Organisations are clamouring to purge content chaos. Applying search techniques to content that lacks a well-defined organisational structure just is not effective in gleaning value from data generated by applications, records, business processes, blogs, wikis and external sources proliferating in today's organisations.
Shipping now, SAS Content Categorisation, from the leader in business analytics, correctly and meaningfully parses and analyses enterprise content for entities and events.
It creates robust metadata to trigger business processes that can improve organisational performance. The new standalone product is powered by a division of SAS, Teragram, the market leader in mobile and multilingual natural language processing technologies.
“SAS Content Categorisation organises and increases the findability quotient for information; this is due to the fact that it can process huge quantities of data,” says Goran Dragosavac, National Product Manager Analytical Intelligence at SAS Institute South Africa.
“It also eliminates manual and redundant content tagging and uses advanced linguistic and natural language processing techniques to recognise and analyse more than 30 languages, helping international organisations to work with multilingual content that is critical in today's regulatory environment.”
With SAS, organisations can fully leverage content assets and provide for reuse across disparate departmental repositories, regardless of who owns the content or where it was generated. Capabilities that competing offerings cannot deliver include:
Taxonomy creation - The intuitive and easy-to-use graphical interface lets users create an organised information system of categories and concepts.
Category classification - Custom-defined category rules let users classify documents that match a rule and exclude texts that do not.
Collaboration - Multiple taxonomists and developers, working individually or in teams, can securely access projects.
"Leading organisations such as the Associated Press, CNN, Factiva, eBay, Forbes.com, NYTimes Digital, Reed Business Information, Sony, washingtonpost.com, Wolters Kluwer, the World Bank and Yahoo! are using unstructured data in their analyses - of customers, market opportunities, internal operations, supply chains - and we enable fast, accurate access to the information they need for decision-making,” says Yves Schabes, President of Teragram.
“Teragram's advanced categorisation technologies power SAS Content Categorisation to provide instant, advanced classification of enterprise documents to help organisations fully leverage their information assets.”
As an example, taxonomy creation is helping Reed Business to process billions of b-to-b related documents, including information on 14 million companies, millions of people, and thousands of product categories and topics. Reed Business uses this technology to deliver better search results to its sites' visitors.
SAS Content Categorisation provides flexibility by applying advanced linguistic rules for unique, identifying terms, increasing specificity and defining category rules to classify documents that match those rules. In doing so, SAS Content Categorisation drastically reduces the overhead associated with the content categorisation process - which is good news to management who must help control expenses.
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