High growth companies are better at analysing data

Pro

1 May 2013

The Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) has found a strong relationship between the growth of corporate earnings and companies’ use of data in strategic planning, with high growth companies performing better at analysis and use data for decision making.

A survey of 318 C-level executives, which was sponsored by Wipro, found that companies that had an average EBITDA growth over the past three financial years of more than 10% were more likely than lower growth companies to analyse various data sources they collect-58% versus 43%.

These higher growth companies also consider themselves effective at extracting useful insight from this analysis, with 81% suggesting this to be the case, versus 57% of companies with a lower EBITDA growth. However, most importantly, they are also far more likely to have changed the way they handle strategic decisions as a result of having more data, 50% versus 36%, and have also seen improved strategic decision-making as a result of better analysis, 60% versus 38%.

"This research is reflection of how organisations are leveraging data to sustain its competitive advantage for its products/services and be relevant in future," said K.R. Sanjiv, senior vice president and global head of analytics and information management services, Wipro.

 

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Three sectors stood out in the results as being the most prepared for the increased use of data for analytics and strategic decision making: financial services sector (22% have a well-defined data management strategy in place); the technology industry (30%); and the professional services sector (40%).

In comparison, such data management strategies are least often found amongst manufacturers (16%) and retailers (13%).

With data feeds not only coming from internal applications, but also streams of information available on the internet, 40% of respondents said that clarity on which data matters most is what tops the list of challenges for firms. Some 34% of respondents said that they are worried that the quality of their decisions are actually being impaired by the data overload.

Also, while 68% of respondents think their strategy has improved in the past two years as result of collecting more data, only 18% see a significant improvement in strategy, and very few found ways to use data to make a genuinely transformational shift in the business.

IDG News Service

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