May 14

Social Media and BI are the sweet and sour, yin and yang, oil and vinegar topics of interest in BI these days.  Can the real-time, user-generated, free flowing tweets and online conversations of social media benefit traditional enterprise BI?

In the past week, Information Management published the following, Social Media Will Play a Big Part in BI’s Future.

No doubt the volume of social media is growing exponentially.  And surely, this data contains valuable information on competitive intelligence, product feedback, customer service, and even market trends.

But there’s a gap in social media data access.  Traditional BI tools can’t access all this unstructured data and present it in a usable format, let alone filter out all the noise.

What’s needed is an automated, flexible way to access hundreds or even thousands of sites in real-time, extract only the relevant content, add structure to the data, and load it easily into a database.  What’s needed is Web Data Services, and it exists today.

Social Media Data Access:

With hundreds of sites to monitor (most having no API access) and an already overburdened IT department, accessing social media data becomes the foremost hurdle to overcome.  With Web Data Services, all of this can be achieved with no coding.  Kapow robots (automated data collection processes) are easily created with visual point-and-click technology eliminating the need for complex, time-consuming coding and scripting.  If you can see the data in a web browser, Web Data Services can extract it.

Enriching Unstructured Data:

The trick is taking disparate text based tweets, comments, blog posts, online conversations, etc. and structuring them in a way that lets your analyst understand when it occurred, who said it, and how it applies to your keywords or hypothesis.  But getting there is harder than you might think.  Web Data Services surgically transforms unstructured social media web data to provide superior data quality without the noise.  Included, but not often talked about, is the ability to perform regular expressions (through a graphical interface), encoding and decoding, date formatting, string calculations, conditional expressions, numeric calculations, and multiple language support.

Making the data readily available:

Web Data Services makes it easy to output the structured social media data into multiple formats, such as a SQL database, vendor hosted database, Java or C# data structure, SOAP or REST Web service, RSS, CSV, or XML.

Social media is BI 2.0. It opens the doors to listen in on what people are saying about your brand, products and services, and also taps into untapped market opportunities and customer pain points.  So rather than reacting, you are out in front predicting future events and gaining first mover advantage.

By:  Rick Kawamura Rick Kawamura

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Jan 22

Earlier this week we announced great results for Q2 FY2010.  See the highlights.  At Kapow, we see the voracious appetite of businesses to harness the power of the internet by leveraging real-time web data into their core enterprise information systems.

I met up with Joe Bugajski, analyst at The Burton Group, this morning and he conveyed that making sense out of the world of “unstructured” data remains unsolved.  Also that information managers continue to face challenges combining “external” data with the data they work with every day.

Web Data Services certainly fills that void.  With over 400 customers and Fortune 1000 companies across every industry and geography, forward thinking executives are finding ways to use public Web data to keep an eye on competition, reduce risk, automate manual processes and even roll out new products and services.   Stay tuned for our webinar with Deutsche Boerse, Europe’s #2 stock exchange, to see for yourself how real-time web data services was put into action to create a power financial instrument for energy commodities traders to time the market!

By:  Ron Yu Ron Yu, VP Marketing

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Nov 09

Check out Part 3 of our podcast series, “New Web Technologies Give Businesses a Leg Up by Creating Structure from Unstructured Data”, and hear Stefan, Dana Gardner, and Seth Grimes discuss the growing importance of text-based content and information.  Companies and government agencies are using real-time text analytics as a web data service to bring about a new generation of business intelligence, from reputation management and 360-degree analysis of information, to discovering early warning of medical epidemics and preventing terrorist attacks.  And to do this well, you need automated tools.

Learn more from our Reputation Management and Terrorist Intelligence demos.

And please check out our other podcasts:

Part 1:  The Future of Business Intelligence:  “Web Data Services and Web-based information pave the way for better decision making” with Dana Gardner and Howard Dresner
Part 2:  How Web Data Services and Business Intelligence come together:  “Web Data Services extend data access and distribution beyond the RDB-BI straightjacket” with Dana Gardner and Jim Kobielus

By:  RonYu RonThumb65

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Oct 07

Please tune in to hear Stefan and Jim Kobielus on Dana Gardner’s Briefings Direct Podcast, ”Web data services extend data access and distribution beyond the RDB-BI straitjacket”.  Dana moderates an intriguing discussion on making the most of Web Data Services for Business Intelligence, focusing on web data volume, relevancy and timeliness, as well as access, monetization, enablement, governance, security, and the unification and converging of structured and unstructured data.  And in looking towards the future, Jim and Stefan weigh in on the impact of cloud computing on Web Data Service tools.

Jim is a senior analyst at Forrester Research, and an expert on data warehousing, advanced analytics, and business intelligence.

Enjoy the Podcast!

By:  Ron Yu Ron Yu, VP Marketing

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