Customers Rapidly Adopting Big Data Solutions - Driven By Marketing, Sales and More - Reports New Microsoft Research

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February 11, 2013
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Customers Rapidly Adopting Big Data Solutions - Driven By Marketing, Sales and More - Reports New Microsoft Research

New findings headline weeklong series on the Microsoft News Center showcasing big-data customers, industry perspectives, solutions and more.

REDMOND, Wash., Feb. 11, 2013 /PRNewswire/ -- More than 75 percent of midsize to large businesses are implementing big-data-related solutions within the next 12 months -- with customer care, marketing and sales departments increasingly driving demand, according to new Microsoft Corp. research released today.

(Logo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20000822/MSFTLOGO)

According to Microsoft's "Global Enterprise Big Data Trends: 2013" study of more than 280 IT decision-makers, the following trends emerged:

    --  Although the IT department (52 percent) is currently driving most of the
        demand for big data, customer care (41 percent), sales (26 percent),
        finance (23 percent) and marketing (23 percent) departments are
        increasingly driving demand.
    --  Seventeen percent of customers surveyed are in the early stages of
        researching big data solutions, whereas 13 percent have fully deployed
        them; nearly 90 percent of customers surveyed have a dedicated budget
        for addressing big data.
    --  Nearly half of customers (49 percent) reported that growth in the volume
        of data is the greatest challenge driving big data solution adoption,
        followed by having to integrate disparate business intelligence tools
        (41 percent) and having tools able to glean the insight (40 percent).
The company published its findings to the Microsoft News Center (http://www.microsoft.com/news) this morning, kicking off a week of announcements focused on the company's big data customers, products and future investments.

Microsoft "Big Data Week"

"Big data can be large tables of structured data, huge files of complex unstructured data, or small amounts of machine-generated data that pile up faster than you can make sense of it," said Eron Kelly, general manager of SQL Server at Microsoft. "Microsoft's goal is to help everyone make better, faster decisions by providing tools that make it easy to find insights in big data, small data ... any data."

Big data is changing the way organizations and people do business, discover insights and interact with one another. This week Microsoft will embark on a week of digital storytelling that showcases what customers, partners, the industry and Microsoft are doing to bring this vision to life:

    --  Today: "Global Enterprise Big Data Trends: 2013" and insight from big
        data executives and analysts
    --  Tuesday, Feb. 12: Spotlight on big data early adopters, including a Q&A
        with The Weather Channel Chief Information Officer Bryson Koehler on how
        big data is transforming his company
    --  Wednesday, Feb. 13: Microsoft's big data approach, investments and
        products
    --  Thursday, Feb. 14: Silicon Valley big data event highlights
    --  Friday, Feb. 15: The future of big data and machine learning within
        Microsoft Research, including a Q&A with MSR Researcher Eric Horvitz
Founded in 1975, Microsoft (Nasdaq "MSFT") is the worldwide leader in software, services and solutions that help people and businesses realize their full potential.

SOURCE  Microsoft Corp.

Photo:http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20000822/MSFTLOGO
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Microsoft Corp.

CONTACT: Rapid Response Team, Waggener Edstrom Worldwide, +1-503-443-7070, rrt@waggeneredstrom.com

Web Site: http://www.microsoft.com

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