IT'S A STEAL AS NEW DATA MINING CENTER OPENS
by Thomas Y.B. Chen
IHPC signed an agreement last week with SAS in what may have been a deal to
acquire SAS software license at bargain basement price.
Under the agreement, IHPC and SAS will jointly form the Enterprise Mining
Center, which will deliver data mining services and solutions to local
enterprises using SAS' Enterprise Miner software.
While company officials have not revealed the price of licensing to IHPC,
SAS regional director of Asia, Bruce Brown made it clear to reporters after
the signing that SAS treat this as a "very special case."
When asked to estimate SAS' input to the new center, Brown puts the figure
at around a quarter of a million in terms of software and solutions provided.
The company sees the agreement in positive light, however, believing that
SAS will eventually earn the investment back through the growth and maturation
of the data mining market.
"We will earn it back by the awareness of the usage of data mining, the
awareness of Enterprise Miner as a leading data mining solutions," said Tan
Ser Yean, regional marketing manager of SAS. "This is more like a marketing
kind of investment that we are putting in."
IHPC will be putting the software to good use.
Initial plan is to use the software to fulfill data mining projects
conducted for local enterprises.
To good use
Funded by Singapore's National Science & Technology Board, IHPC has an
explicit mandate to "enhance Singapore's global competitiveness through the
innovative application of leading-edge computational technology."
With the expertise and pricing provided by the new center, IHPC hopes to
encourage local enterprises in adopting data mining solutions.
As a business solution, data mining is a technology that allows an
organization to analyze its data in such a way as to identify trends, patterns
and correlation. Through these analyses, strategies identifying specific
market segments and consumer behavior can be formulated, among other things.
"As local firms, they are a bit conservative, a bit reserved," said Fong,
"they want to test the water first, to see what data mining can do for them,
and the Enterprise Mining Center will provide that."
Brown believes this process of gradual commitment is a major appeal of the
new center for local enterprises.
Offering to deliver data mining on a project basis, the center affords local
enterprises an opportunity to test out what the solution can do without
incurring any cost of set up or acquisition.
A project with the center ranges from S$30 000 to $100 000 a pop depending
on the demands and duration of the project.
The center, however, is not planning to remain an initiatory gateway for
enterprises deliberating on the merits of data mining.
Already, companies are encouraged to take on bigger projects with the center
and if the initiative proves to be profitable, IHPC will consider rolling the
center out as a full-fledge consulting agency.
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