©2015 Copyright Fractal Analytics, Inc, all rights reserved
Transcription
©2015 Copyright Fractal Analytics, Inc, all rights reserved
©2015 Copyright Fractal Analytics, Inc, all rights reserved. Confidential and proprietary Information of Fractal Analytics Inc. Fractal is a registered trademark of Fractal Analytics Limited. Selecting the right analytics partner Introduction With the explosion of analytics (poised to reach over $59B by 2018) and widely publicized lack of analytics talent (McKinsey report estimates that by 2018, about 140,000 to 190,000 big data jobs will be unfilled due to a lack of applicants with expertise and experience), many enterprise organizations— from IT to Marketing—are turning to analytics service providers for help. Leaders seeking to build a competitive advantage, as well as drive their personal career development, are now asking how to evaluate and select the right analytics partner. This decision can’t be made lightly as the consequences can easily make or break a critical initiative, or career. Analytics service providers range from tiny niche boutiques, to midsized established consulting firms, to massive organizations embedded inside larger consulting or platform providers. Offerings range from single point solutions or projects, specialty industry expertise or retained teams with broad and/or deep expertise. Which provider you select depends on the following factors: 1) The complexity of your business problem(s) 2) The nature of the desired solution 3) How you are currently addressing the issue 4) The depth and level of service desired IDC’s Worldwide Business Analytics Software 2014–2018 Forecast and 2013 Vendor Shares http://www.idc.com/getdoc.jsp?containerId=249926 2011 McKInsey report – Big data: The next frontier for competition http://www.mckinsey.com/features/big_data ©2015 Fractal Analytics, Inc., all rights reserved | Confidential Selecting the right analytics partner Contents • Analytics provider landscape --------------------------------------------------- 1 • Evaluating an analytics partner ------------------------------------------------ 2 • Problem requirements --------------------------------------------------- 3 • Current approach ---------------------------------------------------------- 5 • Solution requirements ---------------------------------------------------- 7 • Provider requirements --------------------------------------------------- 9 • Conclusion --------------------------------------------------------------------------- 12 • Author --------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 13 • About Fractal Analytics ----------------------------------------------------------- 14 ©2015 Fractal Analytics, Inc., all rights reserved | Confidential Selecting the right analytics partner Analytics Provider Landscape 1 Before you can evaluate an analytics partner, you need to understand the types of providers that offer analytical services and what they offer. The most common examples of analytics service providers are described in the chart below. You will want to consider a number of factors when selecting the type of partner. If you have the budget and well-trained analytics team, you may opt to work with a management consulting firm to create a roadmap for your internal team to build the solution. If you want to limit your focus to solve one specific issue and don’t need to fit your specific decision process, then an out of the box point solution provider may work well for you. If you want a strategic partner for the long haul who will build and operationalize analytics over an enterprise wide roadmap, then a pure-play provider could be your best bet. Analytics provider landscape Description Pure play analytics providers Broad range of flexible and customized analytics services or products Platform providers Analytics services augment hardware/software sales Point solution providers Solve one specific problem- often designed for a specific industry; typically one size fits all Management consultants Business consulting with focus on strategy- ‘what’ to do with limited support to build or implement In-house analytics Internal teams with institutional knowledge A wide range of companies offer analytics services to suit any situation. ©2015 Fractal Analytics, Inc., all rights reserved | Confidential Selecting the right analytics partner Evaluating an Analytics Provider 2 Once you’ve decided the type of analytics engagement you seek, and selected the kind of provider, there are a number of evaluation criteria you can apply to find the right analytics partner for your initiatives. These are the selected criteria you might want to consider when evaluating analytics providers. Analytics provider landscape Key considerations Problem requirements • Degree of • complexity • • Current analytics • sophistication Provider requirements Desired analytics • Capabilities sophistication • Team structure • Engagement Degree of • Types of data • Innovation experience • Data sources • Scale tradeoffs Organizational • Industry and • Customization • Process problem expertise • Data security • Skills and training • Implementation • Culture • Operationalizing • Results scope • Solution requirements Current approach Timing Finding the right analytics partner requires many considerations across several dimensions ©2015 Fractal Analytics, Inc., all rights reserved | Confidential approach Selecting the right analytics partner 3 Problem requirements Is your problem well-defined or ambiguous? Your answer will determine the solution approach and depth of problem-solving experience you will need when working with your analytics provider. The types of considerations when evaluating your analytics provider include: • Degree of complexity – If your initiative is simple and straightforward, you can look for a simple and out of the box solution. If your initiative is massively complex, then consider a broadly experienced provider with consulting skills that can help you navigate your organization’s processes to define the problem, gain stakeholder buy-in, build a solution, and collaborate across departments and other providers to pilot and implement an enterprise-wide approach. • Degree of experience – If your organization has a lot of experience solving a similar issue, you probably won’t need as much consulting or implementation support. You may opt to select a provider to manage the nuts and bolts to develop the analytics and hand off to your internal teams to integrate the solution into your existing environment. If you are looking to address a new approach, you may want more help defining the problem as well as help you define how the solution will be operationalized within existing decision processes, or define and implement a new process. ©2015 Fractal Analytics, Inc., all rights reserved | Confidential Selecting the right analytics partner 4 • Organizational scope – Where you seek to address a single department’s needs, you may find a point solution fits the bill. A large enterprise-wide initiative requires careful consideration and planning of the end-to-end process for a wide range of user needs. In this case, you may opt for a full service provider who will partner with you and your stakeholders to ensure the solution is optimized to support each business user’s needs. • Timing – When you need to address a temporary or periodic issue, consider a point solution or provider who can deliver a specific project. Where you have many short-term projects or decision processes that need to be updated regularly, consider partnering with a provider who can streamline processes for speed and efficiency and deliver analytics on a regular schedule. Example questions or proof you should ask from candidate providers: 1. “What approach do you use to collaborate on problem definition?” 2. “How do you propose delivering accurate forecasts on a monthly basis?” 3. “What experience do you have scaling an enterprise-wide analytics program?” ©2015 Fractal Analytics, Inc., all rights reserved | Confidential Selecting the right analytics partner 5 Current approach How extensive are your current analytics and Big Data capabilities? Your answer will determine the gaps your analytics partner needs to fill to augment your current approach. The types of considerations when evaluating your analytics provider include: • Current analytics sophistication – Whether you seek to implement visual story-telling or advanced analytics, consider any gaps within your internal team or current providers to sufficiently generate the depth of insights or analytical rigor required to meet your needs. You may need support building the infrastructure to assess or pilot analytics or you may need to acquire to leverage a partner that has experience with licensed enterprise tools such as reporting and data discovery, or modelling software. • Types of data – Data comes in many types of forms so identify gaps in your team’s ability to manage and process the size and types of structured, unstructured, or streaming data you have. If your team has less experience with unstructured or large-scale data, your provider should demonstrate they can fill the gaps. • Data sources – In addition to different forms, the more robust solutions require a combination of data across internal and external sources. Many analytics initiatives require working with new data sources so your analytics partner will likely need to have experience organizing, cleansing, integrating and interpreting different data formats across 3rd party aggregators that your team may not yet be familiar with. ©2015 Fractal Analytics, Inc., all rights reserved | Confidential Selecting the right analytics partner 6 • Industry and problem expertise – If your internal team has a lot of institutional knowledge on how your organization and industry does business, you may opt for a more generic or industry-specific solution provider and expect to coach them to define the solution and user requirements. Where you lack in-house industry expertise, you should consider a consulting-oriented partner to collaborate and guide you through the problem and solution definition, as well as help you build the implementation roadmap. Example questions or proof you should ask from candidate providers: 1. “Can you demonstrate expertise in the range and depth of my internal and external data?” 2. “What experience do you have building analytics with ABC data aggregator, customer and social media data?” 3. “Can you explain how we could automate data preparation to allocate more time in model building and insights?” ©2015 Fractal Analytics, Inc., all rights reserved | Confidential Selecting the right analytics partner 7 Solution requirements The solution you need will depend on the type of analytics you need to build, how they will be operationalized and whether you need ongoing support. The types of considerations when evaluating your analytics provider include: • Desired analytics sophistication – Analytics can generate substantial value in many ways. Consider whether you want to advance the adoption of analytics in your organization by automating simple business intelligence, or take the plunge and shift to advanced analytics offered by machine learning and artificial intelligence. • Innovation – Where you seek a proven approach, you may opt to find an out of box solution or a pre-configured approach that can be quickly tailored to the way you do business. If your goal is to crush your competition through innovation, you need to be more adventurous, and push the envelope to partner with a provider with a lot of experience building and implementing a bleeding edge approach. • Scale tradeoffs – Driving value through analytics can be accomplished along different dimensions. You may opt to focus on driving faster and consistent decisions and tradeoff accuracy initially and then refine as you go. Or, you may choose to keep the scope limited with a pilot and then scale across business units and countries. Either way, your analytics partner should have experience developing an approach that allows you to make these tradeoffs and be flexible in refining their approach until your vision is fully realized. ©2015 Fractal Analytics, Inc., all rights reserved | Confidential Selecting the right analytics partner 8 • Customization – In some cases what you need is readily available out of the box, and in other cases your organization needs a solution that is tailored or completely customized to specific business users, customers or decision processes. Consider the experience your analytics provider has in delivering the degree of customization required on a timeline and reliable basis. • Data security – Many companies are required to comply with local and regional regulations where data security and privacy are paramount to safeguard proprietary and customer data. Your analytics partner should be able to demonstrate they are able to meet your data management and security protocols and certification requirements. • Implementation – Great analytics cannot generate value if they aren’t implemented and integrated throughout your decision processes. Your analytics provider should have experience connecting with your platforms, data connections, and decision processes. • Operationalizing – In addition to ensuring analytics are implemented, they need to be developed and delivered in way that supports the way users make decisions. Analytics can be very sophisticated and complex in their development but business users need analytics to be delivered simply. This means your analytics provider should have capabilities in developing business rules, visual storytelling, and optimization flows. Example questions or proof you should ask from candidate providers: 1. “Can you demonstrate expertise in building and operationalizing machine learning?” 2. “What experience do you have complying with xyz regulatory requirements?” 3. “How do you deliver analytics optimized for the way business people make decisions?” ©2015 Fractal Analytics, Inc., all rights reserved | Confidential Selecting the right analytics partner 9 Provider requirements Once you have defined the problems you want solved, identified gaps in your current approach, and set the parameters of your desired solution, you are prepared to define the type of partnership that will best fit your needs. Are you seeking a short-term project solution or a long-term partnership that will scale and position you and your enterprise-wide initiatives for highly visible success? The types of considerations when evaluating your analytics provider include: • Problem-solving capabilities – Your analytics partner should be able to prove that their capabilities are aligned to your solution requirements as defined in the previous section such as: advanced analytics, ability to scale with the right tradeoffs, support of desired customization, and operationalizing analytics for a range of business users. Consider the experience you need to fill in and proofs your provider can share for data management, insight development, predictive modeling, machine learning, automation, visual storytelling, business rules, or systems integration. • Industry experience – When you face a challenge that is similar to what others face in your industry, or requires substantial industry expertise, look for a provider with a lot of experience developing solutions to address the same types of issues. When you want to break out from your competitors to truly innovate, you want to look for an analytics partner with a range of experience in other industries to cross-pollinate leading edge thinking from other industries. • Team structure – Where you seek a team of analytics professionals, make sure they understand how to structure a team of analysts, consultants, data scientists, and Big Data engineers, in a flexible way that quickly adapts to your analytics roadmap. ©2015 Fractal Analytics, Inc., all rights reserved | Confidential Selecting the right analytics partner 10 • Engagement approach – Where you have large-scale and longterm initiatives, consider a strategic partnership with a retained team who can tailor their engagement approach and scale with you. In this case, your provider should have experience collaborating and engaging executives, business users and technology organizations. For short-term or time bound projects, consider a partner who can deliver an out of the box solution quickly and efficiently. • Process – When evaluating analytics providers, consider their approach to building and improving processes throughout the engagement. Your provider should be able to define how they work with you to define a problem, gather solution requirements, how they define and manage milestones, their approach to resolving outstanding problems, and how they measure client satisfaction. • Skills and training – When working with analytics providers on a long-term basis, you want a team of well-trained professionals that have a strong penchant toward continuous education to hone consulting skills and keep pace with the latest analytical techniques and tools. • Culture – Business is often personal and your initiative rides on how well your analytics partner complements your values and work-style. In most cases you want to ensure your provider is flexible enough to shift with changing priorities, is reliable and supportive, and has a strong client service orientation to go the extra mile when you need it. Your provider should be open and candid about what they can realistically do and when. ©2015 Fractal Analytics, Inc., all rights reserved | Confidential Selecting the right analytics partner 11 • Results –Ultimately, it’s results that count. Your analytics provider should be able to demonstrate case study examples of impact, insight, and innovation delivered. And of course, you will want references and a check for ethical business practices. Some companies seek business at any cost and the sooner you know you can trust your provider, the better. Test your provider with hard questions that challenge their integrity and run for the hills if outright lie or promise the moon. This wrong choice can dearly cost you and your company. Example questions or proof you should ask from candidate providers: 1. “What can you tell me about your employee engagement and how you attract, train and retain the best talent?” 2. “How would you structure your delivery team to support our needs as we evolve?” 3. “Can you share case study examples where you delivered insights, impact and innovation?” ©2015 Fractal Analytics, Inc., all rights reserved | Confidential Selecting the right analytics partner Conclusion 12 Market leading companies recognize that analytics is now an imperative to forge lasting relationships with their customers, employees and suppliers. Embracing analytics is the key to driving corporate success as well as individual leadership in today’s Big Data world. How you choose the right partner depends on: 1) The complexity of your business problem(s) 2) The nature of the desired solution 3) How you are currently addressing the issue 4) The depth and level of service desired Site Visit The best way to learn about your analytics partner is to conduct a site visit. You should meet people in different roles and should learn a lot about their culture and how they run their business. Plan a full day and be sure to ask about their vision, management and people philosophies, data management and security, and how they work behind the scenes to support you. They should be open and transparent, allowing you to meet people who do the work. Apply these tips to evaluate your options and select the right analytics partner to propel your initiative and career. ©2015 Fractal Analytics, Inc., all rights reserved | Confidential Selecting the right analytics partner Author 13 Careen Foster is the Chief Marketing Officer at Fractal Analytics and leads Corporate Marketing to raise awareness of Fractal Analytics brand as a leading provider of business analytics. Throughout her career, she has been on the forefront of Big Data analytics space as the head of product management and partner marketing at FICO’s Scores division (Fair Isaac), and product management and operations for risk management solutions at TRW (now Experian). Careen Foster Chief Marketing Officer Fractal Analytics Careen holds an MBA from the University of California, Irvine, Paul Merage School of Business and a Bachelors in Psychology, from the University of California, Irvine. Her analytics interests are to shape the future of human evolution by enabling the global mind to enable new ‘senses’ such as virtual telepathy and telekinesis by connecting people through data, technology, and analytics. ©2015 Fractal Analytics, Inc., all rights reserved | Confidential Selecting the right analytics partner About Fractal Analytics 14 Fractal Analytics is a global analytics firm that serves Fortune 500 companies to gain a competitive advantage by providing them a deep understanding of consumers and tools to improve business efficiency. Producing accelerated analytics that generate data driven decisions, Fractal Analytics delivers insight, innovation and impact through predictive analytics and visual storytelling. Fractal Analytics was founded in 2000 and has 800 people in 13 offices around the world serving clients in over 100 countries. The company has earned recognition by industry analysts and has been named one of the top five “Cool Vendors in Analytics” by research advisor Gartner. Fractal Analytics has also been recognized for its rapid growth, being ranked on the exclusive Inc. 5000 list for the past three years and also being named among the USPAACC’s Fast 50 Asian-American owned businesses for the past two years. Learn more at www.fractalanalytics.com For more information, contact us at: +1 650 378 1284 info@fractalanalytics.com Follow us: ©2015 Fractal Analytics, Inc., all rights reserved | Confidential