Chap 01 Introduction To Business Analytics
Chap 01 Introduction To Business Analytics
Introduction
Introduction
Introduction
• Three developments spurred recent explosive growth in the use
of analytical methods in business applications:
• First development:
• Technological advances, Internet social networks, and data
generated from personal electronic devices, produce incredible
amounts of data for businesses.
Data mining
Simulation
Simulation optimization
• Combines the use of probability and statistics to model uncertainty with
optimization techniques to find good decisions in highly complex and highly
uncertain settings.
Decision analysis
• Used to develop an optimal strategy when a decision maker is faced with
several decision alternatives and an uncertain set of future events.
• It also employs utility theory, which assigns values to outcomes based on
the decision maker’s attitude toward risk, loss, and other factors.
A Categorization of Analytical Methods and Models
• Optimization models
Model Field Purpose
Portfolio models Finance Use historical investment return data to
determine the mix of investments that yield the
highest expected return while controlling or
limiting exposure to risk.
Supply network Operations Provide the cost-minimizing plant and
design models distribution center locations subject to meeting
the customer service requirements.
Price markdown Retailing Uses historical data to yield revenue-maximizing
models discount levels and the timing of discount offers
when goods have not sold as planned.
Big Data
Big Data
• Big data: A set of data that cannot be managed, processed, or
analyzed with commonly available software in a reasonable
amount of time.
• Big data represents opportunities.
• It also presents analytical challenges from a processing point of
view and consequently has itself led to an increase in the use of
analytics.
• More companies are hiring data scientists who know how to
process and analyze massive amounts of data.
Business Analytics in Practice
Figure 1.2 - The Spectrum of Business Analytics
Business Analytics in Practice
• Types of applications of analytics by application area
• Financial analytics
• Use of predictive models
• To forecast future financial performance
• To assess the risk of investment portfolios and projects
• To construct financial instruments such as derivatives
Business Analytics in Practice
• Financial analytics (contd.)
• Use of prescriptive models
• To construct optimal portfolios of investments
• To allocate assets, and
• To create optimal capital budgeting plans.
• Simulation is also often used to assess risk in the financial sector
Business Analytics in Practice
• Human resource (HR) analytics
• New area of application for analytics
• The HR function is charged with ensuring that the organization
• Has the mix of skill sets necessary to meet its needs
• Is hiring the highest-quality talent and providing an environment that
retains it, and
• Achieves its organizational diversity goals.
Business Analytics in Practice
• Marketing analytics
• Marketing is one of the fastest growing areas for the application of
analytics.
• A better understanding of consumer behavior through the use of
scanner data and data generated from social media has led to an
increased interest in marketing analytics.
Business Analytics in Practice
• Marketing analytics (contd.)
• A better understanding of consumer behavior through marketing
analytics leads to:
• The better use of advertising budgets
• More effective pricing strategies
• Improved forecasting of demand
• Improved product line management, and
• Increased customer satisfaction and loyalty
Figure 1.3 - Google Trends for Marketing, Financial,
and Human Resource Analytics, 2004–2012
Business Analytics in Practice
• Health care analytics
• Descriptive, predictive, and prescriptive analytics are used:
• To improve patient, staff, and facility scheduling
• Patient flow
• Purchasing
• Inventory control
• Use of prescriptive analytics for diagnosis and treatment
Business Analytics in Practice
• Supply chain analytics
• The core service of companies such as UPS and FedEx is the
efficient delivery of goods, and analytics has long been used to
achieve efficiency.
• The optimal sorting of goods, vehicle and staff scheduling, and
vehicle routing are all key to profitability for logistics companies
such as UPS, FedEx, and others like them.
• Companies can benefit from better inventory and processing
control and more efficient supply chains.
Business Analytics in Practice
• Analytics for government and nonprofits
• To drive out inefficiencies
• To increase the effectiveness and accountability of programs
• Analytics for nonprofit agencies
• To ensure their effectiveness and accountability to their donors and
clients.
Business Analytics in Practice
• Sports analytics
• Used for player evaluation and on-field strategy in professional
sports.
• To assess players for the amateur drafts and to decide how much to
offer players in contract negotiations.
• Professional motorcycle racing teams that use sophisticated
optimization for gearbox design to gain competitive advantage.
Business Analytics in Practice
• Sports analytics (contd.)
• The use of analytics for off-the-field business decisions is also
increasing rapidly.
• Using prescriptive analytics, franchises across several major sports
dynamically adjust ticket prices throughout the season to reflect the
relative attractiveness and potential demand for each game.
Business Analytics in Practice
• Web analytics - It is the analysis of online activity, which includes,
but is not limited to, visits to Web sites and social media sites
such as Facebook and LinkedIn.
• Leading companies apply descriptive and advanced analytics to
data collected in online experiments to:
• Determine the best way to configure Web sites,
• Position ads, and
• Utilize social networks for the promotion of products and services