SAN FRANCISCO,
Twitter on
Wednesday announced a partnership to let computing powerhouse IBM dip
into the public stream of tweets to provide businesses with insights for
making decisions.
"Twitter provides a powerful new
lens through which to look at the world — as both a platform for
hundreds of millions of consumers and business professionals, and as a
synthesizer of trends," IBM chief executive Ginni Rometty said in a
release.
The alliance will put IBM computing expertise,
including its Watson artificial intelligence technology, to work
extracting insights from Twitter to "enrich business decisions with an
entirely new class of data," according to Rometty.
ENORMOUS PUBLIC ARCHIVE
IBM
services access Twitter data to glean answers to questions such as what
customers like or dislike about products or why a company is growing
quickly in one country and not another.
"This important
partnership with IBM will change the way business decisions are made —
from identifying emerging market opportunities to better engaging
clients, partners and employees," Twitter chief executive Dick Costolo
said in a release.
Patterns, trends or sentiments mined
from Twitter will be woven into IBM business analytics tools such as
Watson, which are hosted in the Internet "cloud."
The partnership will involve training an army of IBM consultants on business applications for Twitter data.
"Twitter
represents an enormous public archive of human thought that captures
the ideas, opinions and debates taking place around the world on almost
any topic at any moment in time," Twitter data strategy vice president
Chris Moody said in a blog post.
"While companies have
long listened to what their customers are saying on Twitter, complex
enterprise decisions often require input from a lot of different
systems."
Financial terms of the partnership were not disclosed
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