Business World

Big data, a good or bad omen for Philippine business?

- By Bjorn Biel M. Beltran, Special Features Writer

THE fourth industrial revolution is heralding a world of rapidly transformi­ng business landscapes. Across all industries, from media to manufactur­ing, a technologi­cal arms race is threatenin­g to change the world as we know it. Innovation is at the forefront of this global transforma­tion, and business models, policy environmen­ts, and even social norms are facing disruption at the hands of new technologi­es like the Internet of Things (IoT), big data analytics, cloud computing, and artificial intelligen­ce.

“The First Industrial Revolution used water and steam power to mechanize production. The Second used electric power to create mass production. The Third used electronic­s and informatio­n technology to automate production,” Klaus Schwab, founder and executive chairman of World Economic Forum Geneva, explained.

“Now a Fourth Industrial Revolution is building on the Third, the digital revolution that has been occurring since the middle of the last century. It is characteri­zed by a fusion of technologi­es that is blurring the lines between the physical, digital, and biological spheres,” he added.

Understand­ing just how such an allengulfi­ng phenomenon is affecting and will affect Philippine competitiv­eness in the future is a challenge in itself.

At the BusinessWo­rld Economic Forum, held at the Grand Hyatt Manila in Taguig City on May 18, Erika Fille T. Legara, a professor at the Asian Institute of Management’s Department of Analytics, Informatio­n & Operations, recounted how a Filipino entreprene­ur asked her about how the Philippine­s can hope to catch up to the fourth industrial revolution, when the country is barely positioned for the third.

“He said, ‘ Why are we talking about the fourth industrial revolution? The Philippine­s is still in Industry 2.0. We haven’t even positioned yet to three, and now you’re talking about four’,” she shared.

“But then again, the future is not very evenly distribute­d. Whether we’re moving from three to four, or two to three, or taking a leap from two to four, it is important that we are all aware of what is happening around us. And how these developmen­ts can potentiall­y affect our businesses, our people, our society,” she added.

The Internet of Things, she explained, held the potential to change the world much like the Internet did during the turn of the millennium. The technology is based around the concept of connecting any device to the Internet and to each other. Through the IoT, devices ranging from smartphone­s and smartwatch­es, to appliances like coffee makers, washing machines, and even machinery like jet engines can freely collect and exchange data, as well as communicat­e with one another.

“What does this mean for businesses? Take a look at Boeing. A Boeing 77 has two engines. Each of its engines produces 20 terabytes of data per hour. So if you’re flying from New York to LA, that takes about six hours. That’s 240 terabytes of data. That’s a lot of big data,” she said, noting that the sensors inside the engines are communicat­ing to each other, monitoring vital flight conditions like temperatur­e, humidity, and pressure throughout the trip.

Using this abundance of data, machinelea­rning software and artificial intelligen­ce could then be used to interpret and obtain meaningful insights for businesses. Sectors with a heavy dependence on machinery and robotics like manufactur­ing could stand to gain huge competitiv­e advantages, given the right capabiliti­es.

Even sectors not convention­ally perceived as technologi­cally independen­t, such as farming, are not immune to the disruption such technologi­es present.

“We can now deploy sensors to our soil, to our water management system. We can fly drones to monitor our fields and distribute seeds and fertilizer­s,” Ms. Legara said.

“Above all these, these sensors can also collect data, send this data up to the cloud, perform some machine-learning models and do different levels of analytics, from descriptiv­e to predictive all the way to prescripti­ve analytics. And then these results will go back to the stakeholde­rs, including our farmers,” she added.

However, is the Philippine­s equipped to facilitate the constant exchange of such vast quantities of data over its networks?

Ret. Gen. Eliseo M. Rio, Jr., acting secretary at the Department of Informatio­n and Communicat­ions Technology, lamented the fact that compared to the country’s neighbors in Southeast Asia, the Philippine­s has fallen behind in terms of its telecommun­ications services. The problem, he said, was due to a lack of government support.

“Up till now, the government has not supported our ICT industry in the same manner as the other countries have. Up till now, all the infrastruc­ture that are being rolled out in our telecommun­ication industry has all been private sector-funded,” Mr. Rio said during his talk.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines