Competing on Analytics: Updated, with a New Introduction: The New Science of Winning
By (Author) Thomas H. Davenport
By (author) Jeanne Harris
Foreword by David Abney
Harvard Business Review Press
Harvard Business Review Press
1st November 2017
Revised Edition
United States
General
Non Fiction
Management and management techniques
Management decision making
Hardback
320
Width 155mm, Height 234mm
The new edition of a business classic.
This landmark work, the first to introduce business leaders to analytics, reveals how analytics are rewriting the rules of competition.
Updated with fresh content,Competing on Analyticsprovides the road map for becoming an analytical competitor, showing readers how to create new strategies for their organisations based on sophisticated analytics. Introducing a five-stage model of analytical competition, Davenport and Harris describe the typical behaviours, capabilities, and challenges of each stage. They explain how to assess your company's capabilities and guide it toward the highest level of competition. With equal emphasis on two key resources, human and technological, this book reveals how even the most highly analytical companies can up their game.
With an emphasis on predictive, prescriptive, and autonomous analytics for marketing, supply chain, finance, M&A, operations, R&D, and HR, the book contains numerous new examples from different industries and business functions, such as Disney's vacation experience, Google's HR, UPS's logistics, the Chicago Cubs' training methods, and Firewire Surfboards' customisation. Additional new topics and research include:
The business classic that turned a generation of leaders into analytical competitors,Competing on Analyticsis the definitive guide for transforming your company's fortunes in the age of analytics and big data.
Praise for the updated edition: Paul Roma, Chief Analytics Officer, Deloitte Consulting LLP Competing on Analytics both captured and stimulated a revolution in the business landscape in 2007. It's great to have a new version that incorporates the latest concepts.Gary Loveman, Executive Vice President, Consumer Health and Services, Aetna; former Chairman and CEO, Caesars Entertainment Nowhere is there a better case for analytics than in health care, where the opportunity exists to dramatically improve health and reduce cost by identifying and then closing gaps in care. As Davenport and Harris make clear, the challenges are organizational, not technological or empirical. It takes focused leadership and the establishment of deep analytic capability to drive sustained competitive differentiation. Praise for the original edition: John Rowe, retired Chairman, President, and CEO, Exelon CorporationCompeting on Analytics will be invaluable to anyone who is truly interested in making a difference in today's business world. Rob Neyer, former columnist, ESPN In business, as in baseball, the question isnt whether or not youll jump into analytics; the question is when. Do you want to ride the analytics horse to profitabilityor follow it with a shovel Steve Maritz, Chairman and CEO, Maritz Davenport and Harris have raised the bar with their study and insights into how analytics can become a competitive advantage.
Thomas H. Davenport is the Presidents Distinguished Professor of IT and Management at Babson College and a research fellow at the MIT Initiative on the Digital Economy. He is the cofounder of the International Institute for Analytics and senior adviser to Deloitte Analytics. He is the author of nineteen books, including five on analytics and cognitive technology. Jeanne G. Harris is on the faculty at Columbia University, where she teaches Business Analytics Management. She is the coauthor of two books and over one hundred articles on analytics and information technology. She is executive research fellow emerita and was the global Managing Director of Information Technology and Analytics Research at the Accenture Institute for High Performance.