0 billion www.ebay.com Source: eBay Page 35 RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Business Case Studies Big Benefits from Big Data at eBay Online marketplace provider eBay uses predictive analytics and in-memory computing to better serve customers and bolster the bottom line. B Y L A R RY L A N G E O eBay at a Glance } Founded: 1995 } Headquarters: San Jose, Calif. } Brands: eBay, PayPal, eBay Enterprises, StubHub } Buyers worldwide: 145 million } Active users worldwide: 128 million } Number of items listed for sale: 650+ million } Revenue (fiscal 2013): $16.0 billion nline retailers face two big challenges: improving customer service, and keeping partners and suppliers satisfied. Both are vital, because online competition is fierce. If shoppers aren’t happy with their site experience—from browsing to buying—they can easily go elsewhere; competitors are just a click away. It’s the same for an online retailer’s suppliers. If they FIGURE 1 Predictive Analytics: What Is It Good For? don’t like certain terms and conditions, or consider (percentage of survey respondents) technical features too basic, they won’t stay loyal. Achieve competitive advantage 68% The stakes for online retailers are huge. Worldwide B2C ecommerce sales will increase more than 20 percent this year, reaching $1.5 trillion, predicts research firm eMarketer. 1 New revenue opportunities 55% Increased profitability 52% Leading online retailer eBay is meeting both www.ebay.com challenges by deploying business analytics to provide Source: eBay online sellers with real-time information about their eBay-enabled sales. Sellers can use this information to sell more goods more efficiently and effectively. Increased customer service 45% Operational efficiencies 44% Because eBay is better serving its sellers, it is able to indirectly better satisfy buyers with a speedier, optimized shopping experience. As for eBay’s bottom Source: Ventana Research predictive analytics benchmark research, 2012. http://goo.gl/k5lkGk line? It gets a cut of every sale, regardless of which and services that empower customers to perform a variety customer is buying or selling. Simply put, the new of business tasks (see Figure 1, “Predictive Analytics: What analytics program is a win-win-win. Is It Good For?”). Analyzing Analytics Many organizations use predictive analytics (see Figure The move is significant for another reason: 2, “Predictive Analytics: What It Is Used For”). Netflix Although many ecommerce companies find the commissioned two TV shows, “Orange Is the New promise of big data compelling, few have realized Black” and “House of Cards,” knowing beforehand, its business benefits. Now, though, early adopters thanks to predictive analytics, that a big chunk of its like eBay are achieving new revenue streams, customer base would loyally watch them.2 greater speed-to-market and enhanced business 1. eMarketer. “Global B2C Ecommerce Sales to Hit $1.5 Trillion This Year Driven by Growth in Emerging Markets.” Feb. 3. 2014. http://goo.gl/K8l0Vt. 2. Carr, David. “Giving Viewers What They Want.” The New York Times, Feb. 24, 2013. http://goo.gl/Tr4wAw. flexibility. Among the approaches yielding results, A mining company uses predictive analytics to better predictive analytics stands out. maintain equipment. The company, as described by Henry Morris, senior vice president of software and services Predictive analytics helps companies extract research at market researcher IDC, deploys Caterpillar information from mountains of data, forecast customer machinery that, in the past, was manually checked and trends and patterns of behavior, and create products maintained only on an infrequent and irregular basis. AUGUST 2014 | © Copyright 2014. Bloomberg L.P. All rights reserved. RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Business Case Studies Now equipment is continuously monitored. “The FIGURE 2 company can detect a ‘signal,’ or datapoint anomaly, on a machine that predicts when the machine is likely to fail,” Morris explains. “Then they can send someone out to repair it.” Speed is an important benefit of predictive analytics. A Benefits of In-Memory Computing at eBay new, faster technology, known as in-memory computing, } Sellers get relevant, real-time information about their own customers and eBay buyers } More in-depth data analysis; faster anomaly detection and notification } Dashboard lets analysts visualize relevant information in several categories } Tasks that previously took a month can now be done in one day } Data is delivered to the entire team of eBay analysts instantaneously “In-Memory vs. Disk: The Shootout”). In-memory keeps data in a computer system’s RAM rather than storing it on traditional physical disks (see Figure 3, Predictive Analytics: What It Is Used For (percentage of survey respondents) Currently using 24% 22% 45% 34% Product offers 43% consultancy PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC), says improved productivity, enhanced customer experience and loyalty, and lower costs.”3 67% Customer service and analyze vast amounts of data from multiple data in-memory computing can deliver “increased innovation, 72% Marketing computing helps predictive analytics systems aggregate sources in nearly real time. Anand Rao, a principal at Plan to add in future Forecasting 22% Fraud detection 34% 31% Many enterprise software providers offer automated platforms based on in-memory computing. These Source: Ventana Research predictive analytics benchmark research, 2013. http://goo.gl/1kUhOz systems run data through myriad preconfigured metrics, quickly send those metrics to users and To stay competitive, eBay employs 5,000 data analysts provide dashboards for users to disseminate data. worldwide who sift through as much as 100 petabytes of Researchers at audit and consulting firm Deloitte say data. Until recently, analysts used Microsoft Excel new in-memory platforms offer query response times spreadsheets. But the process wasn’t scalable, and that are thousands of times faster than more errors were common.6 Given the huge amount of data conventional approaches; transactions can be and eBay’s pressing business needs, the case for processed as much as 20,000 times faster. automation was easily made. These and other related benefits are making predictive eBay’s first test project, launched in 2013, combined analytics a serious business. Research firm predictive analytics and in-memory computing. The MarketsandMarkets forecasts the global market for result empowered the North American marketplace predictive analytics systems reaching $5.24 billion in team of 300 data analysts to provide sellers with 2018, up from $1.7 billion last year. forecasts, as well as relevant and real-time information 4 5 about sellers’ own customers or eBay buyers. 3. PricewaterhouseCoopers. “6th Annual Digital IQ Survey.” http://goo.gl/1dQiyn. Comments by Anand Rao in “Digital IQ 2014 10 Technology Trends for Business.” http://goo.gl/IpJsLw. 4. Deloitte University Press. “Tech Trends 2014: Inspiring Disruption.” http://goo.gl/E3f6z3. 5. MarketsandMarkets. “Predictive Analytics Worldwide Forecasts (2013–2018).” http://goo.gl/4fEhBg. 6. SAP. “Optimizing eBay’s Signal Detection with SAP HANA.” http://goo.gl/UFHy7j. 7. Schwarzbach, David. “SAP Sapphire Conference Presentation: Target Business-Critical Processes for Transformation.” http://goo.gl/uIv6Zu. Up, Up and eBay Information was provided as actionable metrics, eBay recognizes the value of predictive analytics and including customer tastes and preferences, market in-memory computing. It uses the technology to score conditions, and timely supply and demand information. both business and technology benefits. Consider the popular category of collectible men’s 2 Data at eBay is certainly big: It serves some 20 million basketball sneakers. “If we know that ‘collectible sellers offering wares in more than 4,500 product sneakers for the Olympics’ are selling really well, we categories and 145 million active buyers in 100+ want to tell our sellers as soon as we know it,” says countries. Now eBay is feeling pressure to keep David Schwarzbach, vice president and CFO of eBay business competitive and customers loyal. North America. “That’s the value of speed.”7 The Bloomberg Businessweek Research Services RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Business Case Studies sellers, equipped with this knowledge, can then run special FIGURE 3 promotions for those sneakers. Keys to the Kingdom The eBay team had worked alone on a In-Memory vs. Disk: The Shootout How these two technologies compare on two important factors. Infrastructure Finding Data In-memory computing Data is stored in the machine’s main system memory, enabling in-line processing and manipulation. Streamlined data retrieval and processing means no mechanical parts, no movement and no need for alignment. Disk-based Data is mechanically recorded on a spinning disk, often on a large array of networked storage appliances. For data to be read or written, the correct address must first be found on the physical disk. Overhead for input/ output activities can cause delays to jobs that are large or complicated. scalable and configurable automated eBay’s Business Challenges predictive analytics system for two years. } Data analysis was manual; the process wasn’t scalable, and errors were common } Difficult to coordinate analyst’s efforts, diagnose problems and make accurate decisions on seller recommendations Schwarzbach’s team began working eBay’s Solutions eBay honed in on two core requirements: greater a method to deliver items before a customer orders } Deploy advanced business analytics } Combine predictive analytics and inmemory computing } Partner with in-memory platform vendor analysis of data, and faster detection and notification of them. In deciding what to ship, Amazon will leverage its anomalies—or signal detection. The platform delivered trove of customer data—and its predictive analytics several tools, including a dashboard that lets eBay system—to take into account a customer’s previous North America’s analysts visualize relevant information in orders, product searches, wish lists and more.10 But the payoff came when with an in-memory platform vendor. “There was a thrilling, magic moment,” he says, when the team knew they could transfer their data analysis operation over to an in-memory platform. Schwarzbach adds: “We’d cracked it.” Source: Deloitte, “Tech Trends 2014: Inspiring Disruption” By deploying the in-memory platform, several categories and that flashes data anomaly alerts. Similarly, UPS wants to deploy prescriptive analytics on Thanks to in-memory computing, tasks that previously all its data feeds, including GPS tracking, driver routes took a month now take a day. Gagandeep Bawa, a and workloads, traffic patterns and delays, and manager in eBay North America’s financial planning customer delivery requirements. The goal: a real-time, group, says this real-time speed frees up data constantly adapting operational system that optimizes analysts’ time, and he calls the system “inherently any task performed by the company’s drivers.11 intelligent and configurable.”8 PwC says the future of enterprise applications will Next, eBay will offer this data directly to sellers, either combine predictive analytics with mindflows—basically, on their personalized Web pages or via a mobile app. a person’s thoughts—to create “mindful apps.” These Schwarzbach says his team is “taking this to apps will combine data generated by tracking what production right now.” Morris of IDC expects this will people think, their behavior patterns and data already give eBay a big competitive edge. “Other auction firms being aggregated by a firm’s predictive analytics don’t offer this kind of data analysis as a service,” he program. That information will help employees make explains. “So this makes eBay very compelling for optimal decisions, all served up via a mobile app.12 9 8. Bawa, Gagandeep. “eBay’s Early Signal Detection System Runs Machine Learning & Predictive Powered by SAP HANA.” http://goo.gl/282uJB. 9. David Schwarzbach. 10. Bensinger, Greg. “Amazon Wants to Ship Your Package Before You Buy It.” The Wall Street Journal, Jan. 17, 2014. http://goo.gl/Vz1U9i. 11. Hemsoth, Nicole. “UPS Delivers on Prescriptive Analytics.” Datanami, Feb. 23, 2013. http://goo.gl/PP4GjV. Schultz, Beth. “Inside Analytics: UPS Delivers the Goods.” All Analytics, May 9, 2013. http://goo.gl/iEfm4U. 12. Baya, Vinod, Galen Gruman and Bo Parker. “The future of enterprise apps: Moving beyond workflows to mindflows.” PricewaterhouseCoopers. http://goo.gl/GqCOLH. customers to use for selling their goods.” If you were using one of these programs, you’d already The Future Is Predictive Impressive as these gains are, several companies are pushing new developments that will make data analytics even more useful. Amazon was recently granted a patent for what it calls anticipatory shipping, 3 Bloomberg Businessweek Research Services know that! • Larry Lange is a freelance business and technology writer based in Jacksonville, Fla. This research project was funded by a grant from SAP. Real-Time Enterprises A Research Collection EMC at a glance IT as a service, cloud computing. 25 distinct product families span hardware, software and services, addressing storage, trusted infrastructure, cloud computing and big data Industry: high tech Headquarters: Hopkinton, Massachusetts Founded: 1979 2013 revenues: $23.2 billion Acquisitions to date: 70 Employees: 60,000 in 86 countries www.emc.com Source: EMC Page 39 RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Business Case Studies The Key to EMC’s Technology Growth: Integrated Acquisitions Integrating the systems and business processes of acquired companies is often overlooked. EMC, with its 70 acquisitions and counting, has a winning formula. BY ALAN RADDING T he rise of so-called SMAC technologies—social, mobile, analytics and cloud— presents a new challenge to large technology suppliers. On the one hand, these companies must respond to their customers’ rising demands for these new technologies. EMC at a Glance Industry: IT as a service, cloud computing Company description: 25 distinct product families span hardware, software and services, addressing storage, trusted infrastructure, cloud computing and big data Headquarters: Hopkinton, Mass. Founded: 1979 Revenues: $23.2 billion (2013) Acquisitions to date: 70 Employees: 60,000 in 86 countries Yet on the other hand, doing so is costly, time-consuming and complicated. To meet this challenge, many large technology FIGURE 1 companies are turning to mergers and acquisitions (M&A). They are buying smaller suppliers that have developed solutions in one of these areas, and (% reporting deal objective was “very important” and “completely achieved”) then integrating them into their product mix and operations. Among the firms that have spent millions, even billions, of dollars to acquire SMAC suppliers are IBM, Google, Microsoft and EMC. Rob Fisher, U.S. technology industry deals leader at PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC), an audit, tax and consulting firm, said these companies essentially have no choice. SMAC, he said, changes “the nature of the business, especially when software is Acquisitions Do Not Always Deliver Very important All respondents Completely achieved All respondents Very important Technology respondents Completely achieved Technology respondents Access to new brands, technologies or products 56% 82% 40% 47% www.emc.com involved.” Acquisitions are also a way for large Access to new markets Source: EMC technology suppliers to enter new markets at lower risk. “Upstarts are prepared to lose hundreds of millions of dollars of venture capital before becoming profitable,” Fisher explained. “But established players cannot absorb those kinds of losses.” PwC recently completed a three-year study of mergers and acquisitions in technology, information, communications and entertainment. As part of the study, the firm asked C-level 70% 75% 58% 38% Access to management or technical talent 43% 59% 36% 31% Source: PricewaterhouseCoopers, 2014 original rendering executives to name their most important deal objectives. Among executives in the technology percent of the technology executives (see Figure 1, sector, two goals came out on top: access to new “Acquisitions Do Not Always Deliver”). brands, technology and products, cited by more MARCH 2014 | than 80 percent of respondents; and access to However, simply acquiring a smaller technology new markets, also cited by 75 percent. The next company is not a panacea. The acquired company closest was access to talent, cited by nearly 60 must also be integrated into the larger company, and © Copyright 2014. Bloomberg L.P. All rights reserved. RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Business Case Studies that includes its IT architecture, systems and FIGURE 2 survey identified IT integration as the number one post-M&A closing difficulty. It was followed by the related challenge of integrating operating procedures and business processes. EMC’s Challenges } Support both current and anticipated future businesses. } Manage a large number (70+) of acquisitions, and integrate business and operational systems. } Enable current products with mobility and cloud computing. } Update legacy ERP system to support variable pricing, especially pay-as-you-go models. This is essentially an information-platform challenge. The acquiring company must meld disparate processes and technologies, most originally intended to support different business models, customer bases, development cycles and product- Transformation via Acquisition (% of acquisition type, based on the largest acquisition in the past three years) applications. This work is far from simple. PwC’s All respondents Technology respondents Transformational Absorption 44% 53% 29% 29% Source: PricewaterhouseCoopers, 2014 release expectations. And with cloud technology enabling a software supplier to shift its business Originally founded as a provider of data-storage model from licensed products to hosted services, systems to large enterprises, EMC is today a $23.2 even the most basic accounting systems may billion (revenue) supplier of 25 distinct product families require major adjustments. that span hardware, software and services. These products address not only storage, but also what the As a result of this complexity and difficulty, many company calls “trusted infrastructure,” cloud computing acquisitions fall short of achieving their goals. and big data. PwC’s survey found that fewer than one-third of executives at acquiring technologies companies EMC’s customer base has expanded to now include both reported competence in integration. The results small and midsize companies. As a result, it engages both were striking: Fewer than half (47 percent) of the direct and in-direct sales channels. But its typical order executives said their acquisitions actually size has shrunk. In response, EMC embarked on a leaner delivered access to new brands, technologies and operating strategy, methodically cut costs and adopted a products—goals the deals were created to deliver. high-volume/low-touch business model, much like the As for gaining access to new markets and new best SMAC players. And at the manufacturing end, EMC talent, the results were even worse; only 38 operations now rely on more than 50 suppliers worldwide, percent said their acquisition met expectations for up from a small handful in 2004, as well as several new markets, while a mere 31 percent said it met contract manufacturers. expectations for talent. “Transformational deals are much harder due to the increased complexity Internally, EMC is a very different company, too. As of of the integration,” said Gregg Nahass, U.S. M&A 2013, EMC had 60,000 internal users, more than twice integration leader at PwC (see Figure 2, the number it had in 2004. The company now has more “Transformation via Acquisition”). than 400,000 customers and partners, six times the number it had when a previous ERP system was The Integration Hurdle deployed. Similarly, EMC’s roster of applications and tools Integrating systems, therefore, is a key differentiator has grown to 500, up from 400 in 2004. Even more between acquisitions of SMAC companies that important, the way the company handles its workload has succeed at meeting their goals and those that fail. changed dramatically; EMC now operates more than more One company aware of this challenge, and working than 10,000 virtualized systems, amounting to 93 percent hard to master it, is EMC. Over the past decade, of all its servers (see Figure 3, “EMC’s Evolving IT”). EMC has acquired no fewer than 70 companies. 2 What is more, these acquisitions have enabled EMC With all these changes, EMC found it also needed to to radically change the nature of its business. change its internal IT environment. The ERP system Bloomberg Businessweek Research Services RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Business Case Studies that had suited the company so well in 2004 was FIGURE 3 EMC’s Evolving IT by 2013 no longer serving the business. EMC now needed to accommodate dozens of business units supporting varied product families being sold via multiple channels to different types of customers. A new system was clearly needed, EMC’s Solutions one that could support myriad types of pricing, from conventional on-premises licenses to various } Move to an open ERP system. } Create six new principles for any future system. } Launch Project Propel, an enterprise system initiative designed to transform 125+ business processes. } Deploy a set of virtualized enterprise apps that can be adapted to changing future needs. } Plan to add new capabilities, including CRM, scheduled for 2015 deployment. subscription and pay-as-you-go models—and whatever might come next. And the company would need to help its staff work seamlessly. No matter which EMC business units they were in, workers needed to be able to share information, 2004 2013 Internal users24,000 60,000 IT environment 5 datacenters, ~13 petabytes of storage 5 datacenters, 960 terabytes of storage Business~400 ~500 applications Virtualization 2,000 physical 93%, ~10,000 servers OS images Source: EMC Corp. collaborate and innovate with one another. The EMC team began with a question inspired by one of Beyond Integration its acquisitions: What if the same principles that Clearly, EMC needed a solution that went far transformed a single acquisition, delivering beyond merely upgrading its existing ERP system unprecedented value for customers, were applied to the with a few cloud or mobile capabilities. Instead, the entire company? company needed a system that would integrate its acquired companies and support its new business In answering that question, EMC officials realized they would need to abandon their legacy ERP system. The “Now that we’re in the hardware replacement, they realized, would need to be based on business, the software business, open systems. It would need to enable widespread and very much into mergers virtualization. And it would need to support EMC’s journey to cloud and mobile computing. Above all, EMC and acquisitions, we needed needed a system that could integrate everything and to reinvent our ERP system to share information, even with future acquisitions. support not just the business To find the right solution, EMC highlighted six key that we had evolved into but the principles: businesses that we will continue to evolve into going forward.” —M I C H A E L H A R D I N G , P R O J E C T L E A D T E C H N I C A L A R C H I T E C T, E M C • Design for the future state of the business. • Minimize customizations and commit to the vendor’s upgrade path. • Move fast to mitigate system risk. • Use a phased approach to realize value as quickly as possible. processes, customer types and business models. A conventional upgrade would not suffice. “Now that we’re in the hardware business, the software • Recognize and manage the cultural change and transformation the new system entailed. • Prepare the staff with new skills and competencies. business, and very much into mergers and 1. “HANA Customer Spotlight.” SAP, 2013. http://goo.gl/UtnxDU. acquisitions, we needed to reinvent our ERP system After a careful search, EMC settled on a solution supplied to support not just the business that we had evolved by an industry-leading enterprise systems vendor. The into but the businesses that we will continue to solution would support from the outset open systems, evolve into going forward,” said Michael Harding, virtualization and cloud computing. To do that, while project lead technical architect at EMC. ensuring performance and flexibility, the new vendor also 1 3 Bloomberg Businessweek Research Services RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Business Case Studies Project Propel at a Glance } Overall mission: Support both EMC’s current and anticipated future businesses. } Key dates: Phase 1 launched in 2013; Phase 2 (adding RSA and services groups) is scheduled for 2014; Phase 3 (adding CRM capabilities) is scheduled for 2015. } Business benefits include: Reduced capital and operating expenses, improved business performance, the ability to leverage commodity IT hardware, improved security and easy information sharing to facilitate innovation. } Business applications: approximately 500. } Transformation: More than 125 EMC business processes have been added; 65 legacy applications have been retired. } In-memory processing: Four third-party appliances. } Product families: More than 24, including hardware, software and business services. } Training: 103 classes have been completed, training 1,200 “super users.” } Phase 1 implementation: 40,000 users at 316 sites in just four days. brought a slew of the latest technology advances, acquired vFabric, GemFire, Cetas and Cloud including in-memory processing. Foundry). The combined service now provides data warehouse protection, data deduplication and Transformation Project backup services. The new enterprise system initiative, referred to internally as Project Propel, was designed to The new integration and innovation capabilities of transform more than 125 EMC business processes Project Propel have also helped EMC provide by deploying 65 integrated, multi-module enterprise real-time financial reporting. “The end-of-quarter applications. Project Propel has also enabled EMC to process [is] a huge amount of pressure,” Tony deploy an integrated set of virtualized enterprise Pagliarulo, EMC’s senior VP and chief operating applications that can be adapted to support both the way EMC works now and the way it is likely to work “The key to innovation is to in the future as it pursues ongoing innovation. leverage technology for multiple Project Propel’s initial rollout in 2013 involved some 20 departments. It’s being informed modules. These included core ERP, business that creates the basis for intelligence (BI), supplier relationship management sustainable innovation.” (SRM) and advanced planning and optimizing (APO), as well as some portals and various third-party applications. Despite the project’s massive scale, it was deployed to EMC’s internal users in just four days. — G R E G S C H U L Z , S E N I O R A N A LY S T A N D FOUNDER, STORAGEIO officer, said at a recent investment analyst briefing. “So it was critical for us to have real-time reporting The effort was intended from the start as a at a very detailed level.” Thanks to Propel, he multi-stage rollout. The last stage, expected to go added, “We were able to make that available to live in 2015, will add customer relationship users so they can make real-time decisions about management (CRM) capabilities to bring the sales which customers got what product. It was huge—it groups under the same information-sharing really saved our bacon.”2 umbrella, enabling all groups to see the same information. At that point, information should flow Project Propel is the largest IT transformation in efficiently and seamlessly through major swaths of EMC’s history. It delivers new technology, enables the sprawling company, with innovation following EMC to redesign key business processes and right along. ensures an agile approach to deployments. This, in turn, helps EMC respond quickly and completely to This information flow will facilitate another EMC customer requests, provide a better mix-and- objective, sustainable innovation, said Greg Schulz, match of products and services, and share senior analyst and founder of StorageIO, an IT information internally. consulting firm. “The key to innovation is to leverage technology for multiple departments,” he added. These types of capabilities are important, not only to “It’s being informed that creates the basis for EMC but to the entire IT industry. As the market sustainable innovation.” leaders continue to grow and gain capabilities with acquisitions, the need to create open, integrated Source: EMC Corp. An early example of that type of innovation is EMC’s creation of Pivotal, its agile infrastructure service. 2. “Transform Business with an Innovation-Driven Enterprise.” SAP Webcast, 2013. http://goo.gl/trhTSI. EMC formed Pivotal by combining capabilities it gained through the acquisitions of Pivotal Labs, Greenplum and VMware (which, in turn, had 4 Bloomberg Businessweek Research Services systems will only grow.• Alan Radding is a freelance business and technology writer based in Newton, Mass. This research project was funded by a grant from SAP. Real-Time Enterprises A Research Collection Florida Crystals at a glance A subsidiary of Fanjul Corp., Florida Crystals is the world’s largest sugar refiner. A vertically integrated company, it operates two sugar mills, a sugar refinery, a packaging and distribution center, a rice mill and a renewable energy power plant Industry: consumer products and agriculture Headquarters: West Palm Beach, Florida Farmland: 155,000 acres Products: organic and natural sugar; refined sugar; organic and premium rice Raw sugar production: 800,000 tons per year Refined sugar production: 500,000 tons per year Annual revenues: $5.5 billion (Fanjul Corp.) Employees: 2,000 www.floridacrystals.com Source: Florida Crystals Page 44 RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Business Case Studies Real-Time Business Sweetens Performance at Florida Crystals In-memory computing leads to more effective decision-making and energizes an aggressive growth strategy at the world’s largest sugar refiner. BY STEPHANIE OVERBY Florida Crystals At a Glance Industry: Agriculture and consumer products Company Description: A subsidiary of Fanjul Corp., Florida Crystals is the world’s largest sugar refiner. A vertically integrated company, it operates two sugar mills, a sugar refinery, a packaging and distribution center, a rice mill and a renewableenergy power plant. Headquarters: West Palm Beach, Fla. Farmland: 155,000 acres Products: Organic and natural sugar; refined sugar; organic and premium rice Raw sugar production: 800,000 tons per year Refined sugar production: 500,000 tons per year Annual Revenues: $5.5 billion (Fanjul Corp.) Employees: 2,000 E arly in 2014, due to global oversupply, sugar prices sank to less than 15 cents a pound on the IntercontinentalExchange—the lowest price in three-and-a-half years.1 But unlike manufacturers in other industries, Florida Crystals cannot cut Real Time vs. Reality production or hold back supply to compensate FIGURE 1 when prices fall. Sugar cane, once planted, Many companies struggle to deliver in-the-moment business data in real time. (% of global companies with one-day or near-real-time visibility) produces a crop for several years, and mills must extract the raw sugar from the freshly harvested cane soon after each new crop ripens. Cash positions/liquidity Meanwhile, in a commodity industry such as sugar Customer information/business volume 43% that is dominated by a few large players, it is difficult for firms to differentiate their products, noted Simon Ellis, practice director of supply chain strategies at IDC. As a result, profit margins for sugar companies are tight and cost efficiencies are key to profitability. Florida Crystals faces another challenge, too: business complexity resulting from an aggressive growth-by-acquisition strategy and vertically integrated operations that cover every step of sugar production, from planting to distribution. What began as a family-run sugar farm in Cuba in 57% Working capital 39% Supplier base/spend volume 28% Financial performance 24% Operational risk 17% Source: The Hackett Group, 2013 the 1850s is now the largest sugar refiner in the could quickly deliver the real-time capabilities world. The company is involved in planting, necessary for increased flexibility and better harvesting, processing, packaging, marketing and decision-making. www.floridacrystals.com distribution—all within its own farms and facilities. Source: Florida Crystals Recently, Florida Crystals expanded operations to A Way to Stay Ahead Europe and Latin America via acquisitions and Florida Crystals likes to be out front. More than a investment. It is also looking at opportunities in decade ago, it was the first to mill certified organic China and Africa. sugar to be sold in the United States. That has been true of its approach to using information 1. International Sugar and Sweetener Report. “Raw sugar futures fall below 15 cents/lb for the first time since June 2010.” Informa, Jan. 23, 2014. http://goo.gl/OFuOKu. March 2014 | To improve agility in its competitive cost- technology, too. The company has always situated conscious industry, as well as to better manage itself on the leading edge of IT, from being among its broad range of business activities and the first to roll out an ERP system in 1995 to its aggressive growth strategy, Florida Crystals’ early adoption of cloud computing when it rid itself leaders looked to information technology that of its datacenter in 2010. © Copyright 2014. Bloomberg L.P. All rights reserved. RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Business Case Studies Florida Crystals’ Challenges But in 2013, Florida Crystals was like many companies } Standardize and simplify infrastructure and applications. } Create agile processes to facilitate growth through acquisition. } Deliver data and enable analysis in real time. and analytics environment: It was running numerous struggling with the limitations of its existing applications batch processes that delayed data delivery and analysis, and it had devised workarounds that further complicated already complex business processes. Also like others, Florida Crystals lacked real-time visibility into key FIGURE 2 Better Decisions Through Data Business drivers for investment in analytics include the following. (% responding) Improving the quality of decision-making Making quicker decisions 59% 53% business information. A study of global companies by The Hackett Group found that fewer than half have real-time data about customers, suppliers or financial performance (see Figure 1, “Real Time vs. Reality”). Florida Crystals’ Solutions Furthermore, more than 40 percent of IT managers } Deploy an in-memory suite of enterprise applications to speed information delivery to business users. } Move mission-critical business applications to a managed cloud service with flexible capacity to support geographic expansion. } Use real-time analytics to enable employees to make better operational decisions. responding to a recent IDC survey say that users Improving planning and forecasting 47% Developing new products, services and revenue streams 47% Source: IDG Enterprise Big Data Study, 2014. http://goo.gl/BNImWX could not perform predictive analysis or work with real-time data because they have to wait between from re-imagining business processes to take advantage of two and 10 days for their data to be processed. it, noted business transformation expert Behnam Tabrizi, 2 consulting professor at Stanford University’s department of Managers at Florida Crystals used to spend much of management science and engineering. their time waiting for reports to run or devising their own spreadsheet analyses. But Vice President and No More Waiting for Data CIO Don Whittington chose to move the company’s It took two months for Florida Crystals to migrate its full most important business systems to an in-memory stack of ERP software, from finance and materials platform that could deliver data to employees much management to sales and distribution, to a managed more quickly than overnight batch processing. He cloud service. Then the company switched over to the also chose to run those systems using a managed in-memory platform during a long weekend, keeping cloud service with the capacity to process petabytes terabytes of data in sync with no disruption to the of data. The flexible capacity would accommodate thousands of employees who use that data in three the company’s expansion plans more cost effectively. countries on a 24-hour basis. The migration began late But Florida Crystals’ goal goes beyond merely on a Friday and, Whittington said, “it was literally producing reports faster. Ultimately, business leaders business as usual on Monday.” 3 plan to transform the way the company operates. Only it was more than business as usual. Key 2. Olofson, Carl W. and Henry D. Morris. “Blending Transactions and Analytics in a Single In-Memory Platform: Key to the Real-Time Enterprise.” IDC, February 2013. http://goo.gl/e0vZP3. With in-memory computing in the cloud, business performance processes such as accounts payable users can process reports on-demand, on their own analysis doubled in speed. Cost center reports that used and in real time—without waiting for IT to provide to take minutes took milliseconds. Programs that ran for data. Employees can now devote their days to the hours finished in minutes. End-of-month workloads that analysis and business decision-making that will took three days to complete now run in about four hours. underpin the company’s growth and differentiation In fact, response times for most business transactions strategy. As batch jobs are replaced by real-time have improved by anywhere from 50 percent to 500 processing, the company can get information from its percent, according to Whittington. “We don’t just make supply chain faster than ever before, and thus get work faster,” he said. “Work goes away.” answers to customers more quickly. 3. SAP Technology. “Florida Crystals Speeds Up Supply Chain With Enterprise HANA Cloud.” YouTube, July 8, 2013. http://goo.gl/1KVrEy. When employees do not have to download data to a 2 Eliminating batch processes is only the beginning, spreadsheet, format it, upload it again and then however. The greatest benefits from real-time data come reconcile it with the four or five other reports their Bloomberg Businessweek Research Services RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Business Case Studies Benefits of RealTime Business at Florida Crystals colleagues have created, they have more time to } Self-service: Business users can process reports on demand, without going through IT. } Faster analysis: Most business transactions are 50 percent to 500 percent quicker, so business users have more time to study their data. } Improved flexibility to support growth: A scalable cloud infrastructure helps mergers and acquisitions go more smoothly and reduces IT costs. } New value creation: With access to real-time data, Florida Crystals can focus more on value-added work, such as improving inventory management; developing new formulations, products or packaging; or planning expansion into new markets. Center for Digital Business, and his colleagues, found FIGURE 3 Real-Time Businesses Outperform Peers study the data and use it to make decisions. Research by Erik Brynjolfsson, director of the MIT Compared to other companies in their industries, firms using advanced analytics are: that among companies using data in their decisionmaking, productivity increases by 5 percent to 6 percent.4 Meanwhile, a survey of IT decision-makers by publisher IDG Enterprise found that companies are investing in analytics primarily to improve the quality 200% a s likely to be in the top quartile of financial performance 300% as likely to execute decisions as intended and speed of their decision-making (see Figure 2, 500% a s likely to make decisions much faster than market peers “Better Decisions Through Data”). Source: Bain and Company Insights, 2013. http://goo.gl/lY1IvA A Real-Time Transformation There have been benefits for IT, as well, in line with Florida Now, Florida Crystals’ executives are on the way to Crystals’ cost-cutting goals. Total cost of ownership for transforming the company into a real-time computing and storage is down by an average of 30 business. “Your day is no longer spent running percent. And by embracing the cloud, Whittington’s transactions,” Whittington explained. “It’s [spent technology group does not need dedicated resources or taking] the results of those transactions and [using] expertise to manage the in-memory platform. That will that to a business advantage.” “empower IT groups to become that part of the business and not worry about the technology,” he said. “We leave When it comes to implementing new technologies, that to our partners.” such as in-memory and cloud computing, said Narendra Mulani, senior managing director at And the more flexible systems will make the technology Accenture Analytics, “the greatest value will come transitions for future corporate acquisitions and mergers from the ability to enable decision-making at the go more smoothly. In the past, some of the acquired right time.” companies did not come with their technology applications, requiring Florida Crystals to get off the It is not so much that such new business systems are seller’s technology in as little as 90 days. “A flexible simpler, said Robert Parker, vice president of research analytic model and underpinning technology can at IDC Manufacturing Insights; it is that they are more actually be hugely beneficial by allowing the company to flexible. The same core technology can be used to evaluate performance even if systems aren’t fully meet varied and changing business demands, converted yet,” IDC Manufacturing Insights’ Parker said. without having to reprogram them constantly. “These approaches create the necessary resiliency that That should give Florida Crystals a leg up in its industry. allows a company to be more responsive to market A 2013 global survey of 400 large companies by Bain & conditions,” he said. They enable more data-driven Company found that firms using advanced analytics are decision-making at the strategic level and greater more likely to be in the top quartile of financial agility when responding to events in real time. performance within their industries, to execute decisions as intended, to use data very frequently when making 4. Brynjolfsson, Erik, Lorin Hitt and Kim Heekyun. “How Does DataDriven Decisionmaking Affect Firm Performance?” 2012. http://goo.gl/Wkav0C and http:// goo.gl/9VUMG6. In a highly competitive and constrained market, decisions and to make decisions faster than market having flexible technology means Florida Crystals peers5 (see Figure 3, “Real-Time Businesses Outperform can focus on value-added activities that will Peers”). Said Whittington, “It’s a game changer.” • 5. Pearson, Travis and Rasmus Wegener. “Big Data: The Organizational Challenge.” Bain and Company Insights, Sept. 11, 2013. http://goo.gl/lY1IvA. management of inventory; new formulations, distinguish it from the rest, whether it is better products or packaging; or planned expansion into emerging markets. 3 Bloomberg Businessweek Research Services Stephanie Overby is a freelance business and technology writer based in Boston. This research project was funded by a grant from SAP. Real-Time Enterprises A Research Collection Globus at a glance Globus is the premier department store subsidiary of The Federation of Migros Cooperative, the largest retailer and employer in Switzerland. The cooperative has more than 40 business enterprises that are divided into five strategic business units: Cooperative Retailing, Commerce, Industry & Wholesale, Financial Services and Travel Industry: retail 2012 revenue: $849 million Headquarters: The Spreitenbach, near Zürich, Switzerland Products: high-end fashion, beauty, living and gourmet products Employees: more than 3,000 www.globus.ch/en/index.html Source: Globus Page 48 RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Business Case Studies Globus Is Always in Style with In-Memory Technology Real-time insights enable Switzerland’s high-fashion department store to keep up with fast-changing consumer preferences and optimize its supply chain. BY JOE MULLICH Globus at a Glance T he Federation of Migros Cooperative, the largest retailer and employer in Switzerland, has long been noted for its supply chain excellence and creative } Industry: Retail thinking about logistics. Last year, for example, the company was honored with a } Company description: Globus is the premier department store subsidiary of The Federation of Migros Cooperative, the largest retailer and employer in Switzerland. The cooperative has more than 40 business enterprises that are divided into five strategic business units: Cooperative Retailing, Commerce, Industry & Wholesale, Financial Services and Travel prestigious Swiss Logistics Award for determining the best transport routes for its } Annual Revenue: 2012 gross revenue was $849 million using current exchange rates1 } Headquarters: The Spreitenbach, near Zürich, Switzerland } Products: High-end fashion, beauty, living and gourmet products } Employees: More than 3,000 http://www.globus.ch/en/ index.html Source: Globus goods. It is not surprising that a company recognized as the most innovative retailer in Switzerland, according to a survey by the University of St. Gallen, would also be a leader in finding better FIGURE 1 Ready for Mobile Offerings Respondents were asked which of the following they would use if offered on their mobile device while in-store. and merchandizing techniques.2 Gather loyalty points or savings as you shop, based on current promotions 88% A prime example is Globus, Migros Cooperative’s Real-time promotions ways to leverage data to improve its supply chain premier department store subsidiary. Founded in 1907, Globus operates 14 big retail stores that sell clothing, cosmetics, jewelry, household supplies and other upscale goods. The retailer’s need for continual supply chain improvement is driven by higher production costs, a weak Euro and rising raw material prices. Consumers, meanwhile, are more demanding and harder to please, which requires Globus to stay on top of retail and fashion trends that can change as fast as someone posts a new YouTube video. 88% Order out-of-stock items in-store for home delivery or put items on a wish list 82% Shopping list, item locator and store navigator 79% Scan products as you put them in your shopping cart 77% Base: 6,000 consumers from eight countries Source: “Accenture Seamless Retail Study,” April 2013 Like many worldwide retailers, Globus operates in a competitive landscape, in which consumer sales performance data to identify merchandise expectations are increasingly influenced by mobile that is selling slowly. Such goods are a costly device capabilities such as comparing competitive issue for many retailers. Studies have shown the offerings and sharing their opinions on social media cost of owning excess inventory is approximately (see Figure 1, “Ready for Mobile Offerings”). 2.5 percent per month, or 30 percent per year, according to consulting firm The Retail Management 1. Globus Web site. http://tinyurl.com/myfoz4k 2. Migros Web site. http://tinyurl.com/m3f5o7s 3. Carter, Linda. “What Is Stock Turn Rate, And Just Why Is It So Important?” The Retail Management Advisors. http://tinyurl.com/mg5urrh AUGUST 2013 | Insights at the Shelf Level Advisors. Costs include interest, insurance, buying With this relentless pressure, Globus depends on expenses, receiving department expenses, property timely, accurate reporting and analysis of sales taxes, markdowns and shrinkage, the firm says.3 performance data to identify consumer trends so Another issue is customer satisfaction—if store shelves it can change its pricing and marketing strategies contain too many items that customers do not want, as the market changes. In particular, Globus uses that leaves less room for the goods they do want. © Copyright 2013. Bloomberg L.P. All rights reserved. RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Business Case Studies Globus needed to find a way to track slow-sellers FIGURE 2 so it could then discount or promote those products to clear precious shelf space for hot products. Enabling this type of analysis was no easy matter, Speeding Insights with In-Memory Computing Globus has seen quantifiable speed benefits from its in-memory computing system. considering the large data volumes involved. Globus offers roughly 800,000 products through a network Globus’ Data Analytics Challenges of some 3,500 suppliers. With increasing sales } Speed reporting. The retailer wanted to generate reports more quickly so it could stay on top of rapidly changing fashion trends. decisions was spiraling out of control.4 volumes and transaction data, the amount of time it took Globus to generate reports used for inventory Analytics at the Speed of Business To get quicker insights, Globus implemented in-memory database technology. By leveraging } Minimize excess inventory: Globus wanted to reduce the amount of slow-selling inventory to make more shelf space for hot items. in-memory computing, Globus can now instantly explore and analyze data from numerous sources. Operational data is captured in-memory as Before After Data warehouse capacity 550 gigabytes 60 gigabytes (due to data compression) Time to generate a report on slow-selling items 22 minutes (reports did not include all product lines) 17 seconds (including all product lines) Time to generate a sales report 7 minutes 60 seconds Source: IBM transactions occur, permitting analytics to be } Improve efficiency: The retailer wanted to reduce the volume of data it stored while increasing the insights and information that data provided. performed against rich data sources and providing the type of real-time insights that were simply not Sales promotion reports, which once took seven possible before. minutes to complete, can be produced in a mere Elements of Globus’ Analytics Solution } An in-memory technology-based analytics platform that helps to quickly generate insights, resulting in better demand planning, merchandizing and marketing in real time. This approach has provided numerous benefits. 60 seconds. “Previously, if we needed sales For example, Globus used to store 550 gigabytes figures of our 14 big stores, [we] had to generate of data in its data warehouse. Thanks to its in- 14 separate reports and then combine the results memory approach, that has decreased to only manually,” Weiss says. “Now we can simply 60 gigabytes, one-ninth the original size. “This is create one report at the touch of a button.” He important, because the less memory we need, the adds, “we can now process more complex and lower our licensing fees and maintenance costs,” comprehensive requests within seconds, providing says Alexander Weiss, team leader, processes and a range of new insights that were simply not business warehouse at the company. available without in-memory processing.”9 Queries and even forecasts that call up archive data The insights culled from this approach have are now faster than ever, dramatically improving the increased employee readiness to embrace speed of insights (see Figure 2, “Speeding Insights analytics. Before the use of in-memory technology, with In-Memory Computing”). “Previously, it took “acceptance of the company’s key performance 22 minutes to generate a basic slow-seller report indicator dashboard was low among managers,” that did not include the whole product line,” Weiss Weiss says. “With the new solution, the figures are says. “Access to these reports had to be planned referred to and used regularly, helping the company in advance because of the processing time.”7 But to manage its retail business more efficiently.”10 5 6 after implementing the in-memory database system, 4., 5., 6. SAP Web site. http://tinyurl.com/lqvgz4k 7., 8., 9., 10. IBM. “Swiss Retailer Migros Spots Consumer Trends in Real Time with SAP HANA.” March 21, 2013. http://tinyurl.com/lfvruwk Globus can generate a slow-seller report for the entire All this leads to better inventory decisions, a product line in just 17 seconds. Employees obtain stronger bottom line—and happier customers. • needed information 98 percent faster, eliminating the wait time by two hours per employee per day, so decisions can be made on up-to-the-minute data.8 2 Bloomberg Businessweek Research Services Joe Mullich is a freelance business and technology writer based in Sherman Oaks, Calif. Real-Time Enterprises A Research Collection Hewlett-Packard at a glance Provides hardware, software and services to consumers, small and midsize businesses, and large enterprises, including customers in the government, health and education industries Industry: high tech Products: computer hardware and software; IT services; IT consulting Founded: 1939 Headquartered: Palo Alto, Calif. Sales: $112 billion Employees: 331,800 www.hp.com Source: Hewlett-Packard Page 51 RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Enterprise Case Studies HP Paves the Future with Real-Time Insights For the high-tech giant, in-memory-enabled speed is a business game changer. BY JOE MULLICH F or the past several years, the high-tech industry has faced the challenges of rising customer demand, shortened product lifecycles and constant innovation. Now that technology has become a fundamental element of not just the workplace but also everyday consumer life, however, the pressure to execute quickly against these traditional challenges has never been greater. Succeeding in this pressurized environment Hewlett-Packard at a Glance } Products: computer hardware and software; IT services; IT consulting } Founded: 1939 } Headquartered: Palo Alto, Calif. } Sales: $112 billion } Employees: 331,800 www.hp.com Source: Hewlett-Packard FIGURE 1 requires high-tech businesses to acquire realtime intelligence—about customer tastes and preferences, market conditions, supply and demand—and to take immediate action. For all of Big Returns From Big Data High tech expects above-average returns on big data investments. Utilities these reasons, the high-tech industry has become Energy & resources one of the leading users of big data and analytics, gleaning insights from the huge volumes of data High tech produced internally, by the business, as well as externally, from its customers and partners. 60.6% 52.4% Average Technology firms are seeing a payoff from their 45.5% initiatives. In a study by Tata Consultancy Services, Banking/financial services 43.7% high tech was among the top four industries in Insurance terms of spending on big data and in the top three for expected return on investment (see Figure 1, “Big Returns From Big Data”). Travel/hospitality/airlines 37.9% Hewlett-Packard, the $112 billion technology giant, Telecommunications 37.9% is a leading proponent of the value of big data. “We eat, sleep and drink very large databases and big data as a present reality,” said Dave Carlisle, chief architect and strategist for HP’s Enterprise Group.1 “We are under increasing pressure. Business expectations—and particularly user experience expectations—are increasing significantly.” 73.0% (Mean percentage of expected ROI for 2012 big data investments.) 38.9% Retail 36.4% Life sciences 35.3% Manufacturing 28.9% Source: Tata Consultancy Services. “The Emerging Big Returns From Big Data.” 2013 Consider, for instance, HP’s supply chain. Every 1. Dave Carlisle spoke recently in a recorded Webcast. FEBRUARY 2014 | 60 seconds, HP delivers 120 PCs, 100 printers, servers. Every one of those shipments is the 1,200 ink and toner cartridges, seven network result of countless actions and decisions made devices, seven terabytes of storage and five throughout the global supply chain. The question © Copyright 2014. Bloomberg L.P. All rights reserved. RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Business Case Studies FIGURE 2 In-Memory Initiatives HP is focused on three strategic initiatives, powered by in-memory computing. Strategic Initiative Business Innovation Data Consumption Financial planning • Drive accelerated and sophisticated scenario 1–2 terabytes of data and 400 planning in real time business intelligence users • Engage users with instantaneous results when executing simulations and what-if scenarios Quote-to-cash • Accelerate core ERP processes in key areas, such as order management administration, 28 terabytes of data and 1,000 business intelligence users month/quarter/fiscal year-end processing and live operational reporting, delivering modern “experience at scale” to users Next-generation • Drive on-demand visibility and improved business warehouse analytics inventory leveling in the product supply chain • Enable near-real-time account visibility in the 7–10 terabytes of data; 1,500 business intelligence users; 3 predictive users global quote-to-cash process Source: Hewlett-Packard Hewlett-Packard’s Business Challenges the tech giant faces is, how to coordinate all those After running numerous tests, HP discovered query decisions to optimize pricing, reduce out-of-stocks speeds had improved from an average of two hours and shift manufacturing to align with customer using traditional databases to just 88.23 seconds using } Respond quickly to changing conditions via fast analysis of real-time information } Enable employees to analyze data quickly and intuitively } Optimize the use of data volumes generated by the supply chain demand. “To succeed, organizations need to in-memory computing. As a result, HP employees will make fast, informed decisions by extracting large no longer experience radical swings in processing times amounts of raw data from their systems to turn it that vary depending on where data is stored. With user- into information that is meaningful,” said Bill Veghte, driven, powerful analysis and simulation capabilities, HP chief operating officer at HP.2 workers will obtain immediate answers to virtually any business question—with minimal help from IT. To succeed in this endeavor, HP is embracing 2. Hewlett-Packard. “HP Opens New Center of Excellence for In-Memory Computing.” HP press release, Jan. 10, 2013. http://goo.gl/P80n5J. 2 in-memory computing, which enables real-time The increased speed will have a wide-ranging impact decisions through instantaneous analysis of big on employee satisfaction and on meeting market demands data sets. In-memory computing will enable HP to and customers’ changing expectations. With built-in take immediate action based on up-to-the-second analytics, dashboards and reporting tools, data can be insights into its financial planning, ERP and inventory digested and presented intuitively, enabling employees to processes (see Figure 2, “In-Memory Initiatives”). quickly take corrective action and seize opportunities. From Hours to Seconds “At the end of the day, speed is a business enabler,” The ability to analyze massive amounts of fast- Carlisle said. “It’s cool from a technical standpoint changing data in real time provides numerous benefits, that a report that used to run in three hours can now according to Carlisle. What HP employees will really be done in 30 seconds. But the key is using speed to notice is the unprecedented speed of accessing rethink business experiences and processes in ways information to make decisions, he said, particularly not possible before.” For instance, employees will gain given the vast size of HP’s underlying databases and self-service access to financial information, enabling the global scale of its multifaceted business. more rapid analysis and reporting capabilities and Bloomberg Businessweek Research Services RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Business Case Studies significantly reducing the time needed for closing processes at the end of the month, quarter and fiscal year. With better—and faster—visibility into financial, inventory and supply-chain information, HP will Hewlett-Packard’s IT Solutions be able to detect and respond to issues and } Use in-memory computing to analyze vast amounts of data quickly } Begin with a critical system involving small data sets } Develop next-generation business warehouse analytics managing risk and forecasting demand. HP could exceptions more quickly, in addition to proactively potentially accelerate inventory turns and ensure profitable service delivery by instantly evaluating and making granular changes in supply and FIGURE 3 Order Management Complexity For each process, respondents were asked how many IT systems are required to support it. One System Two Systems Three or More Systems Order management 55% 21% 21% Demand management 53% 15% ERP 56% 9% demand, reducing out-of-stocks and lost sales. Warehouse management 34% 21% Transforming processes and enabling new Price management 32% 15% capabilities are at the core of what manufacturers are looking to achieve with analytics. “In our research, only 10 percent of manufacturing companies are satisfied with their ‘what-if’ capabilities, and only 24 percent of companies can easily determine the profitability of decisions,” said 19% 28% 23% Production planning 32% 11% 30% Tactical supply planning 36% 17% 15% Lora Cecere, founder of Supply Chain Insights. Transportation planning 36% 9% Tackling Order Management Manufacturing execution systems 23% 15% 23% HP’s in-memory computing efforts began with a focus on its largest single ERP environment, which includes order management administration, month/quarter/fiscal year-end processing and live operational reporting, accounting for over $41 billion 21% 15% Product lifecycle management 34% 9% 11% Source: Supply Chain Insights. “Go Big or Go Home?” July 2012. http://goo.gl/p3x8B in revenues. The HP Account Management Portal Throughout 2014, HP will use in-memory computing is used by thousands of HP order administrators to provide better data visualization, and it will begin worldwide. In-memory computing slashed the to incorporate mobile capabilities. Taking a staged time required to run a report from upwards of approach to in-memory computing enabled HP to seven minutes to 40 seconds. “Users can get their scale out its knowledge from both a technical and a display in real time while they talk with customers “comfort level” standpoint. “We are starting to deliver on the phone,” Carlisle said. What made this so disruptive capabilities now,” Carlisle said, “while compelling, he added, is that there was no need to understanding and planning for even larger scale retrain users, which increased the time to value. “It is changes over the coming years.” a good first step that brings material change without disruption.” With the combination of its real-time big data anlytics foundation and strong 2013 performance,3 HP seems Streamlining order management is a challenge for many companies. According to a study by Supply Chain Insights, order management often requires 3. Meola, Andrew. “Why HewlettPackard is Up Today.” The Street, Jan. 13, 2014. http://goo.gl/v8OtZs. more than one system (see Figure 3, “Order Management Complexity”). 3 Bloomberg Businessweek Research Services poised to do just that.”• Joe Mullich is a freelance business and technology writer based in Sherman Oaks, Calif. This research project was funded by a grant from SAP. Real-Time Enterprises A Research Collection HSE24 Germany, Austria, Switzerland at a glance A leading home-shopping network based in Germany Industry: retail Founded: 1995 2012 sales: €515 million Employees: 725 at HSE24; approximately 2,100 external (call center, logistics) Customers: 8 million people have shopped at HSE24, equivalent to more than 10 percent of Germans over the age of 18 Products: 20,000 different products are sold each year Product segments: fashion (35 percent), beauty/wellness (23 percent), jewelry (21 percent) and home living/ household and DIY (21 percent) www.hse24.de Source: HSE24 Page 55 RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Big Data Analytics Case Studies Using Real-Time Insights, HSE24 Gets Closer to Customers With in-memory computing and predictive analytics tools, Europe’s home-shopping network can offer a personalized experience—and solve costly issues—in real time. BY JOE MULLICH HSE24 Germany, Austria, Switzerland at a Glance } Founded: 1995 } Sales: €515 million (2012) } Employees: 725 at HSE24; approximately 2,100 external (call center, logistics) } Customers: 8 million people have shopped at HSE24, equivalent to more than 10 percent of Germans over the age of 18 } Products: 20,000 different products are sold each year } Product segments: fashion (35 percent), beauty/wellness (23 percent), jewelry (21 percent) and home living/household and DIY (21 percent) www.hse24.de HSE24, a leading home-shopping network based in Germany, measures its business in milliseconds. The 18-year-old company reaches 41 million households in Germany, Austria and Switzerland, and it has now expanded into Italy and Russia. All of its home-shopping channnels must stay aware of customer buying patterns and behaviors and respond to them in real time. For example, if it appears that a sales spike is depleting inventory after one of the channels displays a red shirt, it must immediately switch to promoting a blue shirt to encourage purchases of stock on-hand. Considering that a new customer call comes through every two seconds, it is easy to understand the company’s need for speed. Retailers generally are moving to real-time strategies. But because home-shopping networks are based on “selling live,” the growing trends of big data analytics and real-time retailing are particularly crucial for this retail niche. “The amount of data available to retailers is FIGURE 1 Sharpening Insights in a Digital Shopping World Retailers understand the value of data but struggle to turn it into profitable insights. (percent of respondents) Proprietary data can help differentiate the retailer’s products and services 67% Harvesting customer insight from data is a key challenge 58% Data collection is a key challenge 52% Active users of analytics that extensively use their data to generate new ideas and opportunities 25% enormous,” said Don Peppers, an author and founding partner of Peppers & Rogers Group, Source: Accenture. “Seamless Analytics: Three Imperatives for the Retail Digital Marketplace.” 2013. http://goo.gl/aFFy85. a marketing consultancy that specializes in customer-centric practices. Retailers are working immediate action on the insights gleaned. The to find ways of using their data to improve approach enables the company to engage more operations and gain insights into what customers personally with its customers and create highly want at the exact moment of need (see Figure 1, targeted marketing campaigns. Additionally, it “Sharpening Insights in a Digital Shopping World”). will help reduce product returns significantly— an historically costly issue, particularly for Source: HSE24 As HSE24 continues its rapid expansion across omnichannel retailers. Europe—and fortifies its increasingly omnichannel JANUARY 2014 | strategy, including mobile, social networks and A Complex and Growing Business the Web—the company is turning to in-memory In the German-speaking market, HSE24 operates 18 computing as a foundation for success. This call centers and four logistics centers. It processes technology is enabling HSE24 to rapidly analyze orders for more than 1.5 million customers each year huge stores of customer information and take with strong partners such as DHL. For each hour of © Copyright 2014. Bloomberg L.P. All rights reserved. RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Business Case Studies live broadcasting, the retailer offers two to three new FIGURE 2 products that range in price from €20 to €150, on On any given day in 2013, HSE24 serviced thousands of customers. average, and up to €35,000. In 2013, the company fielded 14.6 million calls and shipped 11.2 million Calls Received Parcels Shipped packages (see Figure 2, “A Day in the Life”). (Daily) “We are running seven days [a week], 365 days a year,” HSE24’s Challenges said Christian Schnetzer, CRM team lead at HSE24. 1 “We need our systems every minute, every day.” } Capture, analyze and respond to customer data in real time. } Build highly targeted and personalized marketing campaigns. } Provide marketers with do-it-yourself tools to reduce IT overhead. } Reduce costly product returns. } Maintain a consistent customer experience across channels. A Day in the Life (Every Weekday) Average40,000 37,000 Peak100,000 74,000 Source: HSE24 The challenge for HSE24 is developing deep relationships with its customers to both attend to In-memory computing enables companies to and even anticipate their needs, despite no face-to- quickly analyze very large volumes of up-to-the- face interaction. Doing so is becoming even more second and fast-changing data from diverse complex as the company expands (see Figure 3, sources, including sales and customer data from “Geographic and Channel Expansion”). internal systems and social media sentiment from the Web. As such, in-memory computing seemed HSE24 increasingly interacts with customers on like an ideal way for HSE24 to keep pace with digital channels, including online, mobile apps the increased complexity of doing business by and social media. In fact, its electronic and mobile gleaning insights from its growing data volumes in commerce segments have grown at nearly twice the real time. rate of the company’s business as a whole. Because nontechnical users can ask complex 1. Christian Schnetzer spoke at a July 23, 2013, SAP Webinar titled “HSE24 Runs SAP HANA.” http://goo.gl/jTgTNq 2. Michael Kuenzl spoke at a July 23, 2013, SAP Webinar titled “HSE24 Runs SAP HANA.” http://goo.gl/jTgTNq These developments have caused an exponential questions of current data and receive answers in increase in customer data, as well as the need real time, they can take meaningful action during to keep up with dramatic shifts in taste from one small windows of opportunity, when the chance of country to the next. Michael Kuenzl, senior vice success is greatest. Additionally, these users can president of IT systems at HSE24, described obtain a complete picture of customer desires, the channel expansion as moving from “simple” enabling them to provide a personalized experience multichannel to “complex” multichannel. “They are and avoid costly errors in how they sell or market. a community buying with us and open to sharing “More and more, the value of big data is finding an their experience with the community,” whether on immediate reaction,” Peppers said. “Retailers want Facebook, Twitter or YouTube, he said. to be living in the ‘now’ moment.” 2 The “Now” Moment HSE24 applied in-memory computing to some of its It is now critical for HSE24 to monitor customers’ most pressing challenges in campaign optimization opinions, likes and dislikes, because the “digital and product returns. Before, when the marketing footprints” that Web shoppers leave behind can department wanted to target the customer profoundly influence marketing, inventory and segments that would be most likely to respond to customer service. Not to mention customers specific campaigns, it would need the business themselves, who express comments on social media intelligence group to analyze this information. That and expect service representatives to listen and process could take a week or more. respond—quickly. It is fast becoming a necessity to 2 develop an intimate understanding of customers’ Now, using customer engagement intelligence diverse and changing tastes, as well as to act applications running on in-memory computing, instantly on these insights. marketers can perform the analysis themselves. Bloomberg Businessweek Research Services RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Business Case Studies Through an intuitive user interface, they can query FIGURE 3 the data in real time to detect customer buying patterns based on granular demographics, such as age or where they live, Kuenzl said. Launch Germany October 1995 Marketing staff can now drill down into millions Austria October 1996 of customer records in seconds, using recent Switzerland December 1997 16 hours of live shopping each day May 1998 Online store December 1998 HSE24 Digital (renamed HSE24 EXTRA) as a second TV station September 2005 HSE24 TREND “lifestyle” TV channel September 2010 Shopping app for smartphones November 2010 Italy June 2011 buyers intend to return a product when they order Russia April 2012 it, 40 percent order more variations of a product Shopping app for iPad November 2011 Shopping app on Google TV June 2013 charts, making it easy to see data patterns. } Implement a new in-memory customer engagement intelligence solution. } Provide marketers with intuitive and user-friendly customer segmentation tools. } Implement predictive analytics to uncover hidden customer trends. data from a wide variety of sources. “We can do the selection in seconds, and we don’t need the business intelligence department,” Kuenzl said. “We can play with the data.” Reducing Costly Returns HSE24 is also looking to in-memory computing to reduce return rates and improve margins. According to global management consultancy Kurt Salmon, the cost of processing a return can be two or three times that of an outbound shipment of the same item.3 The National Retail Federation, meanwhile, found that 40 percent of and 40 percent of all product returns are due to poor product information.4 For Web and phone- or mail-order companies, the 3. Morrell, Liz. “The Value of Returns: What Does it Mean for your Business?” RetailWeek, Feb. 19, 2013. http://goo.gl/4SPGz1 4. Informatica. “How Rich Data Sells in Multichannel Commerce.” On-demand Webinar. http://goo.gl/6jZkog Source: HSE24 freight and handling costs of returned goods are Once it detected this pattern, HSE24 could take particularly high. For HSE24, reducing returns by appropriate action. For example, it could improve one percent can lead to a seven-digit improvement its product descriptions to help customers more in the bottom line. Given these high stakes, the accurately select the right products on the very first company demonstrated how it could study clusters order. It also could develop a promotional campaign of customers who exhibit similar returns behavior to reward high-return customers if they lower their with the goal of reducing return rates. return rates over a specific period of time. In the demo, HSE24 identified different groups of Best of all, Kuenzl said, marketers can e-mail customers who frequently return products. Using information to campaign managers so insights can be predictive analytics and in-memory computing, translated into action immediately. This is something it analyzed a particular group based on two HSE24 expects to do frequently in the future, as elements: how many products they order and it explores more real-time uses for in-memory how quickly they pay for those products. It soon computing and its ever-growing mounds of data. • became clear that these customers tend to order products in a variety of sizes or colors to determine which they want to keep and which they would return. 3 HSE24 has grown by establishing businesses in new countries, new TV channels and new digital platforms. New Business The tools represent the analysis in graphics and HSE24’s Solutions Geographic and Channel Expansion Bloomberg Businessweek Research Services Joe Mullich is a freelance business and technology writer based in Sherman Oaks, Calif. This research project was funded by a grant from SAP. Real-Time Enterprises A Research Collection Johnsonville Sausage at a glance Family owned company produces fresh, precooked and smoked sausage Industry: consumer products Headquarters: Sheboygan Falls, Wis. Founded: 1945, family owned, privately held Employees: 1,400 Presence: 6 manufacturing facilities in the United States; products available across the U.S. and in 30 other countries; sales offices in Canada, China, Japan and Mexico www.johnsonville.com Source: Johnsonville Sausage Page 59 RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Business Case Studies Johnsonville Cooks Up a Real-Time Recipe Real-time business enables the nation’s leading sausage brand to continuously innovate, optimize performance and plan for the future. BY MICHAEL S. GOLDBERG I nnovation and consumer products go hand-in-hand. In today’s global marketplace, new offers, products and services need to be well-targeted, and they need to be implemented quickly. That is the mindset that drives Johnsonville Sausage at a Glance Johnsonville Sausage, a family-owned enterprise promotions, according to a recent study by AMG that has built a leading brand of sausage products in Strategic Advisors.1 Immediate insights from analytics Industry: Fresh, precooked and smoked sausage Headquarters: Sheboygan Falls, Wis. Founded: 1945, familyowned, privately held Employees: 1,400 Presence: 6 manufacturing facilities in the United States; products available across the U.S. and in 30 other countries; sales offices in Canada, China, Japan and Mexico the United States, to invest in real-time analytics. would enable Johnsonville to track special offers, such www.johnsonville.com as coupons. With real-time data, Johnsonville could To become more agile and ready to optimize correlate the offers with sales performance and adjust opportunities, the company is working to shift toward the programs based on those insights. an analytics-driven culture, says Ron Gilson, CIO and vice president at Johnsonville. The goal, he says, is to The IT foundation for Johnsonville’s analytics embed real-time data-driven decision-making capabilities, which will be built over multiple years, is throughout the enterprise to anticipate future business based on real-time processing, enabled by in-memory needs rather than just respond to past events. computing. In-memory computing allows very large volumes of data, from multiple sources, to be rapidly One high-profile example is trade promotions. On and easily analyzed. The deployment also extends average, consumer products (CP) companies spend data visualization to mobile devices, to maximize 13.7 percent of their gross sales on trade end-user interaction. But the strategy goes well Source: Johnsonville Sausage FIGURE 1 Most Consumer Products Companies in Early Analytics Stages (adoption rates of new technologies, %) Completed 100 90 26% Implementing 4% 44% Piloting or budgeting 7% 45% No plans 4% 33% 80 70 48% 15% 40 AUGUST 2014 | 41% 37% 30 22% 19% 10 0 67% 44% 50 1. AMG Strategic Advisors. “The Trend Behind the Spend: A Study of Trade Promotion and Merchandising Spending in the Consumer Packaged Goods (CPG) Industry.” Acosta, 2012. http://goo.gl/Lnwhsg. 11% 55% 60 20 4% 19% 22% 7% 4% Software as a service (SaaS) 22% Digital media Mobile platforms Social network collaboration Base: 27 leading CP companies Source: Grocery Manufacturers Association and The Boston Consulting Group, 2013. http://goo.gl/dFnylX © Copyright 2014. Bloomberg L.P. All rights reserved. Advanced analytics Big data RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Business Case Studies FIGURE 2 Analytics Vision J ohnsonville Sausage expects to gain more visibility into its operations by collecting and analyzing data in real time for all sources. Areas targeted for improvement include: A Quest for Growth Johnsonville is pursuing its growth strategy from a position of market leadership in the Trade promotion management and optimization Track performance of retail promotions in real time, respond to market trends, measure results and optimize outcomes. United States. Three out of four bratwurst sold Integrated data repositories Provide sales, marketing, supply chain and other functions with a consistent view of key performance indicators. national brand of Italian sausage, smoked- Mobile device dashboards Deliver and update results quickly to encourage users to explore data trends on devices such as tablets. Johnsonville’s reach expands across North Pricing Analyze retail point-of-sale activity in real time to optimize prices and maximize revenue based on demand fluctuations and supply. Product launches Collect data on new product sales to analyze sales trends and anticipate future performance. Supply chain management Gain real-time visibility into inventory, tracking movement from factory to store to consumer. report-building efforts on preparing data for Manufacturing operations Analyze shop floor data to predict when machines will need maintenance. with limited forward-looking or predictive Source: Johnsonville Sausage in the U.S. are Johnsonville. It’s also the No. 1 cooked links and fresh breakfast sausage links. America and to about 30 additional countries. Even with its strong market posture, the company was spending 80 percent of its analysis. Data was primarily historical in nature, capabilities. Shop floor data was collected but not queried, analyzed or combined in an Benefits of In-Memory Computing at Johnsonville } Improved query performance time } Positive executive response to tablet-based visual data presentations } Ability to meet business objectives, such as more accurate sales forecasts and marketing plans, optimized promotions, visibility into competitive posture, increased agility and responsiveness, and increased profitability beyond IT, as business leaders and managers efficient or standard manner. Promoting business transition from a mindset of making gut-based intelligence reports using advanced data visualization decisions, based on decades of experience, to what was in its infancy. Viewed as a whole, the company’s Gilson calls “fact-based decisions.” analytics efforts were a collection of disconnected silos that made it difficult to share information across “We get new insights when we can put different business functions. people with different perspectives in front of our data. That is what it’s all about: How can we An example is Johnsonville’s efforts to understand data generate new insights—because insights are the about market demand, Gilson says: “When we talk about catalyst for innovation,” Gilson says. “That can be a demand signals, we have different languages. Marketing new product innovation; it can be a new service. It speaks in marketing speak. Supply chain speaks in could be a new process innovation within our supply chain speak. Sales speaks in sales speak. We’ve facilities or in our support groups.” got to get rid of that.” Unifying its approach to analytics means creating an integrated and harmonized view of Throughout the CP industry, businesses are data, so everyone can examine the same data. harnessing new IT capabilities like real-time big data 2 analytics to pursue growth and innovation initiatives, The catalyst for investing in new IT capabilities was notes the Boston Consulting Group (BCG). In a 2013 Johnsonville’s need to optimize its trade promotions BCG study, 75 percent of CIOs at CP companies program. Timely tracking of its retail promotional activities said a top IT objective was supporting business is essential to managing its relationships with retailers, growth, compared with fewer than 20 percent in analyzing revenue and spending trends, and evaluating 2010. That said, the industry as a whole is still in the promotion effectiveness. This requires combining different early stages of incorporating analytics into data sets to derive insights about sales, correlated with operations, with most respondents piloting big data special offers like coupons and other retail promotions. and advanced analytics projects and few having Until recently, it has been an extremely manual and completed their implementations (see Figure 1, time-consuming effort to connect these dots in a way “Most Consumer Products Companies in Early that enables decision-makers to assess performance and Analytics Stages”). plan for the future. Bloomberg Businessweek Research Services RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Business Case Studies Johnsonville’s Business Challenges Gilson says the company chose systems that enabled } Optimize spending on trade promotions by measuring results and making adjustments in real time to maximize returns } Create an integrated and harmonized view of information across business functions } Enable decision-makers to assess performance and plan for the future relevant applications that collect and prepare data for it to modernize existing business intelligence and data warehouse systems with the in-memory platform and analysis. Adding on to existing systems also enables the IT staff to develop new skills in managing the systems. Other business use cases add to the expected return on investment (see Figure 2, “Analytics Vision”). Future Opportunities The first phase of the in-memory platform went live in May 2014, and Gilson says early indications are FIGURE 3 Better Decisions Through Data Business drivers for investment in analytics include the following. (% responding) Improving the quality of decision-making Making quicker decisions Improving planning and forecasting 59% 53% 47% Developing new products, services and revenue streams 47% Source: IDG Enterprise Big Data Study, 2014. http://goo.gl/BNImWX positive. He has seen performance improvements in Johnsonville’s Solutions } Modernize existing business intelligence and data warehouse systems with real-time analytics, enabled by an in-memory computing platform } Centralize data in a harmonized repository to track retail point-ofsale data and provide views into supply chain operations } Extend data visualization to mobile devices query times, and the new tablet-based visual data processes to design, build and deliver products and presentations are popular among executives. services, Morris says. Johnsonville plans to build on these early successes, Picking Up Signals using a more centralized approach to analytics. Johnsonville exemplifies these trends by working to Establishing a harmonized data repository will enable speed the collection of market demand signals and the company to track retail point-of-sale data, as develop truly real-time capabilities. It can analyze well as provide views into supply chain operations, product and promotion performance data by collecting such as shipments and inventory. Adding third-party market data from sales systems, retailers’ point-of-sale data sets, such as syndicated market data, will systems and syndicated research data. The analytics enable business analysts to gauge market trends. All platform lets Johnsonville test promotions, measure the of these activities are tied to critical business results and improve execution to maximize returns. objectives: improving sales forecasts and marketing “They can continually fine-tune things,” Morris says, plans; optimizing promotions to occur at the right “and make adjustments based on the outcome.” time and value; simplifying and integrating market analysis and Johnsonville’s competitive posture; With Johnsonville’s program underway, Gilson says the setting prices; increasing business agility and company believes in an “all-in” approach. “We’ve got to responsiveness; and increasing profitability. be able to be generating these insights daily, bring them through the innovation pipeline and execute on them. Efforts at Johnsonville to inject more and better data This is a critical point,” the CIO says. “It’s not about giving more quickly into business decision-making are an elite few the opportunity to do the analysis and do the emblematic of the real-time business and big data analytics and create insight. It’s about every member in analytics trend, says Henry Morris, senior vice Johnsonville on a daily basis, whether that is a small president of worldwide software and services at IDC insight driven through some predictive analytics for (see Figure 3, “Better Decisions Through Data”). maintenance, or some other transactional-oriented Companies across industries are pursuing strategies analytics, or it’s in sales and marketing going after the big to measure and improve the performance of wins. Really, it’s about orienting the entire organization’s business processes and to experiment with analytics on the future.” • opportunities to cut costs or drive revenue, using data to assess value and make changes in real time. Data analytics is being targeted at financial processes, risk assessment, relationships and 3 Bloomberg Businessweek Research Services Michael S. Goldberg is a business and technology writer and editor based in the Boston area. This research project was funded by a grant from SAP. Real-Time Enterprises A Research Collection Kaeser Kompressoren SE at a glance One of the largest providers of compressed air systems and compressed air consulting services in the world Industry: industrial machinery & components Headquarters: Coburg, Bayern, Germany Year founded: 1919 Number of employees: 4,800 worldwide Countries of operation: 91 www.kaeser.com Source: Kaeser Kompressoren SE Page 63 RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Business Case Studies Kaeser Puts Customers First with Big Data and Real-Time Business The privately held German maker of air compressor systems and services taps predictive maintenance to drive ROI and a better experience for its customers. B Y L A U R E N G I B B O N S PA U L Kaeser Kompressoren SE at a Glance Industry: Manufacturing and services solutions Headquarters: Coburg, Bayern, Germany Year founded: 1919 Number of employees: 4,800 worldwide Countries of operation: 91 www.kaeser.com Source: Kaeser Kompressoren SE Makers of heavy industrial goods aren’t exactly famous for their focus on the customer experience. But a leading maker of compressed air systems is trying to change that perception. Family-owned since 1919, Kaeser Kompressoren SE is one of the largest providers of compressed air improve after-sales service. The company systems and compressed air consulting services implemented a real-time business solution powered by in the world. Its roughly 4,800 employees operate an in-memory computing platform, which is able to in nearly 100 countries across the globe. analyze vast amounts of granular, real-time data produced by a machine-to-machine (M2M) interface. For a company that sells an industrial product in a This platform enables Kaeser to automatically monitor air business-to-business (B2B) environment, Kaeser compressors in use at customer sites. Kaeser is hardly is uncommonly focused on customers. The the only company using this technology: Companies are company’s Web site says its goal is to “provide forecast to step up their investments in M2M technology exceptional customer service coupled with over the medium term (see Figure 1, “Global M2M innovative products and progressive system Market Growth”). solutions.” Privately held Kaeser stands out in another way, as well, as the site makes clear: FIGURE 1 “You are doing business with a company with a Use of the technology that underlies predictive maintenance, machine-to-machine communication, will expand along with maintenance analytics. (total annual revenues, M2M tech producers) family tradition of producing quality equipment, not a company focused on meeting Wall Street estimates. Thomas Kaeser is proud to put his name, his father’s name and his father’s father’s Global M2M Market Growth 2011 $21.52 billion name on every product.” The Kaeser line of air compression systems $85.96 billion 2017 includes machines many have never heard of: rotary
screw compressors, vacuum packages, Source: MarketsandMarkets.com. http://goo.gl/l1QTsO refrigerated and desiccant dryers and
condensate management systems, as well as The Kaeser system is capable of running analytics portable compressors, filters and
blowers. As against the vast amounts of M2M data generated from important as the quality of those products is the systems’ sensors and meters, including energy Kaeser’s commitment to after-sale service. consumption, operational status and compressed air quality. The objective: to predict which equipment will September 2014 | Predictive Maintenance Powered by Big Data need service, and when. Predictive analytics gives In fact, Kaeser recently made a significant avoiding unexpected outages, which can cause investment to harness the power of big data to grievous injury to the bottom line. © Copyright 2014. Bloomberg L.P. All rights reserved. customers the luxury of planning downtime and RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Business Case Studies Kaeser Kompressoren Business Challenges “Our customers simply can’t afford any unplanned system downtime,” noted Kaeser FIGURE 2 ABI Research forecasts predictive and prescriptive maintenance analytics will dominate the analytics market within five years. (advanced maintenance analytics percentage of total analytics market) Kompressoren AG CIO Falko Lameter in a recent article.1 The company’s predictive } Make maintenance and other services offerings more cost-efficient and more valuable to customers } Streamline the supply chain } Innovate through new technologies and business models maintenance ensures that its superior products stay that way even after years of use. “Our Advanced Maintenance Analytics to Rise 2014 23% products are built for a lifetime,” Lameter said. “But to get optimal longevity and performance, they must be maintained properly.” Kaeser’s 60% 2019 real-time predictive maintenance services help customers achieve nearly 100 percent reliability. Kaeser Kompressoren Solutions Source: ABI Research. http://goo.gl/9oJm67 Crucially, customers no longer have to monitor breakdown gets to occur, so over time both their mission-critical air compressors around the parties can save money. clock. Kaeser handles that chore through its M2M } Implement a real-time business solution powered by an inmemory computing platform to enable automatic monitoring of customer site air compressors } Use predictive analytics to help customers plan downtime and avoid unexpected outages } Use an M2M interface to monitor customers’ mission-critical air compressors around the clock, with resources on call to address issues swiftly } Establish a portal to accelerate problem resolution and enable customer
service personnel to be more proactive and more customer-oriented interface, with resources on call to address issues “We’re always thinking of new ways to run things swiftly. The system has direct, M2M connections better and innovate new technologies and business and real-time alerts, so potential failures can be models,” Lameter explained. Case in point: Kaeser’s detected before they occur, with corrective action transformation into a real-time business that puts the undertaken before business is affected. customer at the center and focuses on delivering solutions, not mere products. The services-based Lameter believes the addition of predictive analytics business model not only secures the company’s for its equipment sets Kaeser apart from the market position and keeps it one step ahead of competition—a belief that is driving investment increasing customer demands, it also improves across the business spectrum (see Figure 2, margins and revenues. In fact, total revenues from the “Advanced Maintenance Analytics to Rise”). sort of predictive analytics that Kaeser uses are expected to grow sharply in coming years (see Figure ABI Research principal analyst Aapo Markkanen 3, “A Growing Market”). says the cost savings associated with the ability to predict equipment breakdowns before they occur Using real-time analytics, Kaeser can monitor is potentially huge, both for Kaeser (or any other key
parameters in real time, including power solutions manufacturer and service provider) consumption, operational availability and
safety or and its customers. “From the manufacturer’s compressed air quality at each customer air station perspective, the key benefit is the ability to against
minimum and maximum allowed values. transform a product business into a product- Service engineers can analyze this
real-time data from and-service business,” he says. a portal without having to visit the customer site. Serving key data to the portal accelerates the “Many manufacturers have been trying to do this resolution of any problem, keeping customer for years, with their maintenance and other services operations reliable
and efficient. With the offerings, but what makes the difference here is comprehensive view that the portal provides, that the combination of [M2M communication] and customer
service personnel have become more analytics can make such services more cost- proactive and ever more customer-oriented. efficient from the vendor’s point of view, as well as 1. http://goo.gl/VHzpWK 2 more valuable from the customer’s point of view,” “What makes our predictive maintenance solution Markkanen says. Maintenance is conducted only cutting-edge is its computational
complexity combined when truly needed, he says, but still before a with the scale on which it operates,” wrote Lameter in Bloomberg Bloomberg Businessweek Businessweek Research ResearchServices Services RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Business Case Studies a recent blog post.2 “It collects thousands
of Benefits of In-Memory Computing at Kaeser Kompressoren real-time data streams from customer air stations; FIGURE 3 big data scales into the
terabyte range. We collect, analyze and act upon that huge amount of A Growing Market ABI Research forecasts worldwide maintenance analytics revenues for the next five years will top $24 billion. (projected revenues from maintenance analytics, CAGR: 22%) data
as part of our routine operations.” } Improved
equipment uptime } Decreased time to problem resolution } Reduced operational risks } Accelerated innovation cycles } Better alignment between Kaeser’s products and services and its customers’ needs 2014 $9.1 billion The predictive maintenance portal handles
these complexities while providing service engineers with user-friendly, Web-based and mobile access. $24.7 billion 2019 As a result, the portal keeps Kaeser service engineers fully
informed of equipment status at Source: ABI Research. http://goo.gl/9oJm67 customer sites so they can provide a consistently
positive customer experience. and
development of our next-generation equipment,” Lameter wrote. The power and scale of the system provide a real advantage. “We had to harness the power of big This is an important benefit, Markkanen says. data to remain at the vanguard of our
industry in “Manufacturers are able to study their products’ the 21 Century,” Lameter said recently. At the behavior in the field more closely than what has same time, the company simplified its software been possible before, so much of the analysis done landscape by migrating its CRM application to a for maintenance purposes can be used to steer the robust in-memory platform. The in-memory product development work, too,” he says. “If certain, platform helped Kaeser accelerate its core previously hidden circumstances prove detrimental business processes and achieve
operational to the product time and again, it may be possible to excellence, he wrote. address them when designing the product.” Running on the in-memory platform, database In this way, product development can become more response times are now
five times faster than of an iterative process, with manufacturers before. “This has allowed us to bring the continuously learning about their products and entire
lifecycle of the sales process under careful improving them accordingly. “All this can make a scrutiny—from lead management to
requirements manufacturer like Kaeser more competitive in its analysis, solution planning and solution market,” Markkanen says. st implementation. And with
real-time information, we have streamlined our supply chain to deliver The big data and in-memory platform that form the on
customers’ changing needs while generating basis of Kaeser’s predictive maintenance service have healthy margins,” Lameter wrote in the blog post. produced substantial benefits for the nearly 100-yearold company. According to Lameter, “We are seeing Aligning Product Development with Customer Needs improved
uptime of equipment, decreased time to The predictive maintenance system has had a innovation cycles. Most importantly, we have been able significant, unforeseen side effect. Stored in to align our
products and services more closely with Kaeser datacenters, the big data
culled from our customers’ needs.”• monitoring machine operations forms the basis for sophisticated data analysis, including insights relating to new product development. “This helps resolution, reduced operational risks and
accelerated Lauren Gibbons Paul has written extensively on customer relationship management and customer experience management for more than 15 years. us further optimize our
service processes and furnishes highly valuable input for the research 2. http://goo.gl/iyjdoy 3 Bloomberg Businessweek Research Services This research project was funded by a grant from SAP. Real-Time Enterprises A Research Collection Maple Leaf Foods at a glance A leading CP company that specializes in meat and bakery products as well as agribusiness Industry: consumer products Headquarters: Toronto, Canada Founded: 1991 2012 revenues: $4.9 billion (Canadian) Employees: 1,200 www.mapleleaf.ca Source: Maple Leaf Foods Page 67 RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Business Case Studies Maple Leaf Foods Turns Over a New Leaf with Up-to-the-Minute Insights Real-time business enables Maple Leaf Foods to keep pace with fast-changing market conditions, increase profitability and hone a competitive edge. BY JOE MULLICH I n a world that moves at Internet speed, consumer products (CP) companies face a particular challenge in responding to fast-changing tastes. And taste is literally the issue for Maple Leaf Foods, a leading CP company that specializes in Maple Leaf Foods at a Glance meat and bakery products, headquartered in Toronto. Product pricing is also a Industry: Bakery, meat, agribusiness Headquarters: Toronto, Canada Founded: 1991 Revenues (2012): $4.9 billion (Canadian) Employees: 1,200 make-or-break issue, with ever-fluctuating www.mapleleaf.ca customer satisfaction. consumer demand and commodity prices. FIGURE 1 Because its primary products have extremely short shelf lives (see Figure 1, “Three Core Businesses”), Maple Leaf needs to move swiftly to ensure its new product introductions, marketing and pricing strategies will translate into sales, profits and Three Core Businesses Maple Leaf Foods is organized into three major groups. Meat Products Bakery Products Agribusiness Products Packaged meats and meals Premium fresh, frozen and specialty bakery products Hog production Fresh pork, poultry and turkey products Fresh pasta and sauces Rendering and biodiesel operations Source: Maple Leaf Foods To meet these challenges, Maple Leaf needed a real-time understanding of its complex business operations. Over the years, the company has grown through dozens of acquisitions, leaving it with a multitude of systems. That is why, about five Source: Maple Leaf Foods years ago, Maple Leaf launched an initiative to Number One in Many Markets coordinate its diverse data volumes and is now Open a cupboard or refrigerator in the typical embracing in-memory computing—technology that Canadian home, and you are likely to find Maple Leaf, enables multiple sources of data to be rapidly and Schneiders, Dempster’s or one of the company’s other easily analyzed. brands. Maple Leaf Foods ranks number one in market share in many Canadian food categories, including 1. Canadian Financial Executives Research Foundation. “Real Time Business: Making The Most Of Big Data.” 2012. http://goo.gl/TujxFE. MARCH 2014 | The company’s efforts have resulted in integrated fresh bakery products, branded prepared meats, analytics across business functions and chilled ready-made meals, branded fresh poultry, and instantaneous insights to support real-time fresh pasta and sauce. Additionally, the company has decision-making. This is a critical issue for many operations in the United States, the United Kingdom, CP companies, which need to respond quickly to Asia and Mexico. To stay ahead of the competition, rapidly changing market conditions. “Ultimately, Maple Leaf introduces 100 or more new products the big piece is profitable growth so we can every year, such as its Maple Leaf Natural Selections, actually understand what’s happening in the a line of deli meats that contain no added marketplace quickly and secure more profitable preservatives, artificial ingredients, fillers or MSG. growth as a result,” said Michael Correa, vice president, Information Solutions, at Maple Leaf Although an acquisition spree was key to Maple Leaf’s Foods.1 growth, it also left the company with 65 plants and 35 © Copyright 2014. Bloomberg L.P. All rights reserved. RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Business Case Studies Benefits of RealTime Business at Maple Leaf Foods enterprise resource planning (ERP) systems. Because this meant consolidating its data into a single ERP of the difficulty connecting information among these system, enabling integrated analytics across business isolated systems, Maple Leaf relied on weekly functions and developing the ability to analyze its data in } Standardized view across the enterprise: System consolidation and process standardization have led to improved operations through the use of in-memory analytics for management. } Faster analysis speeds: Business users are experiencing speeds that are 100 to 1,000 times faster than with traditional databases. } Self-service: Users can now run their own ad hoc queries and reports. } Real-time pricing analysis: Maple Leaf will be able to price products based on the cost fluctuations of raw materials by combining syndicated data with supply and demand information from transactional systems. } Future use cases: The company is evaluating the use of in-memory analytics for recipe development, demand planning, production planning and trade promotion to help it further improve decisions and profitability. summaries of business performance data, which real time. The first move in this direction began in 2008, hampered its ability to respond to fluctuations in supply when Maple Leaf launched Project LeapFrog, in which it and demand. In addition, business users were unable consolidated its many ERP systems and implemented to easily drill down into reports to truly understand the common business processes across the organization. supply and demand of individual products. “A big part of the business is protein—poultry, hog and These issues grew particularly acute between 2009 prepared meats—and each had their own way of doing and 2011, when the Canadian dollar appreciated work,” Hutchinson said. “And if you go over to the bakery by 50 percent, resulting in Maple Leaf operating at side, like Dempster’s or frozen foods, each of them ran a cost gap of 15 percent to 25 percent versus its almost every process internally their own way.”3 U.S. competitors. “If [Maple Leaf is] going to grow, it can’t rely on the exchange of the U.S. dollar,” An important data source that Maple Leaf needed to said Dr. E. Jeffrey Hutchinson, global CIO of Maple integrate with its internal systems was the fluctuating Leaf Foods. “If it’s going to compete against the market prices for “hogs and hams,” Correa said, which U.S. and European players, it needs the right can change throughout the day. Because the company capabilities in house.” trades such products on the mercantile exchange, he 2 said, “We’re looking at real-time, live information.” Building the Analytics Foundation Maple Leaf needs to combine supply and demand As the competitive landscape toughened, the information from its transactional systems with data company realized it needed a better handle on its generated by the marketplace to enable real-time cross-organizational performance. For Maple Leaf, pricing analysis. FIGURE 2 Most CP Companies in Early Analytics Stages (adoption rates of new technologies, %) Completed 100 26% 90 Implementing 4% 44% Piloting or budgeting 7% 45% No plans 4% 33% 55% 48% 44% 60 15% 50 40 41% 37% 30 20 22% 19% 10 2. Schick, Shane. “Maple Leaf Foods’ ERP system project: A CIO strategy.” IT World Canada, April 18, 2011. http://goo.gl/8daaTX. 3. Schick, Shane. “Maple Leaf Foods’ ERP system project: A CIO strategy.” IT World Canada, April 18, 2011. http://goo.gl/8daaTX. 0 22% 22% 7% 4% Software as a service (SaaS) Digital media Mobile platforms Social network collaboration Base: 27 leading CP companies Source: Grocery Manufacturers Association and The Boston Consulting Group, 2013. http://goo.gl/dFnylX 2 11% 67% 80 70 4% 19% Bloomberg Businessweek Research Services Advanced analytics Big data RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Business Case Studies Maple Leaf Foods’ Business Challenges To enable real-time insights and provide employees } Real-time information and analytics were required to optimize product pricing and enable other business performance insights. } Data needed to be consolidated from 35 ERP systems. } Processes needed to be standardized across the enterprise. } Business users needed the ability to drill down into reports. project focused on customer data that contributes with a range of analytics tools, Maple Leaf embraced in-memory computing. Its first in-memory to profitability, such as profit and loss, price elasticity, and sales and marketing data, all of which amounted to about one terabyte of data. Although FIGURE 3 Better Decisions Through Data Business drivers for investment in analytics include the following. (% responding) Improving the quality of decision-making Making quicker decisions 59% 53% Maple Leaf had used analytics for more than a decade, in-memory computing enables the company to ask entirely new questions; for example, “How should products be priced tomorrow in line Improving planning and forecasting 47% with supply and demand?” Developing new products, services and revenue streams 47% The In-Memory Edge Source: IDG Enterprise Big Data Study, 2014. http://goo.gl/BNImWX The ability to answer such questions through Maple Leaf Foods’ Solutions } Consolidated systems and standardized processes } In-memory technology to provide instantaneous analysis of disparate data } Analysis and visualization tools for hundreds of users 4. Schick, Shane. “Maple Leaf Foods’ ERP system project: A CIO strategy.” IT World Canada, April 18, 2011. http://goo.gl/8daaTX. 5. Yuhanna, Noel, Holger Kisker, Ph.D. and David Murphy. “Case Study: Maple Leaf Foods Relies On SAP HANA To Enable Faster Business Analytics.” Forrester Research, Oct. 28, 2013. http://goo.gl/QGBfXt. 6. Henschen, Doug. “Oracle In-Memory Apps: Hunting Hana.” InformationWeek, April 11, 2013. http://goo.gl/nGvZns. 7. Yuhanna, Noel, Holger Kisker, Ph.D. and David Murphy. “Case Study: Maple Leaf Foods Relies On SAP HANA To Enable Faster Business Analytics.” Forrester Research, Oct. 28, 2013. http://goo.gl/QGBfXt. analytics puts Maple Leaf ahead of the pack. databases.5 For example, profit-and-loss analysis previously According to a late 2013 study by the Grocery required 15 to 18 minutes, but it now takes 15 to 18 Manufacturers Association and The Boston seconds with in-memory computing, according to Correa.6 Consulting Group, only 23 percent of CP The in-memory computing system has also enabled a companies had implemented or completed an self-service data platform on which users can run ad hoc advanced analytics initiative (see Figure 2, “Most queries and reports (see Figure 3, “Better Decisions CP Companies in Early Analytics Stages”). Through Data”). And according to Lora Cecere, head of research The use of in-memory computing has simplified Maple firm Supply Chain Insights, only a small percentage Leaf’s business rules, processes and data, removing of companies are satisfied with their “what-if” complexity and enabling collaboration. Business users capabilities and few can easily determine the can create more reports and queries, rather than profitability of decisions. “They need more real-time relying on the old system of canned reports. At the monitoring, dashboards, early-warning systems and same time, the company has achieved a standardized other imperatives that can only be accomplished view across the enterprise, enabling it to better through smarter use of analytics,” she said. manage its operations. In Maple Leaf’s case, such insights could potentially As Maple Leaf begins using predictive analytics supported guide the company on product introductions, as by in-memory computing, it plans to price products based well. “We’ll start to see what the reality is and be on the cost fluctuations of raw materials—such as wheat, much faster at adjusting to market conditions as pork and chicken—and combine this information with they change,” Hutchinson said. “We’ll be able to syndicated data from sources like Nielsen to obtain make sure that our trade promotion monies, for real-time pricing information. The company is also example, are giving us what we want to get out of evaluating many new use cases, such as recipe them. Too often, unless you are very proactive there, development, demand planning, production planning and it just becomes a slush fund.”4 trade promotion to help it improve decisions and profitability even further.7 • In early 2012, Maple Leaf extended its real-time analytics capabilities to 800 business users. In some cases, business users experienced speeds that were 100 to 1,000 times faster than with traditional 3 Bloomberg Businessweek Research Services Joe Mullich is a freelance business and technology writer based in Sherman Oakes, Calif. This research project was funded by a grant from SAP. Real-Time Enterprises A Research Collection Mercedes-AMG at a glance The performance unit of Mercedes-Benz, it tests the limits of driving dynamics and performance with hand-built engines Industry: automotive Parent company: Daimler AG Headquarters: Affalterbach, Germany Founded: 1967 Employees: approximately 900 www.mercedes-amg.com Source: Mercedes-AMG Page 71 CASE STUDY Technology Small/Midsize Business Marketing & Sales Mercedes-AMG: A Showcase for Real-Time Business Decisions The maker M of high- Y28 K28 C78 M52 Y28 K6 C73 M19 Y40 K1 ercedes-AMG C65 M29 Y79 K22 C61 M20 is Y78the K3 performance unit of Mercedes-Benz, testing the limits of driving dynamics and performance performance with its hand-built engines. But the division automobiles is is also a testing ground for revving up building nextC0 M60 Y100 K17 C28 M88 Y70 K19 C48 M89real-time business performance. Y84 K49 C61 M66 Y61 K52 generation manufacturing As manufacturers integrate complex machinery with networked sensors to create next-generation operations on production processes, they are gathering more data a real-time than ever before that could eliminate waste and business improve efficiency, according to the U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology. In fact, platform. 1 Figure 1 Analytics Offers Relief From Operational Pressures Need to reduce the cost of manufacturing operations 70% Need to improve delivery of new products to market 38% Management of global supply chains 36% Management of demand volatility 32% Customer mandates for improved order fulfillment 27% Source: Aberdeen Group, “Big Data in Manufacturing Operations,” 2012. http://goo.gl/E43v5f Cutting costs is a top reason for seeking more insight from data. pressure to cut costs while bringing new products BY ST E P H A N I E OV E R BY to market is pushing manufacturers to make better use of that data, the Aberdeen Group has found cars, such as its million-dollar S-class line and the (see Figure 1, “Analytics Offers Relief From new GLA compact SUVs, but also invested in more Operational Pressures”). efficient manufacturing processes to cut the cost of product delivery and improve vehicle quality. In the automotive industry, manufacturers must Daimler saw Mercedes-AMG as the perfect place to manage a greater number of both models and test out real-time systems that might benefit the customization options as they adjust to fragmented larger enterprise. consumer demand, while also managing shorter 1. National Institute of Standards and Technology. “Real-Time Data Analytics for Smart Manufacturing Systems Project.” http://goo.gl/KZ9nzW. product life cycles, according to McKinsey and Employees working in the performance unit’s Company (see Figure 2, “More Product Options, engineering-focused manufacturing environment Shorter Product Cycles”). To make the best use of have yearned for real-time access to information for their data riches as they tackle these challenges, nearly 50 years, observes Dirk Zeller, Mercedes-AMG companies are implementing technology capable of head of IT Consulting. In addition, Mercedes-AMG analyzing large volumes of data from disparate operations are concentrated at the company’s sources in real time. Affalterbach, Germany, headquarters. “We have everything close to us, from design and development Mercedes-AMG and its parent company, Daimler to marketing and sales, making us a good company AG, are among the businesses that are expanding to test out innovation, with regards to the products their product portfolios. Daimler is currently one of as well as in the IT area,” Zeller says. the largest producers of premium cars and the AUGUST 2014 © Copyright 2014. Forbes Insights. All rights reserved. biggest global manufacturer of commercial LESS WAITING, MORE WORKING vehicles. To increase market share and profits, the In late 2012, Mercedes-AMG began to deploy an €118 billion company has not only introduced new in-memory platform across business functions to FORBES INSIGHTS 1 FORBES INSIGHTS CASE STUDY analyze large volumes of data in real time. The Figure 2 company started with back-office systems, such as More Product Options, Shorter Product Cycles accounting and finance, and then moved on to its of its one-of-a-kind vehicles. Ultimately, MercedesAMG is considering simplification of the hundreds of systems it uses to engineer, sell and service cars to run on a single, in-memory platform. Avreage product life cycle (months) Number of models 131 core operations—the development and manufacture 122 111 106 110 100 The first goals were to “be more efficient by crunching numbers faster,” says Mercedes-AMG CIO Reinhard Breyer. Company leaders saw an opportunity to free financial analysts from waiting for reports and enable them to focus on strategic 22 12 2002 BMW analysis and decision-making. But a faster, more efficient back office was just a start. The key to becoming a real-time enterprise is not 2011 32 30 44 15 2002 Audi 2011 2002 2011 Mercedes-Benz Source: McKinsey & Company, “Manufacturing the Future: The Next Era of Global Growth and Innovation,” 2012. http://goo.gl/EcQ6tq A greater number of models and options and shorter product life cycles challenge automakers. delivering more data quickly, it’s more quickly delivering information that can improve the processes equipment, and efficient use of the facilities was a that lead to competitive advantage. For Mercedes- priority. The ability to correlate historical test data in AMG and Daimler, these are product development and real time with sensor data from the engines being manufacturing processes. tested enables engineers to identify possible problems more quickly. Real-time efforts “are useless if they aren’t aligned,” says Behnam Tabrizi, consulting professor at “We are able to analyze test data from engines and Stanford University’s department of management test vehicles faster than before,” Zeller says. “And that science and engineering. “If you throw new leads to more insights faster, as we compare more technology at a bad process, you won’t resolve data and use complex analytics without losing time.” anything. It’s not just about real-time systems, it’s about real-time organizational transformation.” Now an engine test that shows unusual behavior can be stopped at any step of the test procedure; A NEW WAY TO TEST ENGINES engineers used to have to wait to analyze the majority Even today, every Mercedes-AMG engine is hand of data until after the hour-long test run has ended. built from start to finish by a master engine builder: That change, in turn, creates more engine-testing it’s a hallmark of the brand. But company leaders capacity each week. It also gives engineers more time recognized an opportunity to use big data analytics to focus on refining engine quality. to also improve the engine production process. to transform the company using real-time A PLATFORM FOR REAL-TIME TRANSFORMATION applications, they zeroed in on quality assurance What’s more, Mercedes-AMG now has a scalable for its engines. platform that it can apply to other areas of its When they went looking for the next high-value area business, and which Daimler can begin to apply Earlier this year, Mercedes-AMG piloted a real-time across the enterprise. Both Mercedes-AMG and quality assurance platform that harnesses predictive Daimler are expanding their vehicle lines, and thus analytics to optimize engine-testing processes when the number of projects they must manage. manufacturing its vehicles. The dynamometers the Mercedes-AMG has already introduced three new company uses to determine the torque or power compact models in pursuit of new market segments. characteristics of engines being tested are high-cost 2 FORBES INSIGHTS FORBES INSIGHTS CASE STUDY The company is also enabling car buyers to customize their vehicles more than ever before. The strategy seems to be working: in 2013 Mercedes AMG sold more than 32,000 automobiles, its most successful year ever. “We are able to analyze test data from engines and test vehicles dramatically faster than before.” –Dirk Zeller, head of IT Consulting, Mercedes-AMG The project expansion and growth could strain existing project management processes, so Mercedes-AMG leaders have begun exploring how FIGURE 3 Delivering Real-Time Supplier Data Customer information 46% Employee data Product data 42% Supplier information 23% the same data analysis and predictive functionality can be applied to engine testing for project management. The goal is to be able to visualize in real time how the product creation and engineering process is progressing and to predict potential 46% Source: Accenture, “High Performance in IT: Defined By Digital,” 2013. http://goo.gl/7cc4KM Among top-performing companies, nearly half provide customer and employee data to employees in the moment, but less than a quarter can do the same with supplier information. bottlenecks, such as supplier delays, before they impact manufacturing ramp-up. who will be consuming the data and what they need to know. Business leaders and managers shouldn’t become Both Mercedes-AMG and parent company Daimler overwhelmed by the amount of data available to them, anticipate benefits beyond managing an individual Zeller advises. The concern is similar to that which project more efficiently. They want to take accompanied the introduction of email, Zeller recalls. advantage of real-time analytics to give employees “People felt disturbed by too many alerts, tending to who work across several projects, such as those with ignore them over time,” he says. “During our projects, a focus on braking systems, visibility across all we need to define if our target audience is prepared for projects, so they can see if a new part is in time, the solutions we’re offering.” quality and budget during the engineering process, if it is available for testing or inventories are low. Daimler’s IT group recently awarded Mercedes-AMG several innovation awards for the testing and Even among top-performing companies, access to implementation of its real-time systems. The parent such supplier intelligence in real time is relatively company will be using the performance unit’s rare. Less than one-quarter of leading enterprises experience and lessons learned as the basis for its can provide up-to-the-minute supplier data to their planned implementation of in-memory analytics. employees (see Figure 3, “Delivering Real-Time “They’re the trigger that started us on this path,” Zeller Supplier Data”). Mercedes-AMG, however, plans to says. “And we had a huge will to innovate.” • be the exception. The goal is to have new business intelligence ABOUT FORBES INSIGHTS software running on the in-memory databases by functionality every two months. “We are working Forbes Insights is the strategic research and thought leadership practice of Forbes Media, publisher of Forbes magazine and Forbes. com, whose combined media properties reach nearly 50 million business decision-makers worldwide on a monthly basis. very closely with our business partners to deliver Bruce Rogers exactly what is needed in an easy-to-use user CHIEF INSIGHTS OFFICER the end of the year, and then to release new experience,” Zeller says. One key to success when deploying real-time Brian McLeod DIRECTOR, NORTH AMERICA Writer: Stephanie Overby is a freelance business and technology writer based in Boston. capabilities is gaining a deep understanding about FORBES INSIGHTS 3 Real-Time Enterprises A Research Collection National Football League at a Glance A professional U.S. football league that runs a 17-week regular season Industry: sports & entertainment Headquarters: New York, New York Employees: 1,100 Founded: 1920 Number of Teams: 32 Viewership: 205 million people tuned in to NFL games in 2013 www.nfl.com Source: National Football League Page 75 RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Business Case Studies The NFL’s Advanced Analytics Score with Football Fans Looking to spur fan engagement, the National Football League is putting user-friendly data analytics tools in the hands of fantasy football fanatics. BY STEPHANIE OVERBY P rofessional football is America’s true national pastime. Viewership of NFL games has grown steadily over the past decade. During the 2013 football season, NFL games attracted three times more eyeballs than other The National Football League at a Glance primetime TV offerings, and 34 of the 35 most- FIGURE 1 watched TV shows in autumn 2013 were NFL games NFL’s Gameday TV Viewership Industry: Sports and entertainment NFL league office employees: 1,100 Founded: 1920 Number of teams: 32 Viewership: 205 million people tuned in to NFL games in 2013 (see Figure 1, “NFL’s Gameday TV Viewership”). Gameday outdraws the leading primetime broadcast television shows. (average in millions of viewers) But if regular viewers of NFL games on Sunday, 2009 www.NFL.com very real for them. “When Tom Brady throws that Source: National Football League touchdown pass, it’s six points for the New England NFL broadcast Primetime broadcast 18.4 Monday or Thursday nights are considered fans, 8.5 those who participate in the NFL-inspired fantasy football leagues might better be deemed fanatics. The 2010 20.0 fantasy teams that individuals put together might be 8.2 imaginary, but the process of managing a franchise is 2011 19.8 8.1 Patriots,” says Daniel Shlossman, the NFL’s director of product for fantasy football and mobile games. “But if 2012 19.3 I’m playing Tom Brady, it’s also six points for my 7.6 fantasy team.” This year, there will be 41 million fantasy players 2013 20.3 7.0 across all sports, nearly 70 percent of whom say that football is their favorite, according to the Fantasy Sources: NFL and The Nielsen Company. http://goo.gl/nGSRhN Sports Trade Association (FSTA), with their ranks increasing at least 10 percent every year. Around So when the NFL was looking for new ways to use three-quarters of fantasy football participants use four data to maximize the engagement of football fans, the or more Web sites for research. They spend nearly 18 fantasy market was a logical target. In addition to the hours a week consuming sports content and more direct revenues that fantasy league participation than 8.5 hours a week specifically on their fantasy generates, fantasy league members view about seven teams, FSTA says (see Figure 2, “Fantasy Sports times more content, including text, video and data, on Users Are Active Fans”). NFL.com than nonmembers. The NFL has its own fantasy sportswriters online, and NFL.com is chock full of key breaking news, expert analysis and weekly rankings to help fantasy managers develop their teams. OCTOBER 2014 | © Copyright 2014. Bloomberg L.P. All rights reserved. RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Business Case Studies The NFL’s Player Comparison Tool Challenges There has been no shortage of companies looking to } Increase direct engagement with fantasy football users by developing a player comparison tool for NFL.com } Create a simple user interface that enables users to easily make better decisions about their fantasy teams } Enable customization so that the tool is equally valuable to novices and experts } Ensure that the online tool is scalable and reliable, with 100 percent uptime NFL.com in 2010 and has sprinted into a position be the preferred destination for fantasy footballers. The NFL launched its own fantasy football league on among the leaders. In 2011, the league introduced in-game video, delivering big-play highlights to viewers only seconds after they happen on the field. In 2012, it added more functionality, such as social tools and basic research tools, along with simpler fantasy football games to lure in the novice or casual user. The league also incentivizes participation in its own fantasy leagues by awarding prizes for league champions, such as trips FIGURE 2 Fantasy Sports Users Are Active Fans • There are 36.6 million fantasy users across all sports. • 69% of fantasy users say football is their favorite fantasy sport. • The universe of fantasy users is growing at a rate of 10% to 12% annually. • 74% of fantasy users go to four or more Web sites to conduct research. • Fantasy users dedicate 17.89 hours a week to watching sports. • Fantasy users spent 8.67 hours a week specifically on fantasy sports. Sources: Fantasy Sports Trade Association to the Super Bowl (see Figure 3, “The ROI of Customer Engagement”). “We are leveraging a custom cloud platform to answer very fantasy football-centric questions,” Shlossman says. Elements of the NFL’s Player Comparison Tool Solution Last year, as new, more advanced tools for data “‘Which player should I start? Who’s going to perform analysis and visualization became available, the NFL better in a certain environment?’ Fans are wanting an saw an opportunity to further fuel its captive fantasy answer very quickly that they can understand.” contingent. “In 2013, we wanted to focus on the } Deploy the tool on an in-memory analytics platform in the cloud to ensure real-time processing, scalability and reliability } Utilize self-service data visualization software to deliver player analysis in a user-friendly format } Enable users of the tool to customize player analysis along five dimensions: performance, matchup, consistency, upside and intangibles data,” Shlossman says. “We wanted to make it The tool uses 10 years of historical information to make simpler to understand the data, make it easier to play predictions about player performance so that fantasy fantasy football and grow that market.” franchise owners can make data-driven decisions about their teams. They can analyze and track more Putting Big Data in Customers’ Hands than 100 stats on each player, from team defense As is the case with any statistics-generating sports tendencies to home-and-away performance organization, the NFL has for years been collecting comparisons. The tool also incorporates variables and analyzing what is now commonly known as big ranging from the forecast weather at kick-off time to data. But that activity has taken on a sharper focus playing surface to injury reports. Historical and real-time in recent years. “We are able to use our own data from live games is fed into a statistical model that exclusive content, data and statistics to increase predicts player performance. the fantasy market,” Shlossman says. The league wants fantasy players to compete on NFL.com. “There are lots of things we can do with the data to break But, he adds, “at the end of the day, we want fans it down at a very detailed level,” Shlossman says. “It’s all playing fantasy football because it brings them about the live data and understanding who the players closer to the game.” are and who the best players are for me to play in my fantasy team.” The question was, “how do you bring a tremendous 2 volume of data and statistics to fans in a very A Tool for Rookies and Veterans simplified, intuitive and highly visual way?” says Vishal The behind-the-scenes number-crunching that delivers Shah, the NFL’s vice president for digital media player comparisons is very complex, but the user business development. The NFL used the same interface had to be simple, Shah says, and the tool had in-memory analytics platform and data visualization to work for the fantasy rookie and the fantasy pro. The software that businesses deploy to gain a competitive NFL wanted a tool that was just as valuable for someone edge in their industries for its Player Comparison Tool. who has been fielding fantasy teams for 15 years as it Bloomberg Businessweek Research Services RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Business Case Studies “At the end of the day, we want fans playing fantasy football because it brings them closer to the game.” was to someone who has never done it before. “A Houston Texans’ Andre Johnson or the Denver Stability and Scale on Any Given Sunday —DANIEL Broncos’ Wes Welker at receiver. The two are very For any fan-facing system, the NFL requires 100 percent SHLOSSMAN, different players. Welker is consistent, catching short uptime. That’s quite a challenge for a pursuit that passes over the middle of the field and delivering involves millions of users hitting the system at the same FA N TA S Y F O O T B A L L steady fantasy points. Johnson is known for streaking time—just before kick-off. “We’re a direct-to-consumer AND MOBILE GAMES, down the edge of the field and reeling in the long, business,” Shlossman says. “[The tool must] scale to NFL rainbow passes that can end in a touchdown. The millions of users who want to access this data at any tool “kicks back a simple-to-read answer about who given moment.” FIGURE 3 tool that works for both markets was the goal,” The ROI of Customer Engagement Shlossman says. Throughout the week, a fantasy football user typically makes three types of decisions: whom to start, whom to add or drop, and whom to trade. The tool can guide users through all three types of scenarios, enabling them, say, to evaluate a rival user’s proposed trade or whether to start a particular quarterback. Novice users can keep it simple and do a basic • A fully engaged customer represents an average 23% premium in terms of share of wallet, profitability, revenue and relationship growth compared with the average customer. • An actively disengaged customer represents a 13% discount in terms of share of wallet, profitability, revenue and relationship growth compared with the average customer. Source: Gallup. http://goo.gl/mdjf2A head-to-head comparison, say, between starting the DIRECTOR OF PRODUCT FOR is recommended in a head-to-head decision,” Shlossman says. The NFL chose to host the Player Comparison Tool in the cloud for flexibility and stability. “Everything we build has More experienced users can drill down for a more to be best in class,” Shlossman says. “We get to very, nuanced analysis of potential performance in the very high load levels on Sundays and other peak specific game—how each player performs in snow, periods—thousands of requests per second on the for example, or against a certain defensive back. platform as people make last-minute changes to their lineups. We had to build a tool that not only utilized all of Rather than rely on one-size-fits-all rankings, users this data but was also accessible and performed well at can easily customize the tool by tweaking how much the most crucial moment for fans, which is right before weight to place on five different variables: game time.” performance, matchup, consistency, upside and intangibles. If users decide they need a big week, The NFL’s fantasy apps show how consumers as well as they’ll turn up the volume on the upside and turn businesses can reap the value of real-time analytics, down the consistency dial. opening up a whole new spectrum of consumer-grade tools beyond fantasy sports. Just remember, Shah says, “Users come in and add their own spice to it,” to make the tools “immersive and fun. That’s what Shlossman says. “They can adjust the sliders if they attracts the fans and hopefully keeps them on our want big points and get one result, or tweak it and get platform for longer periods of time.”• something else.” The league’s fantasy site also features mixes of variables devised by each of the Stephanie Overby is a freelance business and NFL’s own fantasy experts, which managers can use technology writer based in Boston. at home. This research project was funded by a grant from SAP. 3 Bloomberg Businessweek Research Services Real-Time Enterprises A Research Collection Nomura Research Institute at a glance Japan’s largest consulting and IT consulting firm Industry: high tech Business activities: Consulting, financial IT solutions, industrial IT solutions, IT platform services Established: April 1, 1965 Headquarters: Tokyo, Japan Capital: 18.6 billion yen 2012 sales: 363.8 billion yen Employees: 5,823 (NRI Group 7,738) www.nri.co.jp/ Source: Nomura Research Institute Page 79 RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Enterprise Case Studies Tokyo Drivers Avoid Traffic Jams with NRI’s Big Data and Analytics With in-memory computing and big data behind it, Japan’s popular Zenryoku Annai! application is helping drivers get to their destinations faster and more efficiently—both day and night. BY JOE MULLICH T okyo’s first taxicabs appeared a century ago. Now, about a quarter million of them service the metropolitan area and beyond. For Nomura Research Institute (NRI), Japan’s largest consulting and IT consulting firm, all these vehicles crisscrossing the nation represent a huge wealth of information Nomura Research Institute at a Glance and clues about how to break gridlock in one of the } Business activities: Consulting, financial IT solutions, industrial IT solutions, IT platform services NRI is analyzing traffic jams in Japan using multiple } Established: April 1, 1965 the use of in-memory computing technology, which can } Headquarters: Tokyo, Japan } Capital: 18.6 billion yen process reams of different data types in real time for world’s most densely populated countries. sources, including traffic data from sensors around the country and location data from 12,000 taxicabs. What enables NRI to keep up with the massive data flow is Traffic Data Jam in Japan }C hallenge: 360 million data records of Japanese traffic information needed to be analyzed more quickly than the several minutes required by traditional relational database technology. } Solution: In-memory computing, which can analyze large amounts of data quickly, was able to process the 360 million records in just over one second. instant analysis.1 Japan can plot out the shortest travel routes, avoid traffic } Sales: 363.8 billion yen (fiscal 2012, ending March 31, 2013) Not too long ago, NRI relied on more traditional snarls and estimate what time they will arrive at their technologies. But the database component, in particular, destinations.4 } Employees: 5,823 (NRI Group 7,738) became a stumbling block for this application. According www.nri.co.jp/ Source: Nomura Research Institute to Hiroshi Terada, NRI’s general manager for ERP Zenryoku Annai! combines information from satellite solutions, “An ordinary relational database took several navigation systems linked to sensors at fixed locations minutes to analyze the 360 million traffic records and we along roads with traffic data determined through had problems with real-time data processing.”2 statistical analysis on position and speed information from subscribers, moving vehicles and even pedestrians.5 1. SAP. “NRI: HANA.” Customer Testimonial Video. http://goo.gl/gat2AC 2. SAP. “NongFu Spring: Accelerating performance with SAP HANA.” Customer Testimonial. http://goo.gl/MAQgp1 3. Ashford, Warwick. “SAP highlights customer experiences of in-memory computing at Sapphire Now.” ComputerWeekly.com, May 19, 2011. http://goo.gl/gsGp5e 4. Pai, Suraj. “Guest Blog: How to run an intelligent business.” CIO Asia, September 14, 2012. http://goo.gl/btFQrt 5., 6. Intel. “Not limited to ERP applications alone, the Intel® Xeon® processor E7 family also provides new business opportunities via in-memory technology.” Case study, 2011. http://goo.gl/6nZC9m After NRI implemented in-memory computing technology, Meanwhile, data from thousands of taxicabs is added it was able to analyze the millions of records in just over to the mix. Using all this information, Zenryoku Annai! one second. “The speed this enables is sudden and analyzes road conditions and helps drivers plan routes significant, and has the potential to transform entire more accurately and over a wider range than is possible business models,” says Akihiko Nakamura, corporate with conventional GPS systems. senior vice president, Services and Industrial Solution Division, at NRI.3 “As the number of users of our Zenryoku Annai! service continues to grow, so too does the amount of position New Business from Big Data and speed data collected. Accordingly, we must now NRI is a leading example of how to find huge benefits process this data faster than ever before,” says Aritaka from “big data,” the term given to data that comes in Masuda, general manager of NRI’s Ubiqlink Department, large volumes, variety and velocity. Thanks to big data, which is responsible for gathering the traffic information.6 NRI has leveraged its research and traffic analysis expertise to develop a widely used service called Masuda says in-memory computing tests have confirmed “Zenryoku Annai!.” Using this service, subscribers all over that 360 million data points can be processed in just over SEPTEMBER 2013 | © Copyright 2013. Bloomberg L.P. All rights reserved. RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Business Case Studies one second. The technology has improved search speed by a factor of more than 1,800 over the department’s previous relational database management system. }T otal Cost: $121 billion } Wasted Fuel: 2.9 billion gallons }C O2 Emissions: 56 billion pounds Besides the big boost in speed, NRI found that inmemory computing helps simplify the programming needed to solve a complex analytical challenge and— Tokyo at a Glance somewhat counterintuitively—has even reduced the }P opulation: 13.2 million (metropolitan area) } Number of taxicabs: Approximately 250,000 (metropolitan area) }N umber of cars: Approximately 3.33 million }T otal land area: 2,700 square miles amount of processing power needed. The Price of Traffic Congestion in the United States in 2012 Source: Texas A&M Transportation Institute15 The NRI findings come at a time when many government agencies and companies in Japan are exploring new “In addition to making real-time processing possible, this ways to leverage traffic data and other sources in an approach simplifies traffic-data generation logic,” says effort to improve quality of life issues. Toyota, which is the Kenji Honda, an NRI senior systems analyst in the Ubiqlink largest provider of taxis in Japan, recently announced it Business Planning Group. He says the higher speed of is using real-time traffic information from 700,000 Toyota data extraction processing achievable with in-memory vehicles on the country’s roads to offer what it calls a computing means that historical data can be processed “big data” service to local governments and businesses. on a continuous basis. This, in turn, reduces the amount of The service is aimed at helping drivers during disasters computer resources required to perform calculations. and emergencies. Drivers will be encouraged to share 7 their own observations on road conditions, including A Better Quality of Life blocked paths and strong winds, with other drivers The ability to analyze traffic jams more quickly—and thus around the country.12 to potentially alleviate issues faster—is crucial in nation’s like Japan, which can be crippled by traffic congestion. A recent report in The Japan Times notes the Japanese During the country’s largest spring break, traffic jams can Government also wants to use car navigation data to stretch 37 miles or more.8 better monitor traffic after disasters.13 The Transport Ministry found it was able to check conditions on only 79 7. Intel. “Not limited to ERP applications alone, the Intel® Xeon® processor E7 family also provides new business opportunities via in-memory technology.” Case study, 2011. http://goo.gl/6nZC9m 8. Yamanaka, Megumi and Yuji Okada. “Japan Braces for Record Traffic Jams as Aso Cuts Highway Tolls.” Bloomberg, April 27, 2009. http://goo.gl/9i93AX 9. Texas A&M Traffic Institute. “As Traffic Jams Worsen, Commuters Allowing Extra Time for Urgent Trips.” February 5, 2013. http://goo.gl/fyNEJL 10. Hotz, Robert Lee. “The Hidden Toll of Traffic Jams.” The Wall Street Journal,” November 6, 2011. http://goo.gl/mOjIMK 11. Enterprise Innovation Editors. “Traffic congestion top cause of employee stress, declining productivity.” Enterprise Innovation,” March 14, 2011. http://goo.gl/mIDZYz 12. The Associated Press. “Toyota to try out real-time traffic data service in Japan next month.” CTV News, May 29, 2013. http://goo.gl/TNbFe5 13. JIJI. “Government wants car navigation data to monitor post-disaster traffic.” The Japan Times, August 3, 2013. http://goo.gl/yRnbtU 14. Intel. “Not limited to ERP applications alone, the Intel® Xeon® processor E7 family also provides new business opportunities via in-memory technology.” Case study, 2011. http://goo.gl/6nZC9m 15. Texas A&M Traffic Institute. “As Traffic Jams Worsen, Commuters Allowing Extra Time for Urgent Trips.” February 5, 2013. http://goo.gl/fyNEJL Traffic congestion also can and does have a significant percent of the nation’s roadways on the night after the impact on quality of life and the economy in many major earthquake and tsunami ravaged the Tohoku region in cities around the world. For example, a 2013 report from the 2011. Following the disaster, the ministry discovered that Texas A&M Transportation Institute found that the financial traffic data collected from car navigation systems clearly cost of congestion in the United States in 2011 was $121 showed roads on which no vehicles were running. Being billion, translating to $818 per U.S. commuter. able to understand traffic conditions immediately, both 9 day and night, is a crucial aid in responding to a disaster. The likely negative impact that traffic jams have on public health is an even greater concern. As roadways choke on All this demonstrates the growing need for—and benefits traffic, researchers suspect that the tailpipe exhaust from of—using big data in the public sector. “In the past, it cars and trucks—already implicated in heart disease and could easily have taken several hours to process large cancer—may also injure brains cells and synapses key to volumes of data, and for this reason, I suspect many of memory.10 According to one analysis, drivers traveling the our clients ultimately abandoned the process of data 10-worst U.S. traffic corridors annually spend an average analysis” in the public sector, says NRI’s Masashi. “But in- of 140 hours, or about the time spent in the office in a memory computing may well provide a way to offer faster, month. Meanwhile, a 2013 survey by workplace solutions tailored solutions to them.”14 • provider Regus suggests that traffic congestion and crowded public transportation systems are the top causes of stress and declining productivity among Hong Kong employees.11 2 Bloomberg Businessweek Research Services Joe Mullich is a freelance business and technology writer based in Sherman Oaks, Calif. This research project was funded by a grant from SAP. Real-Time Enterprises A Research Collection Norwegian Cruise Line at a glance Cruise ship operator that gives guests the freedom and flexibility to create their own dining and entertainment activities Industry: travel & transportation Headquarters: Miami, Florida Founded: 1966 2013 revenues: $2.6 billion Year-on-year growth: 12.9% Initial public offering: January 2013 Number of cruise ships: 13, with four on order Passengers carried in 2013: more than 1.6 million Destinations visited in 2013: 114 www.ncl.com Source: Norwegian Cruise Line Page 82 RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Business Case Studies Norwegian Cruise Line Sets Its Course for Real-Time Insights Innovative cruise company adopts predictive analytics and real-time business capabilities, with the aim of improving the guest experience and ensuring operational efficiency. B Y L A U R E N G I B B O N S PA U L N orwegian Cruise Line has a reputation to uphold. Founded in 1966, the $2.6 billion, 13-ship cruise line has a track record of innovation and differentiation. The company was the first in the business to offer round-trip Norwegian Cruise Line at a Glance Industry: Hospitality/travel Headquarters: Miami Founded: 1966 2013 revenues: $2.6 billion Year-on-year growth: 12.9% Initial public offering: January 2013 Number of cruise ships: 13, with four on order Passengers carried in 2013: More than 1.6 million Destinations visited in 2013: 114 www.ncl.com Source: Norwegian Cruise Line cruises out of Florida’s Port of Miami. It also insights that have led to major operational cost revolutionized the industry with its signature Freestyle reductions. Over time, Norwegian’s real-time capabilities Cruising, which gives guests the freedom and flexibility will aid in its ability to quickly ascertain and even predict to create their own dining and entertainment activities. guests’ needs and desires. No wonder, then, that an engaging and increasingly “The real power of the tool comes in predicting the personalized customer experience is paramount to future and giving visibility we never had before,” says Norwegian’s quest to keep up with industry trends and Ben Lightfoot, director of business intelligence delivery continue attracting the growing number of people systems at Norwegian. around the world who want to book a cruise in anticipation of enjoying a one-of-a-kind vacation (see Many companies in the hospitality/travel industry are Figure 1, “Top 4 Cruise Industry Trends”). According to leveraging analytics to gain a better understanding of Cruise Lines International Association, the industry will their customers’ needs and preferences. “This is what serve 21.7 million passengers worldwide, up from 21.3 the innovators are doing,” says Joshua Greenbaum, million in 2013 and 13.5 million in 2009. principal at EA Consulting. “It’s a very competitive environment. They are taking every piece of data they But to maintain its track record for innovation, and have and using it to change the customer experience.” develop offers that will resonate with different segments of customers, Norwegian knew it needed to better understand who its customers are, what they value and FIGURE 1 Top 4 Cruise Industry Trends what they most want to do when onboard the ship. With an eye toward increasing guest satisfaction, among other goals, Norwegian embarked in 2012 on a fast-moving journey to implement a business intelligence (BI) system aimed at delivering insights to business users. Because it wanted to analyze large volumes of data from multiple sources—and needed rapid results—Norwegian chose an in-memory platform, which aggregates and analyzes vast amounts of data from multiple data sources in real time. From its earliest days, the system has generated Improved technology to lower the cost of onboard communications and provide more efficient passenger servicing. First-time passenger growth coming from younger generation travelers, especially Millennials. Rebound in luxury cruising, stimulated by an improving economy and increased consumer confidence. More all-inclusive options and packaging in accommodations, services and amenities. Source: Cruise Lines International Association. www.cruising.org AUGUST 2014 | © Copyright 2014. Bloomberg L.P. All rights reserved. RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Business Case Studies Voyage to Customer Insight According to Lightfoot, the homegrown BI system had long turnaround times and performance issues, FIGURE 2 Swimming Through the Data Norwegian leverages its BI solution, powered by in-memory computing, for a host of data types in real time. lacked flexibility and was too complex for anyone but Norwegian Cruise Line Business Challenges power users and IT staff to use effectively. There was no true enterprisewide BI strategy in place and no real processes around master data management. } Legacy BI platform was slow, inflexible and complex } Individual departments could not easily share data, leading to multiple versions of the truth } The company needed a quicker and more effective way to validate and scrutinize financial data in real time } Norwegian wanted to better understand customer needs and preferences to improve and personalize the customer experience “We knew we needed a state-of-the-art BI platform and strategy to stay ahead of the competition,” Lightfoot says. “The business couldn’t wait until the next day for an answer.” Further, departments maintained siloed data marts, with no way to tie the data together, adds Chad Berkshire, vice president of operations finance at Norwegian. “There was no ‘one version of the truth.’” In late 2012, Norwegian began its quest for a platform that offered performance, self-service for business users and streamlined decision-making. “We knew this couldn’t Financial data. Norwegian’s BI system elucidates and authenticates the financial data in its ERP system, something it was not able to do previously, according to vice president of operations finance Chad Berkshire. Now, business users can swim in the detailed transaction data behind the financials. Inventory data. Norwegian uses analytics to keep a closer eye on food/drink inventory aboard its cruise ships, spotting trends and heading off waste. In the future, it will use the system for inventory planning and forecasting. Guest data. Currently, Norwegian uses analytics to segment and better understand its guests. In the near future, it will use the system to predict which guests and prospects are most likely to go on a cruise in the near future. Source: Norwegian Cruise Line be a project that dragged itself out for the next three to five years,” Lightfoot says. “The BI platform needed to without any concerns around the data they were produce results within a year. This platform would be a consuming,” Lightfoot says. Norwegian Cruise Line Solutions game-changer as to how users consumed and performed data analytics. Changing our organizational Financial Reality Check } Adopting an analytics system based on an in-memory platform, enabling real-time analysis of a large variety of data types } Porting ERP data to the in-memory platform, followed by property management, reservations and customer data } Implementing data cleansing, data governance and master data management processes } Establishing a business department dedicated to BI and analytics culture around data needed to begin right away.” The first use of the system was to provide a reality check for financial data. “We needed to deliver the transactions The team selected the system in June 2013, and that made up the numbers in the ERP system,” Berkshire implementation progressed quickly. The ERP system says. The increased scrutiny was a natural part of was the first data source to move onto the platform, with Norwegian’s becoming a public entity in January 2013. the property management and reservations systems “We needed to talk to potential shareholders about slated for future phases. Along with data cleansing, data specific financial goals and performance,” he says. governance and master data management, another major change was the creation of a new corporate With the system in place, Norwegian could begin to department for BI delivery, headed by Lightfoot. obtain the coveted “360-degree view” of its guests. Under the legacy data warehouse, guest data was 2 “One of the other huge contributing factors to the maintained in multiple data marts, and understanding success of the implementation was the decision to the correlation between pre- and post-spend was create the BI department under the business becoming increasingly difficult. Guest information was umbrella,” he says. “This shift from the norm allowed sourced from the reservations system, property the BI department to align itself with the business, management system, casino system and guest immerse itself in the business culture and drive home satisfaction. However, there was no way to bring all of the necessary business requirements.” It also this together without complexity. The new system is ensured system usability at all levels of the enterprise. changing that, giving everyone the same view of guests, “I wanted users to have a true self-service platform enabling them to provide a better customer experience that would allow them to swim through their data (see Figure 2, “Swimming Through the Data”). Bloomberg Businessweek Research Services RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Business Case Studies Early Wins Soon after the system went live Berkshire was able to FIGURE 3 Better Decisions Through Data Business drivers for investment in analytics include the following. (% responding) Benefits of In-Memory Computing at Norwegian Cruise Line see how much money was spent annually on individual } Operational cost reductions as high as 6 percent in purchasing } Expected revenue improvements driven by improved ship configuration and new food and entertainment packages } Improved scrutiny and validation of financial data } Improved inventory planning and forecasting } Holistic customer views, leading to improved segmentation and prediction of needs representative to reduce the bill by 6 percent. Improving planning and forecasting Purchasing was a fertile area for more hard returns as the Developing new products, services and revenue streams 47% vendors across purchasing systems. “It turned out there were five different departments all using one vendor,” he says. “We had been negotiating in siloes,” says Berkshire, whose team worked with the vendor’s purchasing department obtained visibility across multiple systems. “We discovered that a significant number of services we were buying were not running through a Improving the quality of decision-making Making quicker decisions 59% 53% 47% Source: IDG Enterprise Big Data Study, 2014. http://goo.gl/BNImWX purchasing system. They were being negotiated without purchasing being involved,” Berkshire says. Purchasing For example, guests who meet a certain threshold of has reestablished oversight of services purchases, driving spending on the gaming systems will likely be passengers additional cost reductions and greater efficiency. who Norwegian would encourage to book another trip. Lightfoot expects the system will help his team pinpoint The system would also potentially highlight problematic profitable customers and develop personalized offers (see areas on the ships related to revenue. “We might Figure 3, “Better Decisions Through Data”). change the way the casino floor is laid out, or place assets in different places as a result of looking at the “They will be able to close the gap between someone asset spend across the casino floor,” Lightfoot says. who is interested in taking a cruise vs. someone who is onboard enjoying themselves,” Greenbaum says. This is The biggest impact for guests so far has been the a major advantage in an industry where there are creation of onboard food and entertainment packages complex products, many customers and a lot of based on common spending patterns. “We make it competition. “There are 100 different cruises. Being able convenient for them to buy it in one package while also to take all these potential products and correlate them to gaining savings,” Berkshire says. customers based on data—that is the perfect scenario,” he says. “You can move the needle very quickly.” Another example of data-fueled innovation: Norwegian recently introduced all-inclusive cruising, the first of the Norwegian’s use of the system will increase over time, as will major cruise lines to do so, according to USA Today.1 its associated benefits. “When we can begin to predict for With this option, available for 2015 cruises, the guest the future, the payoff will be huge,” Lightfoot says. “We are pays one price for unlimited extras, including access to now looking in the rearview mirror. The goal is to be able to specialty restaurants and alcoholic beverages, predict months in advance, so we can put together the right shoreline excursions and bingo games. offers, the right experiences for the right customers.” Predicting the Future So far, Norwegian’s journey has been smooth sailing, with Currently, the crucial activity of customer segmentation great things on the horizon. “A lot of hard work has gone is handled by an external service provider. With the into this,” Berkshire says, “but it has really paid off.” • new solution in place, Norwegian will take that function back in-house. “In this business, you have a fixed number of customers based on the ships and number 1. Sloan, Gene. “Norwegian Cruise Line tests all-inclusive packages.” USA Today, July 31, 2014. http://goo.gl/opYCzx. of rooms,” Lightfoot says. “We really have to get the best guests, so segmentation is really key for us.” 3 Bloomberg Businessweek Research Services Lauren Gibbons Paul has written extensively on customer relationship management and customer experience management for more than 15 years. This research project was funded by a grant from SAP. Real-Time Enterprises A Research Collection Southern California Edison at a glance Southern California Edison is a subsidiary of Edison International, which was founded in 1886. A regulated utility, SCE delivers electricity to 4.9 million customer accounts in 430+ cities and communities Industry: utilities Headquarters: Rosemead, California Service territory: 50,000 square miles Transmission and sub-transmission line miles: 12,782 Electricity wood poles: 1.3 million 2012 annual operating revenues: $11.9 billion (Edison International) Employees as of 2012: 16,593 (Edison International) www.sce.com Source: Southern California Edison Page 86 RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Business Case Studies How Southern California Edison Harnesses Big Data’s Power Real-time capabilities are transforming how the electric utility manages supply and demand to lower costs and improve efficiency. BY STEPHANIE OVERBY T o keep up with electricity demand from its 14 million customers, Southern California Edison (SCE) plans to invest more than $20.4 billion during the next four years to expand and strengthen its electric grid. But pouring money into physical Southern California Edison At a Glance Industry: Electric utility Company description: Southern California Edison is a subsidiary of Edison International, which was founded in 1886. A regulated utility, SCE delivers electricity to 4.9 million customer accounts in 430+ cities and communities. Headquarters: Rosemead, Calif. Service territory: 50,000 square miles Transmission and subtransmission line miles: 12,782 Electricity wood poles: 1.3 million 2012 annual operating revenues: $11.9 billion (Edison International) Employees as of 2012: 16,593 (Edison International) www.sce.com Source: Southern California Edison MARCH 2014 | infrastructure such as power plants and substations is not enough. Leaders at the regulated utility need to manage energy supply and FIGURE 1 demand more intelligently, using more data, better analytics and faster reporting. Many organizations, across all industries, have similar ambitions. But for utilities, the transformation to a real-time business—one that uses dynamic and granular data to make decisions in the moment—is in many ways an industry imperative. Theodore F. Craver, Jr., chairman and CEO of SCE’s parent company, Edison International, has stated that preparing for transformative change in the industry is critical to creating long-term value. Not only is demand for electricity increasing, but utilities are also under pressure from regulators and consumers to reduce consumption and lower costs. “The only way they can meet customer expectations and shareholder demands is if they Real-Time Data Bolsters Performance By integrating processes, information and technology, companies deliver real-time benefits “to a very large extent.” High performers Other organizations Improve the ability to analyze costs and benefits 7% 62% Embed real-time decision-making tools 46% 2% Develop and capitalize on insights about customer behavior 46% 3% Provide access to information across devices 38% 6% Source: Accenture, 2013 replace concrete with information,” says Narendra Mulani, senior managing director at Accenture Understanding Business Demands Analytics (see Figure 1, “Real-Time Bolsters SCE’s business data, like that of most large Business Performance”). companies, is scattered among various systems and databases. Integrating it was time-consuming, which SCE has responded to these demands by initiating made analysis difficult. As a result, the utility was using a business transformation. New technologies and only a small portion of its data effectively. “If it takes a analytics tools deliver instant information about lot of time and effort to get information out of your electricity generation and consumption to the systems, it hampers your ability to make business utility’s customers, regulators and employees. decisions in a timely manner,” says Ron Grabyan, Real-time data is helping SCE manage its manager of business intelligence services at SCE. multibillion dollar assets more effectively, while it Oftentimes, by the time you get the data together, the partners with customers to meet their needs. opportunity is lost.” © Copyright 2014. Bloomberg L.P. All rights reserved. RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Business Case Studies FIGURE 2 these disparate data sources together more quickly, The top five point to a critical alignment of business strategy, people and tools. (% responding) the business intelligence services group studied what type of information, and how much of it, people needed, as well as how they would use it, before Benefits of RealTime Business at Southern California Edison Identifying where big data can have the greatest impact 81% choosing a technology platform. Having staff who can extract value from big data initiatives 72% Business users wanted to do deeper analysis of Finding the best tools or resources to meet goals 70% customer data, as well as predictive modeling. SCE has access to an increasing volume and variety of } Integrated data: Business users can aggregate internal and external data sources to unearth fresh insights. } New services: A new tool built on the in-memory platform helps customers manage their electricity usage and their costs. } Faster processes: Real-time data means finance professionals can, in effect, partially close the books daily. } Future use cases: In-memory analytics holds the potential to improve response times when power outages occur and to help analysts create new statistical models with richer results. Big Data Success Factors Although it was obvious that SCE needed to pull internal and external data—from customer and smart meter data to weather and traffic feeds and electricity market information—that can streamline operations and improve decision-making. By aggregating and analyzing such information in real time, the utility can begin to transform processes across its business. So SCE invested in an in-memory platform for its Ensuring needed storage, compute and networking resources are in place 68% Getting IT and business agreement on where big data can have the greatest impact 64% Source: IDG Enterprise Big Data Study, 2014. http://goo.gl/BNImWX business intelligence systems. The smart meter data became the foundation of an “You have all of these different databases, and you online tool that uses the in-memory platform to show need information from all of them,” Grabyan notes. customers what their bills might look like under various “You’re limited by the speed of the slowest one.” An usage scenarios. in-memory platform enables users to load extremely large volumes of data from multiple sources into one SCE had to deliver the results, which are based on the database and answer questions almost instantly. previous year’s consumption, almost instantly, or customers would abandon the exercise. “The customer Choosing High-Value Targets expectation is not set by the interaction they have with The platform for real-time analytics is designed to any other utility, it’s set by the interaction they have with benefit many business functions. But successful retailers or with online companies,” Mulani says. “They companies choose targeted projects to demonstrate expect that same transparency and ability to interact in its value, Mulani says. According to a recent survey real time.” by IDG Enterprise Research, 81 percent of respondents say that identifying the business areas Using legacy systems, the data analysis took 40 and processes where the real-time collection and seconds. Employing the new in-memory platform and analysis of big data can have the greatest impact is analytics technologies, customers get the analysis in five critical or very important to the success of such seconds. “With increased insight, more options and initiatives1 (see Figure 2, “Top 5 Success Factors for greater control over their energy usage, consumers will Big Data Initiatives”). help us engineer a better energy future,” stated Doug Kim, SCE’s director of advanced technology, in a recent With the launch of its smart meter program in 2008, press release. If customers use energy more efficiently, SCE enabled consumers and businesses to reduce SCE does not have to build as many power plants. their use of electricity during peak periods in Everyone’s bills go down. exchange for preferred pricing. The utility’s business 1. IDG Enterprise. “Big Data: Growing Trends and Emerging Opportunities.” 2014. http://goo.gl/BKeOYy. 2 leaders decided that if they could get detailed Transforming Work information about electricity usage to consumers Real-time transformation, however, involves more faster, they could better moderate their energy use. than deploying new technology or delivering a cool Bloomberg Businessweek Research Services RESEARCH UPDATE | Real-Time Business Case Studies People Before Technology new tool. “The business process has to be FIGURE 3 changed,” Grabyan observes. “And you have to Culture change is among the top barriers to building the analytical capabilities needed to become a realtime enterprise. (% citing it as a barrier) have the appetite to make that business process change.” Although SCE’s executive team was hungry for the transformation, others were less eager to see their work change. Indeed, culture Resources Culture 55% Southern California Edison’s Challenges change is among the top barriers to building the } Centralize data for better and faster customer service and predictive analytics. } Deliver instant analysis of smart-meter data to help customers manage their consumption. } Better manage capital investments. Before Technology”). Talent/skills The key is to make it clear to people how they will Leadership 27% Data 26% Southern California Edison’s Solutions projects in half or close the books faster. Finance professionals do not have to wait until the last traffic patterns are and what it is going to take to get } Deploy business intelligence systems with an in-memory database to speed information delivery to customers, business users and regulators. } Develop flexible customer data and predictive analytics models. } Enable online access to analytics to empower consumers and business users. week of the month to perform all financial closing- everyone where they need to go. analytical capabilities needed to become a real-time enterprise2 (see Figure 3, “People personally benefit from new systems and processes. The business intelligence services team showed how real-time analytics and process changes could enable employees to more easily access information while on the phone with a customer, cut the development time for new Technology 49% 30% 21% Source: American Management Association, 2013 related activities. They can spread that work throughout the month—in effect, partially closing There are, as well, opportunities to advance the the books on a daily basis. Not every piece of predictive analytics the utility has been doing for years, business information needs to be delivered not only to forecast outages, analyze usage patterns instantly. But as hundreds of reports run faster, a and costs, or model customer segmentation, but also more efficient workforce emerges. to create new statistical models. In the past, much of the analysis, using legacy systems, was based on Big Returns Take Time samples from SCE’s millions of meters and customers. Employee buy-in will be critical as SCE rolls out That takes time, and it has not always delivered the real-time capabilities to additional areas. With each insight decision-makers wanted. With in-memory potential use, there will inevitably be process change. analytics, they will be able to use the full data sets and That is where the real value is derived—and it takes receive richer results. time. Anyone who approaches real-time transformation with a short-term outlook is destined Ultimately, the real-time transformation will deliver new to be disappointed, Grabyan advises. “You put the ways of doing business that no one can imagine today. systems in the first year, the process changes occur “When you make changes like this, you speed up over the following years.” analytics, which speeds up processes, which speeds up decision-making, which creates exponential Take outage management. Like any utility provider, change,” Grabyan says. “It will change the way we think SCE has to deal with natural disasters, such as the about operating the company.”• 2011 windstorm that left hundreds of thousands of customers without power. The company is looking 2. American Management Association. “Organization Culture, Lack of Resources Impede ‘Big Data.’” Oct. 3, 2013. http://goo.gl/3NUXN8. at putting its storm tracker program onto the in-memory database to enable managers to see where crews are, where equipment is, what the 3 Bloomberg Businessweek Research Services Stephanie Overby is a freelance business and technology writer based in Boston. This research project was funded by a grant from SAP. Real-Time Enterprises A Research Collection T-Mobile at a glance Provides wireless PDAs, cellular telephones, tablets as well as mobile communications, DSL Industry: telecommunications Headquarters: Bonn, Germany Founded: 1990 Area served: Europe, United States, Puerto Rico, U.S. Virgin Islands Employees: 36,000 worldwide www.telekom.com/home Source: T-Mobile Page 90 CASE STUDY Technology Small/Midsize Business Marketing & Sales Using Social Media to Improve Customer Loyalty at T-Mobile How a small A team within Y28 K28 C78 M52 Y28 K6 C73 M19 Y40 K1 ccording to a 2013 study1 by the C61 M20 Y78 K3 FIGURE 1 University of Massachusetts Dartmouth January 2013 C65 M29 Y79 K22 Center for Marketing Research, a stunning 77 T-Mobile uses percent of the most successful U.S. the simple act companies use Twitter to communicate with of listening to while 70 percent use Facebook. C0 M60 Y100 K17 C28 M88 Y70 K19 C48 M89customers, Y84 K49 C61 M66 Y61 K52 turn unhappy They use other social media tools in varying customers degrees. However, frequent usage doesn’t into happy necessarily lead to expected business results. customers— That’s because, according to experts, social and happy media success requires a new way of customers thinking about customers. into recom“Companies are tuned toward delivering messages, mendation but that doesn’t work in social media channels,” engines. says social media consultant Paul Gillin. “Customers BY H OWA R D B A L DW I N T-Mobile: Social Media Success 2.8 million June 2013 3.7 million December 2013 5.1 million Source: T-Mobile The company’s social media efforts have resonated with a growing number of its customers. T-Mobile today focuses on social media as a competitive advantage, using it to listen and respond to customers’ desires and concerns. It has to. With mobile phone penetration at 78 percent of the U.S. population in 2014 and leveling off,3 T-Mobile must show how it is better to grow. Social media is one of the key prongs in its strategy. don’t go to social media sites to get advertising A ROCKY START messages.” The more a company tries to sell via “When we first started doing social media in 2012, we social media, the more likely the very people it’s tripped all over ourselves,” recalls Michelle Mattson, targeting will stop listening, he warns. “Get over the senior manager, social customer support. “We didn’t idea that you’re there to talk. You’re there to help. have a business case for how to handle social properly.” The more people you help, the more you get known as someone who is a pleasure to do business with.” The original team of 24 people—dubbed T-Force— didn’t have a clear goal either, other than to try and 1. Barnes, Nora Ganim, Ava M. Lescault and Stephanie Wright. “2013 Fortune 500 Are Bullish on Social Media.” University of Massachusetts Dartmouth Center for Marketing Research. http://goo.gl/tzXPgg. 2. T-Mobile. “Awards and Recognition.” http://goo.gl/CWPfWp. 3. Statista. “Mobile phone penetration in the U.S. from 2010 to 2016.” http://goo.gl/ZurWud. SEPTEMBER 2014 © Copyright 2014. Forbes Insights. All rights reserved. That is, in essence, what wireless mobile carrier reduce some negative comments on T-Mobile’s T-Mobile is doing, with significant results. The Facebook page and to explore the possible use of number of its social media fans almost doubled analytics. “We took big risks and learned our lessons between the beginning of 2013 and the end (see from them,” Mattson remembers. “That education Figure 1, “T-Mobile: Social Media Success”). got us to where we are today, but those first six Socialbakers, the social media analytics site, months were painful.” consistently ranks T-Mobile as a “top 10 socially devoted” company.2 The results are even more Among those risks: When they first started tracking impressive given that the program has been in complaints, the system for customer sentiment existence for only two years. tracking was manual and time consuming. Eventually T-Mobile started tracking customer sentiment in a more automated way, using a cloud-based system that integrated with its FORBES INSIGHTS 1 FORBES INSIGHTS CASE STUDY customer relationship management system. But even that process was difficult. As a result, Mattson’s team tried several other products and approaches before settling on the cloud-based services it is using today T-Mobile today focuses on social media as a competitive advantage, using it to listen and respond to customers’ desires and concerns. to track everything from general customer sentiment to reactions to FIGURE 2 Upon Further Review Step 1 Initial T-Mobile action Step 2 Social media response Step 3 T-Mobile reaction Step 4 Social media response T-Mobile announces elimination of Advantage discount program 7% positive 37% negative T-Force quickly communicates negative feedback to management; CEO promises to rethink decision 33% positive 5% negative T-Mobile announces campaign to promote switching from Blackberry 5% positive 20% negative After T-Force notifies T-Mobile executives, CEO tweets that the campaign will be tweaked 20% positive 8% negative new promotions and campaigns. Mattson soon determined that her group needed to articulate a clear strategy. Out of those discussions came a simple mantra: “We’re listening, we’re engaging customers where they want to engage, and we’re Source: T-Mobile Most announcements will trigger a negative reaction of 1 to 3 percent. These two went far beyond that, but were saved by quick responses from T-Mobile. resolving issues.” Tactically, Mattson broke the goals down to four steps: customer used the “comment” capability to say • Identify trending issues and monitor customer “Can’t make or receive calls!” Within 32 minutes, one of Mattson’s team had posted a URL for the sentiment. •A llow the tough conversations to take place. customer to send T-Force a message directly. The • Offer quick responses in real time. formerly disgruntled customer was one of 38,000 •M ake positive connections that deliver on the users who “liked” the response. brand promise. GOING BEYOND THE BASICS The sheer action of monitoring customer sentiment Most telecommunications companies take is an eye opener. “Typical negative reaction on every advantage of social media to some degree. “They campaign is 1 to 3 percent,” she says. But in two use applications like Facebook and Twitter to cases where T-Mobile launched a campaign or communicate with consumers at a rudimentary announced a service change to a popular offering, level,” says Bas den Braber, principal consultant at the negative response was off the chart (see Figure Capgemini Consulting, who focuses on digital 2, “Upon Further Review”). In the first instance, it customer experience in the telecom segment. “But planned to discontinue what turned out to be a very telcos that take social media seriously are the ones popular discount program called Advantage. In the who are making progress. They’re using social second, T-Mobile tried promoting a program to get media for marketing, to derive insights and as a customers to switch from Blackberry phones. In both real-time interaction channel to enhance brand cases, the T-Force team was able to engage engagement. They’re deploying predictive analytics executive support to respond to social sentiment, platforms to help make data-driven decisions sometimes in as little as 24 hours. across the organization. They’re integrating social media with the customer service function.” Dealing with negative sentiment is part of the job, Mattson insists, noting that some of T-Mobile’s T-Mobile’s efforts put the carrier into the category of competitors simply delete negative postings. “We leading practitioners of social media in its industry. engage with those people, and in most cases, we “We have sophisticated reporting that tells us what can turn it around,” she says. In one instance, our customers are saying about us and whether T-Force posted a message on Facebook, and a they’re happy or not,” Mattson says. 2 FORBES INSIGHTS FORBES INSIGHTS CASE STUDY For social media monitoring, the T-Force team is using a listening tool that identifies when T-Mobile is mentioned and highlights potentially negative hashtags and keywords (for example, “hate” and “never”). Sometimes the team’s efforts are made “It gives us a sense of pride to work with someone who is super-negative, and then have that person come back and say how great we are. That’s a key element of customer service.” —MICHELLE MATTSON, SENIOR MANAGER, SOCIAL CUSTOMER SUPPORT, T-MOBILE more difficult when someone with a lot of followers complains, and the complaints are retweeted. That happened once with a DJ who was upset about FIGURE 3 Chat Strategy Goes Social Number of issues solved via chat Up 12% Wait times Down 3 minutes Overall handling time Down 1 minute Source: T-Mobile When the T-Force social media team applied its methodologies to customer service chat, management was impressed with the results. being dunned for a bill he said he’d paid; it turned out later that he had not actually paid it. we wanted to be when we grew up, and without a clear vision or aspiration, you’ll just flail.” No matter what level of status the person has, however, the T-Force team dives in. “It gives us a Her T-Mobile colleague Jennifer Palmer, director of sense of pride to work with someone who is knowledge management and social media services super-negative, and then have that person come support, recommends looking at what other companies back and say how great we are. That’s a key element are doing to get a sense of how you can best engage of customer service,” Mattson says. with your customers. “Look at brands you admire and analyze why you like that,” Palmer says. “For instance, Mattson has been so successful with T-Force’s efforts the social content of [toilet tissue manufacturer] that she’s been assigned responsibility for improving Charmin is funny. Is that the way you want to engage T-Mobile’s chat process. Her strategy involves giving with customers? There’s nothing worse than boring the chat team the same tools the social media team content. And you have to commit to delivering it at uses—setting up anticipated responses to questions regular intervals.” and building dashboards to track results. Perhaps the most important lesson is to understand the But it also involved making some structural changes. complexity of making social media work. Just because the “Sometimes we had content to be used within chat T-Force team responds quickly doesn’t mean it is that wasn’t appropriate for offshore agents who may spontaneous. The team has spent a lot of time developing not understand the nuances of social media,” Mattson relationships with marketing, customer service, public says. The solution: creating a two-tiered chat model relations, legal and senior executives. “Before, marketing that shifted complicated support issues to an onshore would just launch campaigns, and the social team would team. The results were almost immediately positive respond to them. Now, we come up with questions and (see Figure 3, “Chat Strategy Goes Social”). issues relating to how customers might respond,” Mattson says. “We have to be methodical. The last thing The number one metric for Mattson, however, is resolution. “That’s the most important thing to measure in the long term. We want to earn customer loyalty in the way we resolve issues across all platforms.” LESSONS LEARNED What has T-Mobile learned about social media that other companies could emulate? The most important lesson is setting a goal for your social media efforts. “Set your goal,” Mattson says. “We didn’t know what we want is to become our own news story.” • ABOUT FORBES INSIGHTS Forbes Insights is the strategic research and thought leadership practice of Forbes Media, publisher of Forbes magazine and Forbes.com, whose combined media properties reach nearly 50 million business decision-makers worldwide on a monthly basis. Bruce Rogers CHIEF INSIGHTS OFFICER Brian McLeod DIRECTOR, NORTH AMERICA Writer: Silicon Valley-based freelancer Howard Baldwin has written about business and technology since 1987. FORBES INSIGHTS 3 Real-Time Enterprises A Research Collection For more information on SAP HANA, visit: sap.com/hana and saphana.com