No, nada, nein and nyet.
But at least it's something. Big data certainly offers illumination on a variety of issues. It may help many industries and the companies within them operate smarter, faster and more profitably. But as the following article explains, the knowledge, skills and experience required are not exactly the stuff of a revived middle class. As the accompanying illustration suggests, there is going to be more need for hardware than for the people to dig wisdom out of it.
The putative number of jobs that may be created to better identify, analyze, interpret and manage the outpouring of wisdom is hardly enough to make a noticeable dent in the demand created by the number of students getting university or college degrees, let alone those already ostensibly in the workforce but looking for actual work..
To put this in perspective, there are approximately 21 million Americans pursuing degrees of some sort in higher education. Assuming, purely for the sake of speculation, that approximately one quarter graduate per year (and we understand that many take years to complete their degrees while many others never do), that would mean @ 5 million grads a year looking for work. Okay, cut it by a third, or in half: that's still almost than ten times the number expected to find jobs in Big Data. And that does not include all those skilled college grads currently unemployed, whether aged 21 or 61.
There is, however, opportunity here. Many will find that their otherwise unmarketable degree in anthropology or English lit could be 're-purposed' to data analysis. What will be required is smart people, driven by curiosity and ambition. What this may do is break the logjam created by companies looking for a degree of specificity so minute as to be unattainable. Demand stimulates opportunity and creativity. Big Data may not create lots of new jobs but it may force enterprises to rethink how to mold experience, skill and intelligence into competence. And, pssst! Call that process an investment, not a cost; your CFO will thank you. JL
Clay Dillow reports in CNN/Money:
In the U.S. alone, a McKinsey & Company report projects a shortfall of between 140,000 and 190,000 "deep analytical" big data professionals by 2018 -- that is, people with highly technical skills in machine learning, statistics, and/or computer science, the actual hands-on big data people that know how to crunch huge data sets into meaningful information.
Big data has been favorably cast as "the new oil" and held up as the economic counterweight to America's sinking manufacturing sector. And while the "data is the new oil" analogy isn't perfect or even necessarily sound (data is both abundant and renewable, after all), there's some merit to the metaphor. As oil did at the beginning of the last century, big data is going to drive economies in the century ahead. But it may not do so in the way that many people think it will.
As with oil, companies know data is out there in large quantities and that it's not enough to simply know where it is -- it has to be extracted, refined, and delivered in a usable format to be valuable. And like the energy economy before it, the data economy needs dedicated people -- 4.4 million of them by 2015 in the IT field alone, according to an oft-cited Gartner Research analysis.
But here the similarities end. The oil patch has never had much trouble finding and training enough roughnecks to get oil out of the ground, but training up skilled big data professionals is a different enterprise entirely.
But what's often overlooked in this dim projection of the big data labor market is that the impact of big data on employment goes far deeper than the deep analytics and IT fields. Companies need professionals at all levels that are not necessarily schooled in deep analytics but are nonetheless big data-savvy. These professionals don't need degrees in computer science or statistics.
A VP at management consulting and technology advisory outfit Booz Allen Hamilton recently told InformationWeek that the company has had great success bringing physicists and music majors onto data science teams -- creative thinkers who know less about computer science and more about how to look at big data problems in a different way. Though companies and economies will certainly need data scientists to manage their massive databases and information technology teams to support them, to a far greater degree they'll need professionals knowledgeable and creative enough to leverage big data to the greatest possible advantage.
"Advances in software, in interface design, and things like that will make it easier to analyze big data in the future," says Dr. Betsy Page Sigman, a professor at Georgetown University's McDonough School of Business and an expert on technology and information systems. "So it won't be as big of a technological hurdle. The more important thing for companies will be to have a lot of people that understand not just how to produce statistics and analytics, but understand how to make better decisions because they have this information."
Any employment bump tied to the proliferation of big data analytics won't be confined to IT departments or even to dedicated "data divisions" that emerge within companies. And it isn't just big data specialists like data scientists and statisticians that stand to benefit from this boom. Big data opportunities are already being exploited in data-centered pursuits like risk management, marketing, and research science, but the applications are virtually limitless.
Academically, big data is playing a role in decidedly non-data disciplines, like some portions of the social sciences and humanities, says Jim Spohrer, computer scientist and director of IBM's Global University Relations Programs. It will increasingly become integral in medical research, various kinds of product development and modeling, and all types of research science. To remain competitive, companies will require professionals at all levels that fundamentally grasp big data concepts and and know how to use them to their advantage.
"What we're seeing now is the tip of the iceberg," Spohrer says. "You think of all the different jobs that exist today. How is all the data associated with each person's job going to change the job and the skills they need?"
Part of this shift will simply require the retooling of existing jobs, but there is also a new class of positions and skills emerging as well, Spohrer says, positions like "chief data officer" that will become more common within existing companies large and small. These jobs won't necessarily be occupied by deep analytics-types either, but by non-data professionals educated and experienced in their chosen industry while also skilled in the use of big data tools (which, as Sigman noted above, will only become easier for non-data professionals to use).
Existing companies will expand as they deploy more big data resources -- both human and technological -- to leverage big data to their advantage. But the space to watch isn't necessarily existing companies reorganizing to embrace big data, but the emerging big data industry where deep analytical job growth is likely to make its biggest economic impacts.
As with so many other specialized endeavors that fall outside the purview of core business -- things like advertising and marketing, the latter of which is itself being completely transformed by big data analytics -- many big data applications will be farmed out to outside contractors who specialize in big data analysis and problem solving, Sigman says. Scores of big data startups are already emerging (largely with the help of venture capital) to meet this demand, including MapR, ParStream, ScaleArc, and Cloudant. The ones who are able to best meet their customers' data analytics needs are poised to become home to many of those many millions jobs big data will generate over the next few years.
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