Firms are underestimating the Big Data revolution, especially when it involves taking a lot of little bits of information from weblogs, smartphones and machine-to-machine (M2M) communications and making sense of it all, Oracle said.
Research released yesterday from Oracle reveals that many businesses appear to have been caught off guard by the boom in ‘Big Data’, which is driven by such factors as increased interaction between consumers and brands via mobile devices, a surge in M2M communications and organisations creating ever greater levels of information within their own processes.
Businesses are reacting to this situation with a short-term increase in outsourced data centre and cloud service use, while planning longer term to build their own in-house data centre facilities.
There is also evidence that the boardroom is paying closer attention to data matters at many organisations, suggesting data within the business is being recognised as having an inherent high value.
John Caulfield, solutions director at Oracle, explained:
“The characteristic big data is typically high volume and high velocity but of low individual value and the way you value this is the variety of data when it is brought together to be analysed it is informative, but these bits on their own don’t make much sense and that’s where the confusion lies”.
“Simply put, Big Data means a lot of data. It could be something of obvious value, like a sales order in an enterprise management system or a weblog of a search for a music book that on its own is of little value. But bring all this data together from web logs to social media, blogs and tweets, and there is opportunity there to derive significant value and be able to predict, analyse and forecast what people will be buying any given weekend, for example.”
Next-generation data centre index
Sustainability is also back on the agenda for 2012 as businesses react either out of a need for a demonstrable green policy for governance reasons, or to reduce spiralling energy bills related to their IT use.
In a direct Cycle 1 (C1) to Cycle 2 (C2) comparison, the overall Sustainability Index has risen from being lowest to joint top among the sub-indices.
The research found:
- The proportion of respondents with in-house-only data centres is down from 60% (C1) to 44% (C2).
- The proportion of businesses using some external data centres has risen from 40% (C1) to 56% (C2).
- Only 8% of respondents (compared to 17% in C1) said they would not need a new data centre facility in the foreseeable future.
- 38% of respondents see a need for a new data centre facility within two years (up from 27% in C1)