Wiley & sas business Series


THE EMERGENCE OF BIG DATA



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   THE EMERGENCE OF BIG DATA 
   
      The information contained in big data will reduce experience-based barriers 
to entry in many industry sectors. The traditional separation between many 
industry verticals will start to collapse and for these industries, differentia-
tion purely based on experience and sector knowledge will progressively 
evaporate. Leaders will need to become comfortable with the constant 
threat of disruption from nontraditional competitors. 
 The sudden focus on big data is more than just a technical fad. It ’s a 
manifestation of a broader zeitgeist. 
 “Big data” has become one of the most used and overused catch-
phrases. It ’s getting to the point where if something doesn ’t have the 
term somewhere in the brief, someone 
’s not doing their job. Just 
because it ’s popular, however, doesn ’t mean it ’s overstated. We ’ve been 
through the information revolution. We ’ve seen knowledge workers 
come and go. We ’ve even got our head around Web 2.0 as we rocket 
through Web 3.0 on our way to Web 4.0. 
 Big data dwarfs all of these, not only for the decade but for the 
rest of our natural lives as well. Rather than just being hype, our sheer 
volume of discussion refl ects the impact people suspect it will have. It ’s 
an idea whose time has come. 
 Ideas are fascinating. They don ’t exist in any real sense; they ’re 
a shared delusion, carrying us beyond our physicality. Abstraction is 
powerful and in some ways, it ’s what distinguishes us as a species. Jean 
Piaget, acclaimed developmental psychologist, theorized that it ’s only in 
our fi nal stage of cognitive development, the formal operational stage, 
that we make the transition from concrete thinking to abstract logic.  
 11  
 
 As babies, we are phenomenists. We defi ne our world based on 
our personal experience, not on the physicality of the objects around 
us. When we hide behind a sheet, it ’s arguable that from the baby ’s 
perspective, we ’re not just hiding. We ’ve literally temporarily ceased 
to exist. As we develop, we progressively make the leap from naturalist 
interpretation of physical objects to symbolic representation, abstract 
thought, and metacognition. 


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B I G   D A T A ,   B I G   I N N O V A T I O N
 The signifi cance of this step is enormous and yet it 
’s often 
 overlooked. While nowhere near a primary measure of self-worth or 
community value, some have suggested that as many as two-thirds 
of adults never reach the formal operational stage.  
 12  
 We refer to the 
“economy” or “market” and yet, what is it? To a child, it ’s a physical 
place where one can go to buy carrots. It ’s down the street and to the 
left, somewhere that smells of earth and spices. 
 In the abstract, it ’s a synthetic aggregation of all possible markets 
in all possible spaces at any point in time. In a multidimensional sense, 
it ’s a superposition of everything we can ’t measure or observe, all 
at once. It includes even stranger things like derivatives, collateral-
ized debt obligations, and currency created through fractional reserve 
banking. These exist not even as numbers on a piece of paper but as 
magnetic fi elds on hard drives scattered across the globe. 
 Despite being unreal in a very literal sense, they have the power to 
change our world. Ideas aren ’t real. And yet, they replicate, mutate, and 
at some stage, terminate. They hold a mirror up to our cultural gestalt
refl ecting that which is most important to us at a point in time. Richard 
Dawkins, author and evolutionary biologist, coined the term  meme  to 
describe this almost evolutionary process of cultural transmission. 
 
 13  
 
Successful memes replicate and mutate. Unsuccessful memes stagnate 
and eventually die. Thanks to the Internet, popular and culturally rele-
vant concepts propagate at the speed of light, ignoring national and social 
barriers. Resonant concepts grow in strength while irrelevant concepts 
decline. One only needs to look at doge—so impressive; much sharing.  
 14  
 
 Memes survive through cultural relevance. And, not all do. Our 
linguistic landscape is scattered with “lost words,” terms that for some 
reason fell out of favor. The archaic term,  

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