Courtesy of Enterprise Apps Today
Yes, say vendors such as Actian, Birst and SAP that are
targeting small companies with Big Data solutions.
If you thought Big Data and the countless efforts to analyze it
were strictly the concerns of large enterprises, think again. Small
and medium enterprises (SMEs) have their own Big Data concerns. Yet
too often, those concerns have been ignored by data analytics and
business intelligence vendors. Recently, however, vendors
including Actian, Birst and SAP have turned their attention to the
Big Data needs of SMEs.
While SMEs are typically more resource constrained than larger
businesses - due to smaller IT budgets, fewer IT professionals
and/or limited cash -they are often more nimble than their larger
counterparts. Thus one could argue they stand to gain the most
from analytical tools that help them respond quickly to market
shifts.
Actian
Actian earlier this year rolled
out
Vectorwise Workgroup Edition, which it designed to address the
growing technology needs of mid-sized businesses as well as
workgroups within larger organizations. The vendor's solution
is powered by Vectorwise, a database engine written from the ground
up to leverage modern chips and memory while providing
industry-standard SQL-based interfaces and certifications with most
major business intelligence tools. Vectorwise Workgroup
Edition is aimed at buyers that can't afford solutions from giants
such as IBM, Microsoft, Oracle and Teradata, and lack the internal
resources to design workarounds.
"Mid-market organizations and workgroups have business
challenges that require enterprise-class technology," said Steve
Shine, Actian's CEO. "Yet they don't have enterprise-sized
resources for projects, especially uncertain ones."
Shine emphasized that mid-market organizations don't have a lot
of time to play around with technology. He said Vectorwise
Workgroup Edition gives mid-market organizations and workgroups the
ability to get rapid answers without the uncertainty, cost and
resources needed to run other technologies.
Birst
Birst, a provider of business
analytics solutions, added Apache
Hadoop support to its business intelligence solution, claiming
that the solution combines the scale of Hadoop data sets with
Birst's agile multi-dimensional database.
Many organizations recognize the value Big Data has to offer,
but except for large enterprises that can manage the complexity,
few can afford data analytics, said Rick Spickelmier, Birst
CTO.
Birst's position is that Hadoop support will lower the data
analytics adoption barrier by giving users the ability to treat Big
Data like any other ordinary data set. By leveraging Hadoop under
Birst's eponymous analytics database, users can quickly aggregate
and visualize Big Data such as website interactions, social media
and cloud traffic -- which traditionally would have required
extensive ETL processes and considerable pain to set up.
"Business analytics is changing as the volume of data from
online web interactions skyrockets and customers increasingly want
to browse, query or merge transactional data with interaction
data," Spickelmier said.
"Data in Hadoop is not well suited for business intelligence and
to make it actionable takes a lot of work," he added. "Birst's
automated multi-dimensional database allows organizations to
quickly and easily take Big Data and make sense of it."
Birst provides access to data stored in Hadoop and enables the
business analyst to discover new relationships and patterns in data
without locking them into manual ETL processes.
SAP
Another vendor targeting SMEs is SAP, which recently unveiled
two offerings crafted to deliver the benefits of its SAP HANA
platform to SMEs. The products,
SAP Business One and SAP HANA,
Edge edition, leverage SAP's in-memory technology.
The new tools will give customers the flexibility to create
interactive reports and run ad-hoc analysis faster than before,
said Ketan Solanki, consulting manager, Evolution Future Solutions,
an Australia-based SAP channel partner. "Another major
advantage is access to relevant information in seconds with
freestyle search," he added, noting users will be able to navigate
through various business objects without having to move from screen
to screen.
Big Data Drivers
Looking ahead, three drivers will accelerate the adoption of
sophisticated business analytics applications by small businesses,
predicts Ed Lucente, a senior product marketing manager at
AT&T.
In a
blog post, Lucente listed those drivers as:
- Continued adoption of cloud deployments from trusted service
providers;
- Innovative analytics cloud appliances;
- Lower entry prices for a wide variety of business analytics
solutions.
"Even more, as they adopt business analytics solutions via the
cloud, small businesses may take their greatest leap ahead
ever in operational efficiencies, customer satisfaction and
competitiveness," Lucente wrote.