|
Neil Raden is the Founder of Hired Brains, a consulting firm specializing in analytics, business Intelligence and decision management. He is also the co-author of the book "Smart (Enough) Systems." Write him at nraden@hiredbrains.com or Twitter @ nraden.
See More by Neil Raden The Search Engine Miracle is Wearing Thin
Search isn't that great anymore. For one thing, it's become so commercial that it's really more like an ad search engine. SEO programs game the big ones to the point that you have to go to page 20 before you find something that isn't trying to sell what you're looking for. I want the Scotty Effect for myself (see my previous post). Why can't I ask a search engine questions and get sent to exactly the places with the answers, not 10,000 hits? Why can't the search engines help me assemble the information I need? Tom Davenport suggests that the competitive playing field for businesses is analytics. I think we'd all be a lot better off if we could do some analytics for ourselves. What do you think? Here are some things I wonder about: Energy: - An electric car may produce no emissions and require no fossil fuels, but over its lifetime, how much fossil energy does it cost versus a conventional car? The electricity has to be produced and transmitted. How much energy is lost in the various steps of transmission? Healthcare: - What are the resumes of the senior staff of the FDA and the NIH? What percentage came from senior positions in the pharma/biotech industry and/or went to such positions after their tenure? - What is the real inflationary driver of healthcare? How much has the cost of liability insurance driven both the cost and the practice of medicine? Can we isolate the windfall trial lawyers received over the past few decades and match it to increased inflationary costs? Or is it the cost of expensive precautionary practices by doctors and hospitals to avoid lawsuits? - What are the real cancer statistics? Five-year survival rates are inflated by early detection. Does early detection actually improve mortality or just dramatically increase and prolong the treatment? Where can I find true mortality statistics to decide if either standard-of-care or aggressive treatments matter? Education: - Suppose I want to assemble my own definition of "Best Colleges" by selecting a different set of attributes than the magazines. Suppose I don't care about the size of the endowment or the number of applications they receive? - How can I correlate spending on primary and secondary education with quality? What percentage of education costs goes to administration and is it reasonable? Is increased spending on classrooms useful or not? - Suppose I wanted to correlate aspects of education with outcomes I'm interested in, not metrics such as those in the No Child Left behind Program? Charity: - Which organizations have the best record for getting their donations to the intended audience? - Trace the flow of funds between charities, where each one takes a cut but can claim that a high percentage was distributed to the intended recipients Maybe you're not interested in these things, but surely there are other things you would like to know. How about that perennial favorite, what should I eat to be healthy? I've gotten over my infatuation with the Web. Now I want it to solve real problems for me.
This is a public forum. United Business Media and its affiliates are not responsible for and do not control what is posted herein. United Business Media makes no warranties or guarantees concerning any advice dispensed by its staff members or readers. Community standards in this comment area do not permit hate language, excessive profanity, or other patently offensive language. Please be aware that all information posted to this comment area becomes the property of United Business Media LLC and may be edited and republished in print or electronic format as outlined in United Business Media's Terms of Service. Important Note: This comment area is NOT intended for commercial messages or solicitations of business.
|
Blog Channels
on Enterprise App Development on Changing the Enterprise by Shawn Shell by Kas Thomas Subscribe to RSS feed of all blogs Archives
|
|
|





