From the COVID-19 pandemic and natural disasters to regulatory changes and political strife, businesses and public agencies are facing unprecedented change and challenges — but also opportunity.
After years of accelerating digital transformation, the Data Age has arrived: an era in which ubiquitous and interconnected digital technologies use data to enable and enrich every decision, across organizations, life and society. The pressures and potentials of this new reality are redefining competitive landscapes, increasing customer expectations, and catalyzing innovative disruption at an unprecedented pace.
In recent years, every industry has been transformed by the sheer volume and value of data — and the opportunity continues to grow.
At Splunk, we’ve seen that successful organizations are those that use data to evolve with shifting expectations, unearthing new possibilities and unleashing powerful outcomes.
Splunk customers are at the forefront of this defining age, using the Splunk platform to better understand their organizations and customers, build consumer trust and adapt to the changing landscape.
From Porsche to Arlo to REI, Splunk customers are doubling down on their agile cloud environments and incorporating technologies like machine learning and IoT — all while using data to inform decisions across business, security, IT and DevOps teams
A single security breach can cripple any organization, draining resources, threatening customer loyalty and tarnishing brand reputation. Savvy organizations are fortifying their security defenses, using real-time data to detect, investigate and resolve threats faster.
With a single, comprehensive view of its data, Mars has improved its security posture across vastly different subsidiaries while providing about 300 global users with the ability to self-serve their own insights.
After automating prevention for 99% of its threats, Intel built its Cyber Intelligence Platform to detect and respond to the most sophisticated threats attempting to penetrate the organization’s environment.
As infrastructures grow more complex, IT teams are under mounting pressure to predict problems while delivering valuable services to employees and customers. Splunk customers have risen to the challenge, adopting emerging technologies, automating processes and driving effectiveness for a more efficient, connected organization.
Managing a complex infrastructure of 52 systems and 35 operations, the U.S. Census Bureau is ensuring success for the 2020 census, the country’s first digital census and the largest civilian count in U.S. history.
This world-changing nonprofit partnered with Splunk to turn messy, unstructured data into actionable insights that are helping curb human trafficking, a crisis that affects an estimated 45 million victims every year.
We’re in a “now” economy. Consumers expect intuitive apps and services that are efficient, reliable and available anytime, anywhere. To deliver on these expectations, DevOps teams need visibility across their entire tech stack to ensure high performance, prevent outages and resolve incidents quickly, before they impact the organization and customers.
Providing more than 13.3 million IoT devices to millions of customers across the globe, Arlo accelerated innovation for quicker fixes, happier customers and faster time to market for new products and features.
Slashing mean time to acknowledge from four hours to under two minutes, PSCU empowers staff to innovate faster, collaborate better and effectively deliver support for more than 1,500 credit unions and nearly 4 billion transactions.
Whether finding new customers, informing product strategy, measuring marketing efforts or predicting sales trends, data is fundamental to successful organizations. Splunk customers know how to use data to optimize operations, increase revenue and better serve customers.
With a single, comprehensive view of its data, Mars has improved its security posture across vastly different subsidiaries while providing about 300 global users with the ability to self-serve their own insights.
After automating prevention for 99% of its threats, Intel built its Cyber Intelligence Platform to detect and respond to the most sophisticated threats attempting to penetrate the organization’s environment.
Intelligent performance without data is not possible.