Predictive modeling: New techniques will make it faster and DEEPER
Before a bank offers you a mortgage re-fi, or a credit card company dangles a low interest rate before your eyes, some information-systems worker has probably pegged you as a promising prospect. He most likely used predictive modeling to do it, and it wasn't a quick, easy task.
U.S. economy lost steam in Q2, slower growth looms
When the first quarter ended, many analysts projected the subsequent months would bring even stronger gains in Gross Domestic Product. But the high hopes of economy watchers for acceleration in growth were dashed by reality when the U.S.
How small businesses can survive and thrive in a recession — part two
Some small firms have weathered the economic storm by cutting expenses and reducing staff. But others have continued forward by focusing on what they do best: exemplary customer service, employee excellence and innovation. They tweaked their business plans to react to the new economic realities.
Podcast: Real estate markets — 20 percent of mortgages under water nationally
High foreclosure rates and negative equity continue to haunt real estate markets across the nation. In fact, a new report states that about 20 percent of mortgages nationally are under water.
The whole truth and nothing but the truth: Managing information asymmetry in IS consulting
A cynic might say that information systems consultants shortchange their clients. They can, for example, promise more than they deliver. Or they can tarry and delay. Or they might ask, on the back end, to bill for "unanticipated" work.
Job growth improves in 20 states
More state labor markets are pulling out of the economic slump created by the recession. As recently as March of this year, only two states (North Dakota and Alaska) were adding nonfarm jobs year-over-year. By May, the number of states posting year-to-year growth had improved to an even dozen.
Making services a science: New study finds great interest — and great confusion
Companies like IBM, PetSmart and Marriott have been proving that enormous success, and enormous profits, can be found in services. Yet services have always been difficult to get your arms around — difficult to understand.
ASU-RSI: Phoenix home prices expected to flatten (your sector may vary)
The small increases in Phoenix housing prices that began this spring will likely continue for only a month or two longer, then flatten out for "an extended period," said Karl Guntermann, a professor of real estate who calculates the ASU-Repeat Sales Index (ASU-RSI) at the W. P. Carey Sc
Emergency programming: The mindset that makes it happen
The team from the Department of Information Systems that created decision-support software to help distribute crucial H1N1 vaccine knew that for this project, speed trumped all other protocols.
Temporary employment: This bellwether bears watching
Optimism about the strength of the recovery took another hit when the June employment numbers were released recently. Economy-watchers had expected at least modest growth, but seasonally adjusted nonfarm employment fell by 125,000 jobs from May.