Hidden Insights
Experience the possibilities with Business Analytics
We realize that you might have ended up here by coincidence after activating a stored link for your favorite local SAS Blog. Nevertheless, do not worry, we will still address how Nordic companies and organizations can gain insight and get the power to know. On the new Hidden Insights Blog,

20 years ago, risk was controlled by small departments in the banks. As authorities felt they were held hostage by the systemic importance of banks, they introduced requirements to banks to become more solvent. In order to get the behavior of banks under control, many types of reports were also

For years, large geographical regions such as the US and the UK have experimented with big data analytics to gain true business advantages – creating an opportunity to adapt better to customer demands, to optimize business models and to mitigate risk. Meanwhile, most companies in the Nordic countries have been

A couple of months ago, I discovered that SAS Institute offers free software for an initiative where data are shared to accelerate cancer research. As a SAS employee, this information made me very proud. I work for a company that makes software available for an initiative, in which we all

Mark Wolff, Ph.D., consultant in SAS Health and Life Sciences Global Practice team, has spoken at health care conferences in several countries. His latest journey took him to Sweden and Denmark, and I met him when he had just delivered his key note at a conference at Karolinska Institut

By Carsten Schmidt, Fellow, Henry Corporation In a 1969 manifesto titled “Design with Nature," a landscape architect named Ian McHarg introduced a concept called the shifting baseline. The concept essentially describes a form of “generational blindness,” which means that our experiences and immediate views limit our perception of reality. Otherwise stated, our