I have spent months in conversation with business leaders across LATAM who already have dashboards, reports and metrics to spare, and yet they still make most of their decisions by reacting: inventory ran out, the customer already left, the machine already stopped. The question I always ask them is the same: what if we could know beforehand? At SUMāTO we believe that this shift in mindset, moving from watching the rearview mirror to watching the road ahead, is exactly what predictive analytics now puts within reach of companies that are not technology giants. I want to share how we understand it in 2018 and where to begin without getting lost.
In short: Descriptive analytics explains what happened, predictive analytics estimates what is likely to happen, and prescriptive analytics suggests what to do about it. Anticipating demand, customer churn, risk or an equipment failure stops being intuition and becomes an actionable estimate. You do not need a data lab to begin: you need a clear business question and reasonably organized data.
This is the most common source of confusion, and it is worth sorting out, because it defines what you should expect from each investment. All three are useful, but they answer different questions.
The usual trap is trying to jump straight to the prescriptive without first getting the descriptive in order. In my experience, a company that does not yet trust its own reports is not ready to trust a prediction. Sequence matters.
Predictive analytics is not an abstract concept: it solves problems you already have. These are the four cases where we see the most value today.
What these cases have in common is that the cost of being wrong is high and the decisions repeat many times over. That is where anticipation pays off.
There is a myth that you need an enormous team of data scientists and a multimillion-dollar infrastructure. The reality in 2018 is far more accessible. The essentials are:
If you want to go deeper into how we structure these projects, you can review our approach to analytics and how it connects with artificial intelligence.
It is rarely for lack of technology. The reasons I see again and again are organizational:
My recommendation is always the same: start small, but start with something that matters. A well-chosen pilot builds credibility and learning without committing the year's budget.
Anticipating does not replace human judgment; it strengthens it. The goal is not to automate the decision, but to help whoever decides do so with better information and more time to react.
Do I need all my data to be perfect before I start?
No. What helps is having reasonably reliable data about the specific case you are going to tackle, not about the entire company. Starting with a narrow case lets you work with a manageable dataset and improve it along the way.
Is predictive analytics the same as artificial intelligence?
They are related, but they are not identical. Predictive analytics uses statistical and learning techniques to estimate future outcomes; many of those techniques are part of the field of artificial intelligence. What matters for the business is the outcome: an estimate that improves a decision.
How long does it take to see value?
It depends on the case, but a well-scoped pilot aims for a first result in weeks, not years. The key is to choose a problem small enough to move quickly and important enough to make the result worthwhile.
Does this work if my company is not large?
Yes. Value does not depend on size but on having repetitive decisions with a meaningful cost of error. Many mid-sized companies have exactly those conditions in demand, collections or retention.
If there is a decision in your business that today is made by reacting and you would like to start anticipating it, the first step is not to buy technology: it is to choose the right question. At SUMāTO we offer a brief diagnostic to identify, together with your team, the case with the highest value and the least friction to get started, and to define how we will measure success from day one.
Let's talk about where anticipation can make a difference in your operation. Write to us through our contact page and let's take that first step together, from the rearview mirror to the road ahead.