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Real-time data has become an essential asset for today’s businesses, and the Asia-Pacific market is no exception. Across competitive industries like finance, travel, and more, data streams and event-driven architectures have become table stakes for leading organizations in the region.
Today, having access to real-time insights and event-driven operations not only lays the foundation for responsive business processes, increased efficiency, and better customer experiences, but it also paves the way for artificial intelligence (AI) use cases with real business and revenue impact. Learning how it plays out in an actual business setting—and how it integrates with a company’s specific architecture—is the way to truly understand the potency of real-time data streams.
At a recent Data in Motion Tour (DIMT) in Singapore, Cathay Pacific and Endowus participated in fireside chats to share how their organizations derive value from real-time data. The event also featured a panel of data streaming experts discussing the importance of quality real-time data to future generative AI (GenAI) efforts and product development. Here are the most significant takeaways from this event.
Interested in how global IT leaders are using and benefiting from data streaming? Read the 2024 Data Streaming Report.
As a premium airline in the Asian market, Cathay Pacific is steadily growing into a leading brand that includes other travel and tourism services as well. In light of this growth, the engineering team wanted the ability to treat data as a product, share trustworthy data products across different teams and departments, and thereby enable more streaming use cases that would advance the business.
The company’s data streaming journey actually began about seven years ago when Cathay’s IT team started to build on microservices, APIs, and messaging services. Quickly, it became obvious that they needed the ability to support high throughput with low latency so they could scale better and more efficiently. As Cathay’s engineering team began to work with more and more microservices off the shelf, Apache Kafka