Business Value

Business Value

Today, more industries and more enterprises require the ability to process large amounts of fast-moving, fluid data in order to meet compliance regulations, maximize resources and mitigate waste.

Big data is big business, and as more and more systems come online and the sheer size and volume of both structured and unstructured data increases, businesses need to figure out ways to not only store—or not store—data, but how to process it, act on it and maximize it in real time.

  • According to IDC, a 62% increase in worldwide data over the previous year occurred in 2009.
  • Digital information in 2009 reached 0.8 zettabytes (one zettabyte equals a trillion gigabytes) and could reach as much as 44 zettabytes by 2020.
  • According to Berkeley’s School of Management, more data will be created in the next 3 years than in the previous 40,000.

All of that data needs to be analyzed, insight gleaned, and, then, put into action. Companies used to rely on human-driven business intelligence solutions which took days to weeks to months to process depending on the industry. Now, enterprises can rely on Starview’s intelligent platform and its unique Active Model™ to process all of the information in real time, analyze it, identify the next best action that steers clear of error and puts the company on the path to optimizing any critical business process across a wide array of industries, including:

  • Energy & Utilities: Create truly Smart Grids that reduce carbon footprint while promoting a greener planet; meet compliance regulations and avoid disasters by monitoring the states of pipelines and drilling platforms.
  • Financial Services: Deploy intelligent predictive trading that maximizes profit; ensure payments and funds in large transaction processing institutions are completed and bleed is eliminated.
  • Manufacturing: Identify opportunities to not only conserve resources and virtually eliminate waste through real-time predictive actions that ensure 100% throughput and the highest levels of quality.
  • Telecommunications: Pinpoint and maximize new revenue opportunities; competitively differentiate in a market that is rapidly becoming commoditized.