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It’s all well and good to talk about customer experience and managing inventory
flow, but what has big data done for me lately?
I’ve rounded up seven of the most interesting — and unique — applications for
big data I’ve seen recently and how they may be impacting your life.
Big Data Billboards
Outdoor marketing company Route is
using big data to define and justify its pricing model for advertising space on
billboards, benches and the sides of busses. Traditionally, outdoor media
pricing was priced “per impression” based on an estimate of how many eyes would
see the ad in a given day. No more! Now they’re using sophisticated GPS,
eye-tracking software, and analysis of traffic patterns to have a much more
realistic idea of which advertisements will be seen the most — and therefore be
the most effective.
iPhone’s ResearchKit
Apple’s new health app, called ResearchKit,
has effectively just turned your phone into a biomedical research device.
Researchers can now create studies through which they collect data and input
from users phones to compile data for health studies. Your phone might track how
many steps you take in a day, or prompt you to answer questions about how you
feel after your chemo, or how your Parkinson’s disease is progressing. It’s
hoped that making the process easier and more automatic will dramatically
increase the number of participants a study can attract as well as the fidelity
of the data.
Big Data and Foraging
The website FallingFruit.org combined
public information from the U.S. Department of Agriculture, municipal tree
inventories, foraging maps and street tree databases to provide an interactive
map to tell you where the apple and cherry trees in your neighborhood might be
dropping fruit. The website’s stated goal is to remind urbanites that
agriculture and natural foods do exist in the city — you might just have to
access a website to find it.
Big Data on the Slopes
Ski resorts are even getting into the data game. RFID tags inserted
into lift tickets can cut back on fraud and wait times at the lifts, as well as
help ski resorts understand traffic patterns, which lifts and runs are most
popular at which times of day, and even help track the movements of an
individual skier if he were to become lost. They’ve also taken the data to the
people, providing websites and apps that will display your day’s stats, from how
many runs you slalomed to how many vertical feet you traversed, which you can
then share on social media or use to compete with family and friends.
Big Data Weather Forecasting
Applications have long used data from phones to populate traffic maps,
but an app called WeatherSignal taps
into sensors already built into Android phones to crowdsource real time weather
data as well. The phones contain a barometer, hygrometer (humidity), ambient
thermometer and lightmeter, all of which can collect data relevant to weather
forecasting and be fed into predictive models.
Yelp Hipster Watch
Whether you want to hang with the hipsters or avoid them, Yelp has you
covered. With a nifty little search trick they call the Word
Map, you can search major cities by words used in reviews — like hipster.
The map then plots the locations for the reviews in red. The darker the red, the
higher the concentration of that word used in reviews — and when it comes to
hipsters, ironic tee shirts and handlebar mustaches.
Even Big Data Bras?
Website True&Co. is
using big data to help women find better fitting bras. Statistics show that most
women wear the wrong bra size, and so the website has stepped up to try to solve
that problem. Customers fill out a fit questionnaire on the site, and based on
the responses, an algorithm suggests a selection of bras to choose from. The
company’s in-house brand is even developed and designed based on feedback from
customers and data the company has collected.
The possibilities of using big data are endless and it might be time to find the
big data applications in your business. Have you seen any fascinating or unusual
big data projects lately?
This post was brought to you by IBM
for MSPs and opinions are my own. To read more on this topic, visit IBM’s PivotPoint.
Dedicated to providing valuable insight from industry thought leaders,
PivotPoint offers expertise to help you develop, differentiate and scale your
business. Photo: Shutterstock.com
About : Bernard
Marr is a globally recognized expert in big data, analytics and enterprise
performance. He helps companies improve decision-making and performance using
data. His new book is Big
Data: Using Smart Big Data, Analytics and Metrics To Make Better Decisions and
Improve Performance'.
Thank you for reading my post. Here at LinkedIn and at Forbes I regularly
write about management, technology and the mega-trend that is Big
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