âI knew youâd say that.â - Sylvester Stallone as Judge Dredd
That may have been Stalloneâs catch phrase in the movie Judge Dredd, but these days a CMO (Chief Marketing Officer) or even your marketing strategist could easily say that phrase as well. These days analytic solutions are breaking down more data from many sources, creating more accurate sales and operational models. Businesses are learning to compete through innovation, but how does one model the volume of analysis and concepts presented?
Predictive Analytics: The Power to Predict Who Will Click, Buy, Lie, or Die by Eric Siegel, PhD serves as a clarion call for business managers to understand the possibilities and myths. Â Siegel is the Founding Conference Chair of Predictive Analytics World and President of Prediction Impact, an analytics services firm. Â Â I was really excited when I came across the book. Several new analytics books are being released this year, so I asked Wiley for review copy.
Breaking Down The Basics - How Data Relates to Your Customers
The word âanalyticsâ means âto break downâ in Greek. The kind of break down in predictive analytics means correlating data to discover new opportunities with the given resources. This new capability is also breaking down department âsilosâ in organizations, our preferences in our behavior and, at times, our privacy measures.
Siegel notes how people can overlook the omnipresence of the opportunity:
Most people couldnât be less interested in data. It can seem like such dry, boring stuff⦠donât be fooled. The truth is that data embodies a priceless collection of experience from which to learn. Every medical procedure, credit application, Facebook post, movie recommendations, fraudulent act, spam email and purchase of any kind - each positive or negative outcome, each successful or failed failed event or transaction - is in coded as data and warehoused. This glut will grow by an estimated 2.5 quintillion bytes per day.
Siegel uses seven chapters to show how we are increasing our understanding - and our misunderstanding - of the world through data. Hewlett-Packard uses analytics to predict if you are considering quitting your job - valuable given that seeking a new employee can cost more than retention. Another interesting correlation experiment is the âAnxiety Index,â a correlation of blog mentions against S&P 500 performance.
Fun correlated observations abound among the practical measurement delights, such as vegetarians miss fewer flights (âAirline customers who pre-order a vegetarian meal are more likely to make their flightâ¦.The knowledge of a personalized or special meal awaiting the customer provides an incentive or establishes a sense of commitment.â).  These discussions can frame personas; the kinds of customers who exist.
By its very design, PA (Predictive Analytics) foster serendipity. Predictive modeling conducts a broad, exploratory analysis, test many predictors and in so doing, uncovers surprising findings.
You can tell Siegel adores the subject, but not with blinders or false salesmanship to the reader. When he says, âData prospectors see value and value is exciting,â you know he really means it.
Siegel shares further personal insight, having been used as a âfoilâ on a Fox news segment on Targetâs outing of a customerâs pregnancy. Speaking of privacy, Siegel wisely dedicates a chapter to the subject. He uses it to debunk myth with minimal bias, such as distinguishing predictive analytics from data mining:
PA [predictive analytics] Â in and of itself does not invade privacy - its core process is the opposite of privacy invasion. Although itâs sometimes called data mining, PA doesnât âdrill downâ to peer at any individualâs data. Instead, PA actually ârolls upâ learning patterns that hold true in general by way of rote number crunching across the masses of customer records.
Such distinctions are critical in understanding perils with personalization programs. Reading this book will help managers who think digital only means flipping a switch.
Businesses small and large can uses this book to help frame what segments of data makes sense. For example, Siegel explains how a learning machine works through a decision diagram - although used in the book to frame an enterprise-level predictive model, small businesses could use the idea in framing their own data conundrums.
Other highlights include Chase bankâs mortgage risk predictive model, IBMâs data usage for Watson on the game show Jeopardy and a 147 example cross industry table of predictive models in use today.
How Does This Book Compare With Other Analytic Text?
Consider this book as an extension of data based marketing and more specific than Davenportâs Analytics at Work (Davenport provides a preface, by the way).
The book has comments that can make data entertaining, though with less of a spin than Avinash Kaushikâs book Web Analytics 2.0. Ultimately itâs an excellent primer for developing some ideas on how data can enhance a business.
This makes the book more actionable than Big Data, although no deep database discussions are included.
Get This Book to Make Better Models for Your Business
Predictive Analytics is excellent, not just for its trend-of-the-day subject, but for the way its treats its subject - respect and reverence, with the right scientific doubt.
The book honors the work from business intelligence professionals like Thomas Davenport, Eric Sterne and Eric Stiegel. It also honors analytic practitioners or managers looking to increase their businessâ competitive advantage.
I do not need data to know that competitive advantage is what any business is looking for.