With
 all the hubbub about Big Data and the Internet of Things (IoT), the 
value of Small Data has been pushed to the wayside. Big Data analytics 
teaches us about trends and hidden patterns, but Small Data pulls out 
the specifics of the current state of business. According to Whatis.com,
 “Small data is data in a volume and format that makes it accessible, 
informative and actionable. Small data typically provides information 
that answers a specific question or addresses a specific problem. 
Examples of small data include baseball scores, inventory reports, 
driving records, sales data, biometric measurements, search histories, 
weather forecasts and usage alerts.”
Why is this short-term thinking helpful? 
According to a recent article in Forbes magazine, “Small Data can 
trigger events based on what is happening now. Those events can be 
merged with behavioral or trending information derived from machine 
learning algorithms run against Big Data datasets.”
Small Data underlines what’s going on in the moment, so you can apply
 actionable strategies to everyday tasks. And, just like anything else 
in life, accomplishing smaller tasks feels less daunting than a huge 
mass of data you have to digest all at once. To be clear, Big Data IS 
valuable—it’s excellent for understanding hidden patterns in customer 
behavior, recognizing patterns and predicting changes in the long-term. 
However, the use cases for Small Data should not be overlooked. Here are
 a few reasons why:
1. There’s no wait time on Small Data.
To reap the benefits of Big Data, you must aggregate the content over 
time and then analyze how all the pieces fit together. (You also have to
 decipher what the heck all that data means.) With small data, there’s 
no wait time. Small Data is generated every second of every day, from 
social media posts to Google searches and check-ins. The stats and 
trends are created in real-time, so you can continually tweak your 
strategies to meet the shifting patterns. 
2. Small Data creates a more comprehensive CRM database.
CRM solutions are evolving to be social-centric. Small Data is generated
 through actions on those social channels. So, if you combine the 
elements of social data with Web analytics, transactional histories, 
competitor trends, etc., it fills in the gaps of your customer profiles.
 With an arsenal of information at your fingertips, you can make better 
marketing decisions and craft meaningful, personal interactions that 
speak to what your customers care about in the here-and-now. 
3. Small Data is less expensive and easier to come by.
Companies need to pull from a lot of data reserves for Big Data 
analytics, and oftentimes it requires a monetary investment. Big Data 
uses high volumes of Terabytes, Petabytes, Exabytes, and Zettabytes — 
which need expansive server space. Data mining applications and advanced
 analytics machines add to those costs as well. Small Data, on the other
 hand, doesn’t need massive amounts of server space or fancy 
applications. Much of the necessary information can be extracted from 
the systems most companies already have in place, like CRM’s and ERP’s. 
That makes Small Data a lot easier to come by and a lot cheaper to 
utilize. 
Big Data and Small Data are both applicable to your business, just in
 different ways. Big Data is your long-term, big picture, and Small Data
 is your short-term, current trend. Find a balance between the two and 
you’ll be on the right path to building a healthy, successful business 
model. 
Sources:
 http://www.forbes.com/sites/mikekavis/2015/02/25/forget-big-data-small-d...
 https://datafloq.com/read/small-data-vs-big-data-back-to-the-basic/706
 http://www.destinationcrm.com/Articles/Web-Exclusives/Viewpoints/5-Ways-...