WASHINGTON'S LEADING BUSINESS MAGAZINE

Order Out of Chaos

If you enjoyed data mining, you might also like predictive analytics, the next generation of tools to make sense of the data deluge.
By Bill Virgin |   March 2010   |  FROM THE PRINT EDITION
Photos and graphics provided by Inrix
Inrix app
Inrix's iPhone App uses predictive analytics software to
forecast traffic information to help commuters better plan their trips.

 

Predictive analytics: You might not know the term but it's a
good bet you've run across or been subjected to it.

The recommendations for other books, CDs or movies you might
like when you place an order with Amazon.com? Those are predictive analytics at
work. The teller who suggests an investment product the bank is pushing, while
you're making a deposit? Predictive analytics again. The approval on your
mortgage or credit card application, and the interest rate you got? That's
credit scoring with predictive analytics behind it.

A growing number of Seattle-area companies not only know
what predictive analytics are, but they're also using these data analysis tools
at the core of their business propositions or writing the software used by
others.

Examples abound. Kirkland-based Inrix Inc. employs
predictive analytics to provide traffic information in 130 American and
Canadian markets, as well as 14 countries in Europe. Says company spokesman Jim
Bak: "We can tell people with a high degree of certainty not only what traffic
looks like now, but what it looks like in the next hour, in 15-minute
increments." For iPhone applications, Inrix offers those 15-minute predictions
for up to six hours in advance, and can do more general forecasts for the
coming year.

Farecast, now owned by Microsoft, applies predictive
analytics to tell travelers the optimum time to buy an airline ticket. Varolii
Corp. in 2008 unveiled a predictive analytics tool to help customers
"understand, analyze and strategically target more effective customer outreach
for collections, customer service and loyalty programs." Bellevue's DS-IQ Inc.
runs predictive analytics to help retailers design in-store digital marketing
campaigns.

ValueAppeal uses predictive analytics tools to tell
customers whether their property assessment is too high. Insightful Corp., a
Seattle-based developer of data analytic tools, was a publicly traded company
until being acquired by Tibco Software Inc. in 2008.

The Department of Energy's Pacific Northwest National
Laboratory at Richland has a "technosocial predictive analytics initiative" to
study whether such an analysis can be applied to the effects of global climate
change on homeland security and defense, or guiding counter-terrorism efforts.

If all this activity sounds like data mining, it is-but it's
also much more. "The difference is data mining is about taking mass volumes of
data and looking for trends," says Craig Chapman, Inrix's chief technology
officer. "Predictive analytics is taking that data and creating models from it
so we can predict" what will happen with a borrower's likelihood to repay, what
a retail customer might

Comments

What a great article

One angle that would have been interesting to focus on is how companies are making predictive analytics affordable to the masses over the Web. You  might want to take a closer look at the Corelytics financial dashboard at http://www.coreconnex.com

Shameless plug I know, but part of making predictive analytics white hot is the ability to get it in the hands of everyone for all kinds of personal and business applications - it won't be just one company who does it all. The key will be collaboration and making data (from a variety of data stores) easily accessible, having applications that standardize how certain information is presented and pattern libraries that establish known patterns within certain types of data (like business finances for service firms.

Predictive analytics also must provide access to benchmarking information about how my business (or actions I'm taking) compare to others just like (or similar to) me. This is not artificial intelligence, just information for me to make a more informed decision using more intelligent information. My 2 year old son is going to expect computers to tell him things he should not have to search for by typing in text. We'd better start preparing now for that future.

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