Data Analytics Trend Report Guide PDF

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Data Analytics

in 2021
A Comprehensive Trend Report
INTRODUCTION
Data is the new oil in today’s digital economy, and businesses that are able to
harness it are the ones staying ahead in the competition. It’s evident when you look
at some of the biggest and the most innovative brands of the era — such as Google,
Facebook, Amazon, and Apple — that treat data as their holy grail. And, they are
investing heavily in data analytics to drive the maximum value out of their data.

Data analytics has surfaced as one of the key competitive resources in recent times.
And not just for these tech giants, but businesses of all sizes. In fact, 67% of small
businesses today spend more than $10K annually on analytics tools and technologies.
Also, the number of businesses relying on data analytics has seen a massive jump in
the last few years.

Looking back at 2017, which was a banner year for analytics adoption, more than 50%
of organizations across industries like healthcare, education, finance, and telecom
made data analytics a part of their business expense and operations. By 2020, that
figure has inflated massively, with 90% of businesses considering data and analytics
to be key to their organization’s digital transformation initiatives.
The data explosion of the past decade has made it critical, if not essential, for
organizations to become more data-driven and derive value from their data. And
now, with the global pandemic forcing millions of companies to re-think their business
models almost overnight, the race to achieve digital transformation is more intense
than ever. They are under mounting pressure to adapt in order to survive and sustain.
And they need people skilled in interpreting and managing their data to unlock the
potentials and opportunities that Big Data presents.

With analytics sitting at the top of the current skill gap in tech jobs, there lies an
enormous opportunity for aspiring analysts to carve a great career in this field. If
you’re one of them, updating your knowledge and learning new skills could be your
first step towards a fulfilling career that holds limitless potential for decades to come.

This data analytics trend report rounds up the top data analytics trends for 2021
and glances back at the trends that developed over 2020. It further highlights the
most popular analytics tools in use and the most sought-after skills that hiring
companies are looking for to fill their data analytics positions.

LOOKING BACK:
TRENDS THAT DEFINED 2020
With the business landscape doing a topsy-turvy, organizations have been challenged
to raise their data and analytics game this year. In their attempt to meet the shifting
consumption patterns of consumers and the needs of employees working remotely
or from their homes, companies have had to make radical changes in their digital
strategies. Data analytics has allowed them to identify these changes and draw
insights to make appropriate business decisions with speed and precision. Overall,
it’s been a year when data analytics captured the attention of top business execs
and decision-makers who made real time implementations to reduce cost, innovate,
make faster decisions, and adapt to the changing times.

Let’s take a look back at some data analytics trends that we’re wrapping up 2020
with.
Augmented Analytics
By automatically sifting through huge data repositories of a company, analyzing
them, and presenting actionable insights, augmented analytics made it faster and
more accurate for businesses to crunch their data.

As a trend that emerged from the world of analytics colliding with that of artificial
intelligence and machine learning augmented analytics made developing, sharing,
and interpreting analytics much easier. Gartner calls it the “dominant driver of new
purchases of analytics and business intelligence as well as data science and machine
learning platforms.”

Natural Language Processing (NLP)


2020 has been a busy year for Natural Language Processing (NLP) research. One
of the biggest news in this field has been the release of the largest natural language
processing (NLP) transformer ever — GPAT-3, which is known to be 10X ahead of
Microsoft Research’s Turing-NLG. On the business front, companies have been using
NLP for applications such as chatbot technology, speech recognition, clinical trial
matching, spam filters, and so on.
Continuous Intelligence
Continuous intelligence or real-time intelligence became more available and usable
by companies thanks to technologies like the cloud, machine learning, the Internet
of Things (IoT), and streaming software growing more interconnected.

Data Pipelines
A data pipeline is a series of data processing steps that allow you to merge data from
multiple sources and makes it accessible for analysis and visualization purposes.
With data booming from all quarters, data pipelines are playing an important role
in helping citizen data scientists to work better with machine learning models and
formulate strategies for better implementation.

Data analysts are utilizing data pipelines for the management of and crisis response
against COVID-19. An excellent example is the US State of Ohio that used smart data
pipelines to collate and analyze data from 88 counties without hand-coding and
created a COVID-19 dashboard overnight.
ANALYTICS TRENDS TO WATCH
OUT FOR 2021
The trends that played out this year will continue to ripple through
2021, while fresh trends might appear on the horizon. With
new data practices and challenges coming up, it will be
interesting to watch how data analytics evolves to
address these changes. But one thing is for certain
— businesses will become more analytics-driven,
whether they want it or not.

That said, let’s take a peek into data analytics trends that are
likely to have a big impact in the coming year.

More focus on business value


IDC predicts the global data will boom to 175 zettabytes by
2025. Given the scale and complexity of the data landscape,
drawing business value out of data is getting tougher than
ever.

According to Roberto Torres of Ciodive.com, “organizations


emerging from the initial reactive phase will look to their
data analytics initiatives to enable a smarter company,
one that automates insight generation and finds ways
to monetize its data inventory.”

Eventually, this could lead to more scalable data analytics solutions that have a
higher business impact.
Crisis prevention will become a big area of
implementation
During the pandemic, AI and analytics have been critical in helping healthcare
organizations comb through tens of thousands of journals, research papers, news
sources, social media posts, and clinical trials data to predict disease spread, develop
capacity-plan, find new treatments, and identify vulnerable populations.

What Gartner terms as “X analytics” could become a means to find answers to the
most hard-hitting challenges facing our society, including disease prevention, climate
change, and wildlife protection.

“X analytics” is “an umbrella term, where X is the data variable for a range of different
structured and unstructured content such as text analytics, video analytics, audio
analytics, etc.,” according to Gartner.

Blockchain in data and analytics


Blockchain isn’t alien to data analytics; the coming year will see blockchain, within
the data analytics realm, being used for vertically specific, business-driven initiatives
such as smart contracts.

According to SmartData Collective, “When paired with Blockchain, Data Science is


turned into something far more structured and concrete, so it becomes even more
useful.” Blockchain also enables data analytics applications to mine larger amounts
of data, making insights that much more worthwhile.

More emphasis on regulation


While GDPR and CCPA have been huge steps in the direction of streamlining the
data regulatory landscape, experts believe it’s just the tip of the iceberg. With data
volumes multiplying at a break-neck speed, it’s fast paving the way for an environment
where it will be necessary for businesses to define how they collect, handle, and use
consumer data. As such, enterprises have to get used to the tightening of the data-
handling and privacy laws.
The maturity of Data-as-a-Service (DaaS)
By enabling companies to access real-time data streams from anywhere in the world,
DaaS solutions seek to break down silos and promote better sharing of data between
departments within an organization.

Many experts have long been supporting the cause of DaaS becoming a way to
internally store, process, and reuse the data businesses collect for capitalizing on
them externally. As the trend matures, it will transform into functional services driven
by processed data, which businesses will use to set up complex real-time analytical
systems to gain a competitive edge.

THE MOST POPULAR DATA


ANALYTICS TOOLS FOR
BUSINESSES IN 2021
Businesses are increasingly trying to forge new paths within their data analytics
strategies. And supporting them in their journey is a huge swath of data analytics
tools and platforms.

The entry barriers are falling steadily, making it easier for businesses to adopt data
analytics tools into their operations. Plus, the unique business challenges presented
this year have further pushed businesses into recognizing the importance of
leveraging data-driven efficiency and growth strategies.

Today’s analytics tools are empowering organizations to harness and make better
use of their data to predict trends and challenges, identify opportunities, improve
decision making, and increase the speed, scale, and sustainability of their business.

Here are some top analytics tools that are helping some of the most successful
companies of today achieve their data analytics goals.
01
Apache
• Hadoop – Hadoop is an open-source software framework, written in the
programming language Java, and is arguably one of the most popular tools employed
by the likes of IBM, Facebook, Microsoft, and AWS.

• Storm – As a fast, reliable, and scalable framework written in Java and Clojure,
Storm is a hit with companies such as Yahoo, Alibaba, and Groupon for its varied use
cases, including machine learning, distributed RPC, continuous computation, and
real-time analytics, to name a few.

• Samoa – Scalable Advanced Massive Online Analysis, condensed as Samoa,


is an open-source platform most commonly used to mining big data streams and in
ML (Machine Learning) applications.

02
Cassandra
This free-to-use, open-source database offers an ideal platform for managing massive
data loads across cloud infrastructures or legacy hardware and is used by Fortune
100 companies such as Uber, Spotify, Walmart, Netflix, Instagram, among others.

03
Knime
A provider of end-to-end data science solutions, KNIME offers no-fuss ETL (Extract,
Transform, Load) operations, a set of rich algorithms, and highly-organized workflows,
making it an effective and powerful tool for data mining and analytics tasks.

04
Microsoft HDInsight
This open-source, full-spectrum, fully-managed, cloud-based service is one of the
top choices for companies that want a fast and cost-effective way to process big
data sets.

05
Skytree
This is an enterprise-grade big data analytics platform that enables data analysts
and scientists to develop predictive models quickly and accurately.
Other popular tools in this field include XPlenty, Datawrapper, Lumify, Rapidminer,
and, SpliceMachine.

DATA ANALYST CAREER:


SKILLS REQUIRED TO GET
HIRED IN 2021
Today, the role of a data analyst is counted among the most in-demand data jobs
of the coming years. If you’re planning to get a foot in the door of the data industry,
there are some skills to master.

Programming – The knowledge of Python, R, and Java is mandatory for


performing the tasks of a data analyst. Other programming languages
you must be familiar with include SQL, C ++, Ruby, Scala, Tensorflow, Weka,
Julia, MATLAB, SPSS, SAS, and Hive.

Data Warehousing – A data analyst must have an understanding of


non-relational and relational databases. Some of the most popular relational
databases include IBM DB2, MySQL, Oracle Database, and Microsoft SQL
Server, while common non-relational databases include Neo4j, Redis, HBase,
Coachbase, Cassandra, DocumentDB, and MongoDB.

Computational Frameworks – The knowledge of frameworks relevant to big


data analytics is another key skill to possess. Data analytics frameworks
include Hadoop, MapReduce, Apache Flink, Apache Samza, Apache Storm,
and Apache Spark.

Statistics and Quantitative Aptitude – Because the foundational principles


of big data analytics are largely based on linear algebra and statistics, an
analyst needs to have basic math skills, specifically statistics. They must be
able to grasp the core concepts of probability distribution, random variables,
or summary statistics.
Visualization – A critical aspect of data analysis is visualization. With
the business focus getting more intense in the field of data and analytics,
it’s a necessary skill to have to present the insights in a way that’s digestible
for business leaders, partners, and stakeholders. As such, aspirants must
have a working knowledge of data visualization tools such as Tableau.

Inference skills – As a person tasked with drawing out workable insights


from data sets in their day-to-day role, a lot depends on their skills to
derive appropriate conclusions from available data plus previous experiences
and knowledge.

Besides those, you’ll also need Microsoft Excel skills, basic web development
skills, basic SQL skills, data mapping skills, and the ability to identify patterns
in large data sets.

As for qualifications, a bachelor’s degree in computer science, math,


statistics, or information management can serve as an ideal foundation to
build your career in the field of data analytics.
CARVE YOUR CAREER PATH IN
DATA ANALYTICS
The race to deploy data analytics is getting intense, with businesses scooping up
data professionals such as Data Analysts, Data Scientists, Database Developers, Big
Data Engineers, and Data Modelers faster than skilled talents entering the market.

While a bachelor’s degree in the aforementioned subjects can help you set the right
basics for this career, it’s certainly not enough. Apart from keeping yourself updated
with the latest trends and best practices in the industry, it is crucial to upgrade your
knowledge base with specialized skills in order to build a thriving career in data
analytics.

The good news is, you can learn the skills you need at your own pace, without going
back to school. A certification from revered industry-recognized institutes such as
Simplilearn can offer you an edge to stand out and become a sought-after candidate
for hiring companies.

Arm yourself with our Data Analyst Master’s Program and master the skills such as
advanced analytics, data visualization, and programming, as well as learn to use the
relevant tools that are essential for a data analyst’s role.

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