Text mining

Analysis of text mining companies, technology, and trends. Related subjects include:

March 26, 2007

Clarabridge takes on Attensity

Text mining newbie Clarabridge gave me the all-too-customary “Please let us brief you, but then don’t write about it for a while” routine. Now that it’s OK to post, what I’m up for offering is a few salient points in bullet form.

Frankly, if somebody wants an alternative to the Attensity/Teradata/Business Objects partnership they could do worse than talk with Clarabridge.

March 21, 2007

Text Analytics Summit marketing panel: Membership firmed up

We’ve now solidified the membership of the Text Analytics Summit marketing panel. It is:

Michelle, Michel, and Mary are all obvious choices, responsible for marketing at leading text mining vendors. In addition, Mary has excelled on the same panel in the past, Michel sent me e-mail with some brilliant thoughts on the panel subject, and Attensity has one of the most interesting strategies in the text analytics market.

As for Dave — he’s simply one of the most astute marketing theorists working in software today. And he runs a very interesting text technology company. And he used to be most senior marketing guy in all of business intelligence, when he was SVP at Business Objects. In his copious free time, he writes a really cool blog.

March 19, 2007

What’s going on at ClearForest?

I tried to invite Jay Henderson so speak on the Text Analytics Summit marketing panel, but got no answer to my e-mail. The company phone directory didn’t work so well for him either. I sent e-mail to a general PR company e-mail address, and that didn’t get returned. And Ravi tells me he has had similar difficulties reaching them. Read more

March 7, 2007

Three crucial issues in text analytics

As so often happens in life, I have gotten the job of fixing something that I was complaining about. Specifically, I’ve been asked to run the Marketing panel at the Text Analytics Summit in Newton, MA, June 12-13. In connection with this, organizer Ravi Virpal has asked me to come up with three major points or themes I feel we should address. Read more

February 1, 2007

What’s interesting about the FAST venture in BI

FAST is annoying me a bit these days. It’s nothing serious, but travel schedule screw-up’s, an annoying embargo, and a screw-up in the annoying embargo have all hit at once. So I’ll keep this telegraphic and move on to other subjects.

And as another example of how this wasn’t the smoothest PR month for FAST, Steve Arnold somehow got the false idea that they were getting out of true text search altogether.

January 11, 2007

Text Analytics Summit — a promising idea gone bad

I hope to be proved wrong, but I think the Text Analytics Summits going forward will be a waste of time and money. The model the first two years was the same, with key features being:

Most of the attendees are vendors, and the ones I talk with almost uniformly agree they didn’t learn much, and they didn’t meet many prospects either.

If you’re a user or prospect, you can do as well inviting vendors to make sales pitches to you, and eventually calling references. If you’re a vendor, it’s a great place to socialize with your buddies from other firms, but that’s about it. If you’re press or analyst — well, it’s an easy drive for me in Boston, and I’m really focused on this subject area, so I’ve been attending. But almost no other press or analysts went, and I honestly can’t blame them for staying away.

Could this change? Yes. But in my discussions with the organizers, I’ve gotten zero reason to think that it will.

December 27, 2006

Text analytics is finally being used for investment analysis

Jay Henderson of ClearForest tells me that hedge funds are one of their more interesting growth areas. It’s about time.

I think a lot of the reason for investment firms not making more use of text analytics has been structural — Factiva, the (relatively speaking) mammoth joint venture of Reuters and Dow Jones, is forbidden by its parent companies from meeting investment firms’ needs. And that’s kind of a pity, as it’s probably the best-positioned firm to do so. It’s good to hear that the little guys are finally filling the gap.

December 27, 2006

Telling Attensity and ClearForest apart

So far as I can tell, Attensity’s strategy when the company was originally founded was rather like ClearForest’s strategy today – and vice-versa. That said, here’s where they seem to stand at this time:

Read more

November 30, 2006

Does web text mining need to be cloaked?

One semi-flagship use for text mining is to track sentiment across news articles, websites, etc. Should this be done openly, or is there a danger of being spoofed? (I doubt it; probably no more than a few of the sites would ever be motivated to do so.) But what if you’re making many hits against the same site, to the point that your traffic is unwelcome? Or maybe the site is a direct competitor. In such cases, hiding your tracks may be more relevant.

If any of this is an issue for you, you should take a look at Anonymizer’s growing enterprise offering. Apparently, there are commercial enterprises using thousands of seats each of Anonymizer’s cloaking service.

November 11, 2006

Text mining and search, joined at the hip

Most people in the text analytics market realize that text mining and search are somewhat related. But I don’t think they often stop to contemplate just how close the relationship is, could be, or someday probably will become. Here’s part of what I mean:

  1. Text mining powers search. The biggest text mining outfits in the world, possibly excepting the US intelligence community, are surely Google, Yahoo, and perhaps Microsoft.
  2. Search powers text mining. Restricting the corpus of documents to mine, even via a keyword search, makes tons of sense. That’s one of the good ideas in Attensity 4.
  3. Text mining and search are powered by the same underlying technologies. For starters, there’s all the tokenization, extraction, etc. that vendors in both areas license from Inxight and its competitors. Beyond that, I think there’s a future play in integrated taxonomy management that will rearrange the text analytics market landscape.

Read more

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