1 / 20

The Text Analytics Market(s) Competitive landscape and trends by Curt A. Monash, Ph.D. President, Monash Research Editor

The Text Analytics Market(s) Competitive landscape and trends by Curt A. Monash, Ph.D. President, Monash Research Editor, Text Technologies contact@monash.com http://www.monash.com http://www.texttechnologies.com. 8 linguistics-based businesses. Web search Public-facing site search

gavril
Download Presentation

The Text Analytics Market(s) Competitive landscape and trends by Curt A. Monash, Ph.D. President, Monash Research Editor

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Text Analytics Market(s) Competitive landscape and trends by Curt A. Monash, Ph.D. President, Monash Research Editor, Text Technologies contact@monash.com http://www.monash.com http://www.texttechnologies.com

  2. 8 linguistics-based businesses Web search Public-facing site search Enterprise search & knowledge management Custom publishing Text mining and extraction Spam filtering Voice recognition Machine translation

  3. Web search Giant oligopoly It's a huge business It's consolidating down to two vendors that matter If anybody but Google matters at all Startups aren't gaining traction Three kinds of search Navigational Informational Transactional

  4. Web search vendor issues today • Physical efficiency • Adversarial information retrieval • Monetization • Regulation • Branding

  5. Future web search issues • Better popularity metrics • Better use of context • Geography!! • Sub-page retrieval • Looking through security barriers • Better UIs

  6. Public-facing site search • It has dual goals • What the user actually wants • What you want the user to see • E-commerce and general search are separate businesses • E-commerce = province of smaller vendors • General = province of search, portal, or CMS vendors • Hand-tagging is key

  7. Enterprise search & KM (inward-facing) • For decades there was only one kind of text analytics … • … but that was asking too much of one technology • Now enterprise search is more circumscribed … • … but things are still convoluted • Complex needs • Multiple kinds of search • Unique technical challenges • Multiple purchase drivers • Confused market • One-size-fits-all strategy • Users want portal integration • Investment is fragmented

  8. Kinds of enterprise search • Find a specific document • Find an answer • Find ALL documents • Find an expert

  9. Technical challenges in enterprise search • Documents may not exist • Many formats • Corpus weighting • No good popularity metrics • Security • Ease of adoption!!!

  10. Many reasons to buy enterprise search • General productivity • Sure beats looking through file cabinets • “Wouldn't it be nice if ...” • KM dreams • Compliance • “Thou shalt … • Not all the reasons are good

  11. One-size-fits-all didn't work Overreaching had a lot to do with that • E-commerce search isn't general search • Text mining isn't search (or clustering) • Custom publishing isn't exactly search

  12. Custom publishing • More precise than search • Sophisticated extraction • Focus on document parts • Started with technical publishers (and intelligence) • Expanded to • Other technical documents • Other publishers • Players • Mark Logic • Various text miners • Various search vendors

  13. Bollixed enterprise search market landscape • Multiple generations of vendors flamed out • Verity • Excalibur (endlessly backed by Allen & Company) • Fulcrum et al. • FAST • Google has brand name, ease of installation • Microsoft, Oracle, SAP, and Autonomy are all confused • Products are sold for inappropriate apps • Compliance is driving demand • Small vendors are ... small

  14. Text mining • Really about sophisticated extraction • Apps and verticals mirror data mining • The action is in sentiment analysis ... • ... and ease of use • Otherwise the industry seems tired

  15. The original text mining apps: Early warning Source: July, 2006 post on Text Technologies • Vehicle safety • Other manufacturing/warranty analysis apps • Reputation management • Other customer sentiment apps • Anti-terrorism • Sarbanes-Oxley compliance (continued …)

  16. More early warning (… continued) • Antifraud • Stopping money laundering • Clinical applications (some) • Early insurance risk management apps • Early experimental hedge fund apps • Employee (dis)satisfaction (missing from the original list)

  17. Customer/market intelligence • Now drive text mining growth • Internal Voice of the Customer came first • Voice of the Market has blended in • Sales, buying, and delivery practices are in line • Departmental buying • SaaS delivery • Many vendors focus(ing) on this segment: • Attensity • Clarabridge • SAS • SPSS • Expert System S.p.A

  18. Three ways to use text mining • Business intelligence • Reports, dashboards • Attensity, Clarabridge • Predictive analytics • Data mining • SAS, SPSS • Custom publishing • nStein et al. • Lots of partnerships

  19. Six trends that could shake up the market • Web/enterprise/messaging integration • BI integration • Universal message retention • Portable personal profiles • Electronic health records • Voice command & control

  20. Further information Curt A. Monash, Ph.D. President, Monash Research Editor, Text Technologies contact@monash.com http://www.monash.com http://www.texttechnologies.com

More Related