ֱ

We're enhancing our website soon and would love your input. Please share your thoughts!  [ Give Feedback ]

Dhiraj Rajaram, ’03

Dhiraj Rajaram in a classroom

Founder, Mu Sigma

Shortly after Dhiraj Rajaram, ’03, arrived at Booth in 2001, he saw the future. Solving complex business problems required a radical departure from the silo mentality that separates programmers, analysts, and mathematicians at many consulting firms. Rajaram envisioned a fresh, interdisciplinary approach that brought together math, business technology, behavioral science, and design thinking.

He sold his home, took $200,000 from savings, and started a company that would harness the combined power of big data and data-driven decision making.

The potential payoff in his strategy was evident to Rajaram, but not to the market he was courting. In 2004, big data was not the household term it is today. He knocked on corporate doors for nine months to no avail. Finally, the head of consumer marketing research at Microsoft Corp. gave him a pilot project: help the company understand the behavior patterns of its customers.