Global Times - Weekend

Big Data Drive

China’s growth bolsters analytics industry, though penetratio­n still lags behind

- By Xie Jun

China’s big data industry has been growing fast in recent years, a response to the country’s strong economic developmen­t stimulus, though the penetratio­n of data usage in domestic companies still lags behind companies in countries like India and the US, an industry survey on data literacy in firms around the world showed on Wednesday.

According to the survey, which was conducted in March by Qlik, a USheadquar­tered data analytics provider, only 11 percent of surveyed employees from Chinese companies are data literate, a little higher than the 6 percent data literacy rate in Japanese com- panies but lagging far behind the 45 percent rate in Indian companies and the 33 percent rate in US companies.

Data literacy refers to the ability to read, work with, analyze as well as challenge data, according to Julian Quinn, regional vice president at Qlik Asia-Pacific.

Qlik surveyed 11,000 full-time employees across 11 countries and regions around the world, of which 1,050 were Chinese.

According to Quinn, a low data literacy rate might point to a topdown decision-making mechanism in companies. He also stressed that only when penetratio­n of data usage is deeper, meaning more lower-level employees are engaged in data usage, can a company fully flourish.

Quinn told the Global Times on Wednesday that instead of a company only allowing its IT department to do the job of collecting and analyzing data, it is a better approach if all the company’s department­s are given the opportunit­y to analyze and use data themselves so they can meet their own needs.

According to Quinn, the fact that China lacks the skills to fully leverage its informatio­n resources at a time when its data is burgeoning is “worrying,” but he predicted that the country’s data literacy rate will improve in the next few years.

He also stressed that China is now an “incredible market” for Qlik and will be their fast-growing market in the near future. However, he didn’t disclose the company’s revenue growth in China for the last few years.

Qlik’s survey results came as China’s big data industry is skyrocketi­ng. Liu Dingding, a Beijing-based industry analyst, said that China’s big data industry took off about 20 years ago and is now in the middle of a rapid developmen­t phase.

“It has a lot to do with China’s fast economic growth, especially the government’s encouragem­ent of innovation as well as entreprene­urship in recent years. This has resulted in a surge in the number of enterprise­s in the country, which need data to help navigate their businesses,” Liu pointed out.

According to a report published in March 2017 by a scientific research institutio­n under the Ministry of Industry and Informatio­n Technology, the domestic big data industry’s value reached 16.8 billion yuan ($2.65 billion) in 2016, up by 45 percent year-on-year.

But Liu cautioned that some of the data reports provided by domestic data firms are not accurate enough.

Quinn said that data usage is not always about compiling data reports. “Visualizat­ion is just the tip of the data iceberg. What’s more important is the insights provided through the data, such as revealing where the market blindspots are and what the fundamenta­l reasons behind selling success or nonsuccess are,” he told

the Global Times.

 ?? File photo: VCG ??
File photo: VCG

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