Big data investments
continue to rise but are showing signs of contracting, according to a recent
survey by Gartner, Inc. The survey revealed that 48 percent of companies have
invested in big data in 2016, up 3 percent from 2015. However, those who plan
to invest in big data within the next two years fell from 31 to 25 percent in
2016.
The
online survey was conducted in June 2016 among Gartner Research Circle members. In total, 199 members participated
and shared their investment plans.
"Investment
in big data is up, but the survey is showing signs of slowing growth with fewer
companies having a future intent to invest," said Nick Heudecker, research director at Gartner.
"The big
issue is not so much big data itself, but rather how it is used. While
organizations have understood that big data is not just about a specific
technology, they need to avoid thinking about big data as a separate
effort."
Big data
is a collection of different data management technologies and practices that
support multiple analytics use cases. Organizations are moving from vague
notions of data and analytics to specific business problems that data can
address. "Its success depends on a holistic strategy around business
outcomes, skilled personnel, data and infrastructure," added Mr.
Heudecker.
Getting
Big Data Projects to Production Is a Challenge
While
nearly three quarters of respondents said that their organisation has invested
or is planning to invest in big data, many remain stuck at the pilot stage.
Only 15 percent of businesses reported deploying their big data project to
production, effectively unchanged from last year (14 percent).
"One
explanation for this is that big data projects appear to be receiving less
spending priority than competing IT initiatives," said Heudecker. Only 11
percent of respondents from organisations that have already invested in big
data reported that their big data investments were as important, or more
important, than other IT initiatives, while 46 percent stated that they were
less important.
"This
could be due to the fact that many big data projects don't have a tangible return on investment (ROI) that can be determined
upfront," added Heudecker. "Another reason could be that the big data
initiative is a part of a larger funded initiative. This will become more
common as the term "big data" fades away, and dealing with larger
datasets and multiple data types continues to be the norm."
A
further factor to consider is the lack of effective business leadership or involvement
in data initiatives. Too often, pilots and experiments are built with ad-hoc
technologies and infrastructure that are not created with production-level
reliability in mind.
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