The first step towards understanding what data assets mean for your organization is understanding what those assets mean for each other. Metadata—literally, data about data—is one of many Data Management disciplines inherent in good systems development, and is perhaps the most mislabeled and misunderstood out of the lot. Understanding Metadata and its associated technologies as more than just straightforward technological tools can provide powerful insight into the efficiency of organizational practices, and can also enable you to combine more sophisticated Data Management techniques in support of larger and more complex business initiatives.
In this webinar, we will:
Illustrate how to leverage Metadata in support of your business strategy
Discuss foundational Metadata concepts based on “The DAMA Guide to the Data Management Body of Knowledge” (DAMA DMBOK)
Enumerate guiding principles for and lessons previously learned from Metadata and its practical uses
Slides: Metadata Management for the Governance MindedDATAVERSITY
Do you have data governance on your mind? Do you envision an environment where people are held formally accountable for the data they define, produce and use? Does metadata play a big role in that governed environment? Of course, it does. To manage any “thing” requires that you have quality information about that “thing".
Join Bob Seiner, of KIK Consulting and TDAN.com, with Gal Alon, Senior Director of Business Development for an industry leading metadata management automation software provider Octopai, as they discuss the who’s, what’s, why’s and how’s of automating and leveraging your metadata environment to successfully govern your organization’s data. Bob and Gal will spend the hour chatting about the role metadata management plays in data governance as well as discuss specific use cases to improve probability of Data Governance success.
In this webinar, Bob and Gal will demonstrate:
- Data Governance’s dependency on quality metadata
- How a great tool will lead to increased use of your metadata assets
- What to look for in a metadata management tool and how it will help
- Automation of metadata collection and management processes
- People that will benefit from improved metadata automation and delivery
DAS Slides: Metadata Management From Technical Architecture & Business Techni...DATAVERSITY
Metadata provides context for the “who, what, when, where, and why” of data, and is of critical interest in today’s data-driven business environment. Since metadata is created and used by both business and IT, architectural and organizational techniques need to encompass a holistic approach across the organization to address all audiences. This webinar provides practical ways to manage metadata in your organization using both technical architecture and business techniques.
Describes what Enterprise Data Architecture in a Software Development Organization should cover and does that by listing over 200 data architecture related deliverables an Enterprise Data Architect should remember to evangelize.
Data Systems Integration & Business Value Pt. 1: MetadataDATAVERSITY
Certain systems are more data focused than others. Usually their primary focus is on accomplishing integration of disparate data. In these cases, failure is most often attributable to the adoption of a single pillar (silver bullet). The three webinars in the Data Systems Integration and Business Value series are designed to illustrate that good systems development more often depends on at least three DM disciplines (pie wedges) in order to provide a solid foundation.
Much of the discussion of metadata focuses on understanding it and the associated technologies. While these are important, they represent a typical tool/technology focus and this has not achieved significant results to date. A more relevant question when considering pockets of metadata is: Whether to include them in the scope organizational metadata practices. By understanding what it means to include items in the scope of your metadata practices, you can begin to build systems that allow you to practice sophisticated ways to advance their data management and supported business initiatives. After a bit of practice in this manner you can position your organization to better exploit any and all metadata technologies.
Becoming a Data-Driven Organization - Aligning Business & Data StrategyDATAVERSITY
More organizations are aspiring to become ‘data driven businesses’. But all too often this aim fails, as business goals and IT & data realities are misaligned, with IT lagging behind rapidly changing business needs. So how do you get the perfect fit where data strategy is driven by and underpins business strategy? This webinar will show you how by de-mystifying the building blocks of a global data strategy and highlighting a number of real world success stories. Topics include:
•How to align data strategy with business motivation and drivers
•Why business & data strategies often become misaligned & the impact
•Defining the core building blocks of a successful data strategy
•The role of business and IT
•Success stories in implementing global data strategies
RWDG Slides: Glossaries, Dictionaries, and Catalogs Result in Data GovernanceDATAVERSITY
If you have the discipline to develop, deliver, and maintain a business glossary, data dictionary, and/or a data catalog, you may already have the makings of a Data Governance program. The roles required to deliver these assets can translate to successful Data Governance in several ways.
In this month’s webinar, Bob Seiner will highlight the aspects of delivering these valuable business assets that result in formal Data Governance. It is practical that your program recognize existing efforts to formalize the definition, production, and usage of data.
Topics to be discussed in this webinar:
• How glossaries, dictionaries, and catalogs add value
• What should be included in these assets
• Who has responsibility for these assets
• When these assets will be valuable to your organization
• Where the discipline results in Data Governance
Advanced Analytics Governance - Effective Model Management and StewardshipDATAVERSITY
There’s been a shift toward digital business transformation with growing use of a broad spectrum of analytical capabilities (descriptive, diagnostic, predictive, prescriptive) to drive decision-making. Having a framework and overarching strategy for analytics governance is essential for data-driven organizations. Today’s advanced analytics and Business Intelligence (BI) professionals understand driving successful governance is critical for developing consistent, trusted, transparent, and effectively utilized analytics.
Join this webinar to learn best practices and vetted approaches for how to:
Ensure analytics governance is integrated with existing Data Governance processes, policies, operating model management, and Data Stewardship
Adapt governance best practices for different analytics use cases
Confirm alignment of your analytics and BI strategy with critical business objectives
Balance the rewards of digital technology and applied analytics with the compliance risks of new ethical rules, standards, and regulations
ADV Slides: When and How Data Lakes Fit into a Modern Data ArchitectureDATAVERSITY
Whether to take data ingestion cycles off the ETL tool and the data warehouse or to facilitate competitive Data Science and building algorithms in the organization, the data lake – a place for unmodeled and vast data – will be provisioned widely in 2020.
Though it doesn’t have to be complicated, the data lake has a few key design points that are critical, and it does need to follow some principles for success. Avoid building the data swamp, but not the data lake! The tool ecosystem is building up around the data lake and soon many will have a robust lake and data warehouse. We will discuss policy to keep them straight, send data to its best platform, and keep users’ confidence up in their data platforms.
Data lakes will be built in cloud object storage. We’ll discuss the options there as well.
Get this data point for your data lake journey.
Slides: Metadata Management for the Governance MindedDATAVERSITY
Do you have data governance on your mind? Do you envision an environment where people are held formally accountable for the data they define, produce and use? Does metadata play a big role in that governed environment? Of course, it does. To manage any “thing” requires that you have quality information about that “thing".
Join Bob Seiner, of KIK Consulting and TDAN.com, with Gal Alon, Senior Director of Business Development for an industry leading metadata management automation software provider Octopai, as they discuss the who’s, what’s, why’s and how’s of automating and leveraging your metadata environment to successfully govern your organization’s data. Bob and Gal will spend the hour chatting about the role metadata management plays in data governance as well as discuss specific use cases to improve probability of Data Governance success.
In this webinar, Bob and Gal will demonstrate:
- Data Governance’s dependency on quality metadata
- How a great tool will lead to increased use of your metadata assets
- What to look for in a metadata management tool and how it will help
- Automation of metadata collection and management processes
- People that will benefit from improved metadata automation and delivery
DAS Slides: Metadata Management From Technical Architecture & Business Techni...DATAVERSITY
Metadata provides context for the “who, what, when, where, and why” of data, and is of critical interest in today’s data-driven business environment. Since metadata is created and used by both business and IT, architectural and organizational techniques need to encompass a holistic approach across the organization to address all audiences. This webinar provides practical ways to manage metadata in your organization using both technical architecture and business techniques.
Describes what Enterprise Data Architecture in a Software Development Organization should cover and does that by listing over 200 data architecture related deliverables an Enterprise Data Architect should remember to evangelize.
Data Systems Integration & Business Value Pt. 1: MetadataDATAVERSITY
Certain systems are more data focused than others. Usually their primary focus is on accomplishing integration of disparate data. In these cases, failure is most often attributable to the adoption of a single pillar (silver bullet). The three webinars in the Data Systems Integration and Business Value series are designed to illustrate that good systems development more often depends on at least three DM disciplines (pie wedges) in order to provide a solid foundation.
Much of the discussion of metadata focuses on understanding it and the associated technologies. While these are important, they represent a typical tool/technology focus and this has not achieved significant results to date. A more relevant question when considering pockets of metadata is: Whether to include them in the scope organizational metadata practices. By understanding what it means to include items in the scope of your metadata practices, you can begin to build systems that allow you to practice sophisticated ways to advance their data management and supported business initiatives. After a bit of practice in this manner you can position your organization to better exploit any and all metadata technologies.
Becoming a Data-Driven Organization - Aligning Business & Data StrategyDATAVERSITY
More organizations are aspiring to become ‘data driven businesses’. But all too often this aim fails, as business goals and IT & data realities are misaligned, with IT lagging behind rapidly changing business needs. So how do you get the perfect fit where data strategy is driven by and underpins business strategy? This webinar will show you how by de-mystifying the building blocks of a global data strategy and highlighting a number of real world success stories. Topics include:
•How to align data strategy with business motivation and drivers
•Why business & data strategies often become misaligned & the impact
•Defining the core building blocks of a successful data strategy
•The role of business and IT
•Success stories in implementing global data strategies
RWDG Slides: Glossaries, Dictionaries, and Catalogs Result in Data GovernanceDATAVERSITY
If you have the discipline to develop, deliver, and maintain a business glossary, data dictionary, and/or a data catalog, you may already have the makings of a Data Governance program. The roles required to deliver these assets can translate to successful Data Governance in several ways.
In this month’s webinar, Bob Seiner will highlight the aspects of delivering these valuable business assets that result in formal Data Governance. It is practical that your program recognize existing efforts to formalize the definition, production, and usage of data.
Topics to be discussed in this webinar:
• How glossaries, dictionaries, and catalogs add value
• What should be included in these assets
• Who has responsibility for these assets
• When these assets will be valuable to your organization
• Where the discipline results in Data Governance
Advanced Analytics Governance - Effective Model Management and StewardshipDATAVERSITY
There’s been a shift toward digital business transformation with growing use of a broad spectrum of analytical capabilities (descriptive, diagnostic, predictive, prescriptive) to drive decision-making. Having a framework and overarching strategy for analytics governance is essential for data-driven organizations. Today’s advanced analytics and Business Intelligence (BI) professionals understand driving successful governance is critical for developing consistent, trusted, transparent, and effectively utilized analytics.
Join this webinar to learn best practices and vetted approaches for how to:
Ensure analytics governance is integrated with existing Data Governance processes, policies, operating model management, and Data Stewardship
Adapt governance best practices for different analytics use cases
Confirm alignment of your analytics and BI strategy with critical business objectives
Balance the rewards of digital technology and applied analytics with the compliance risks of new ethical rules, standards, and regulations
ADV Slides: When and How Data Lakes Fit into a Modern Data ArchitectureDATAVERSITY
Whether to take data ingestion cycles off the ETL tool and the data warehouse or to facilitate competitive Data Science and building algorithms in the organization, the data lake – a place for unmodeled and vast data – will be provisioned widely in 2020.
Though it doesn’t have to be complicated, the data lake has a few key design points that are critical, and it does need to follow some principles for success. Avoid building the data swamp, but not the data lake! The tool ecosystem is building up around the data lake and soon many will have a robust lake and data warehouse. We will discuss policy to keep them straight, send data to its best platform, and keep users’ confidence up in their data platforms.
Data lakes will be built in cloud object storage. We’ll discuss the options there as well.
Get this data point for your data lake journey.
LDM Webinar: Data Modeling & Metadata ManagementDATAVERSITY
Metadata management is critical for organizations looking to understand the context, definition and lineage of key data assets. Data models play a key role in metadata management, as many of the key structural and business definitions are stored within the models themselves. Can data models replace traditional metadata solutions? Or should they integrate with larger metadata management tools & initiatives? Join this webinar to discuss opportunities and challenges around:
- How data modeling fits within a larger metadata management landscape
- When can data modeling provide “just enough” metadata management
- Key data modeling artifacts for metadata
- Organization, Roles & Implementation Considerations
This presentation provides you with an understanding of reference and master data management (MDM) goals, including establishing and implementing authoritative data sources, establishing and implementing more effective means of delivering data to various business processes, and increasing the quality of information used in organizational analytical functions (such as BI). Attendees will learn how to incorporate data quality engineering into the planning of reference and MDM. Finally, we will discuss why MDM is so critical to the organization’s overall data strategy.
Takeaways:
•What is reference and MDM?
•Why are reference and MDM important?
•How to use Reference and MDM Frameworks
•Guiding principles & best practices for MDM
The Missing Link in Enterprise Data Governance - Automated Metadata ManagementDATAVERSITY
So many companies and organizations are in the same boat. They’re drowning in their data — so much data, from so many different sources. They understand that data governance is hugely important for them to be able to know their data inside and out and comply with regulations. What many companies have not yet come to terms with when implementing their data governance strategy and supporting tools, is the criticality of metadata in the process. As the ‘data about data,’ metadata provides the value and purpose of the data content, thereby becoming an extremely effective tool for quickly locating information – a must for BI groups dealing with analytics and business user reporting.
Octopai's CEO, Amnon Drori will discuss this critical missing link in enterprise data governance and the impact of automating metadata management for data discovery and data lineage for BI. He'll demonstrate how BI groups use Octopai to not only locate their data instantly, but to quickly and accurately visualize and understand the entire data journey to enable the business to move forward.
Big data as a gateway to knowledge managementDATAVERSITY
"Knowledge management" may be making a comeback — the term we heard about in the early “noughts,” a formal system that helps manage what an organization knows. Developments in artificial intelligence and database technology have brought the promises of knowledge management back into the forefront.
In this webinar, John and Kelle will cover the “what’s old is new” topic of knowledge management, including:
Its history and definition
How it applies to Big Data and analytics
Its connection to machine learning and the findings from analytics
How to manage the influx of data
Data Architecture Best Practices for Today’s Rapidly Changing Data LandscapeDATAVERSITY
With the rise of the data-driven organization, the pace of innovation in data-centric technologies has been tremendous. New tools and techniques are emerging at an exponential rate, and it is difficult to keep track of the array of technological choices available to today’s data management professional.
At the same time, core fundamentals such as data quality and metadata management remain critical in order for organizations to obtain true business value from their data. This webinar will help demystify the options available: from data lake to data warehouse, to graph database, to NoSQL, and more, and how to integrate these new technologies with core architectural fundamentals that will help your organization benefit from the quick wins that are possible from these exciting technologies, while at the same time build a longer-term sustainable architecture that will support the inevitable change that will continue in the industry.
Data-Ed Online Webinar: Business Value from MDMDATAVERSITY
This presentation provides you with an understanding of the goals of reference and master data management (MDM), including establishing and implementing authoritative data sources, establishing and implementing more effective means of delivery data to various business processes, as well as increasing the quality of information used in organizational analytical functions (such as BI). You will understand the parallel importance of incorporating data quality engineering into the planning of reference and MDM.
Takeaways:
What is reference and MDM?
Why are reference and MDM important?
Reference and MDM Frameworks
Guiding principles & best practices
The first step towards understanding what data assets mean for your organization is understanding what those assets mean for each other. Metadata—literally, data about data—is one of many data management disciplines inherent in good systems development, and is perhaps the most mislabeled and misunderstood out of the lot. Understanding metadata and its associated technologies as more than just straightforward technological tools can provide powerful insight, the efficiency of organizational practices, and can also enable you to combine more sophisticated data management techniques in support of larger and more complex business initiatives.
In this webinar, we will:
Illustrate how to leverage metadata in support of your business strategy
Discuss foundational metadata concepts based on the DAMA Guide to Data Management Book of Knowledge (DAMA DMBOK)
Enumerate guiding principles for and lessons previously learned from metadata and its practical uses
Using Machine Learning to Understand and Predict Marketing ROIDATAVERSITY
Marketing is all about attracting, retaining and building profitable relationships with your customers, but how do you know which customers to target, which campaigns to run, and which marketing programs to invest in, to get most return for your dollar?
Join Alteryx and Keyrus as we demonstrate how to combine all relevant marketing, sales and customer data, and perform sophisticated analytics to deepen customer insight and calculate ROI of marketing programs.
You’ll walk away knowing how to:
Segment and profile your customers – take that raw data and translate it into real value
Build a marketing attribution model within Alteryx, creating a personal answer engine for your company.
Leverage R or Python code in an Alteryx workflow so data scientists can collaborate with non-coding stake holders in a code-friendly and code-free environment.
Join Alteryx and Keyrus and get the actionable insights you need to drive marketing ROI analytics, and answer million-dollar questions without spending millions of dollars on standardized solutions.
Good systems development often depends on multiple data management disciplines that provide a solid foundation. One of these is metadata. While much of the discussion around metadata focuses on understanding metadata itself along with its associated technologies, this perspective often represents a typical tool-and-technology focus, which has not achieved significant results to date. A more relevant question when considering pockets of metadata is whether to include them in the scope of organizational metadata practices. By understanding what it means to include items in the scope of your metadata practices, you can begin to build systems that allow you to practice sophisticated ways to advance their data management and supported business initiatives. After a bit of practice in this manner you can position your organization to better exploit any and all metadata technologies in support of business strategy.
Takeaways:
Metadata value proposition: How to leverage metadata in support of your business strategy
Understanding foundational metadata concepts based on the DAMA DMBOK
Guiding principles & lessons learned
Data Architecture Strategies Webinar: Emerging Trends in Data Architecture – ...DATAVERSITY
A robust data architecture is at the core what’s driving today’s innovative, data-driven organizations. From AI to machine learning to Big Data – a strong data architecture is needed in order to be successful, and core fundamentals such as data quality, metadata management, and efficient data storage are more critical than ever.
With the vast array of new technologies available to support these trends, how do you make sense of it all? Our panel of experts will offer their perspectives on how the latest trends in data architecture can support your organization’s data-driven goals.
Data Modeling, Data Governance, & Data QualityDATAVERSITY
Data Governance is often referred to as the people, processes, and policies around data and information, and these aspects are critical to the success of any data governance implementation. But just as critical is the technical infrastructure that supports the diverse data environments that run the business. Data models can be the critical link between business definitions and rules and the technical data systems that support them. Without the valuable metadata these models provide, data governance often lacks the “teeth” to be applied in operational and reporting systems.
Join Donna Burbank and her guest, Nigel Turner, as they discuss how data models & metadata-driven data governance can be applied in your organization in order to achieve improved data quality.
Emerging Trends in Data Architecture – What’s the Next Big Thing?DATAVERSITY
Digital Transformation is a top priority for many organizations, and a successful digital journey requires a strong data foundation. Creating this digital transformation requires a number of core data management capabilities such as MDM, With technological innovation and change occurring at an ever-increasing rate, it’s hard to keep track of what’s hype and what can provide practical value for your organization. Join this webinar to see the results of a recent DATAVERSITY survey on emerging trends in Data Architecture, along with practical commentary and advice from industry expert Donna Burbank.
Data Catalogues - Architecting for Collaboration & Self-ServiceDATAVERSITY
The interest in Data Catalogs is growing as more business & technical users are looking to gain insight from data using a self-service approach. Architectural techniques for Data Provisioning and Metadata Cataloging have evolved to cater to these new audiences and ways of working. This webinar provides concrete methods of architecting your Self-service BI & Analytics environment to foster collaboration while at the same time maintaining Data Quality and reducing risk.
The recent focus on Big Data in the data management community brings with it a paradigm shift—from the more traditional top-down, “design then build” approach to data warehousing and business intelligence, to the more bottom up, “discover and analyze” approach to analytics with Big Data. Where does data modeling fit in this new world of Big Data? Does it go away, or can it evolve to meet the emerging needs of these exciting new technologies? Join this webinar to discuss:
Big Data –A Technical & Cultural Paradigm Shift
Big Data in the Larger Information Management Landscape
Modeling & Technology Considerations
Organizational Considerations
The Role of the Data Architect in the World of Big Data
Five Things to Consider About Data Mesh and Data GovernanceDATAVERSITY
Data mesh was among the most discussed and controversial enterprise data management topics of 2021. One of the reasons people struggle with data mesh concepts is we still have a lot of open questions that we are not thinking about:
Are you thinking beyond analytics? Are you thinking about all possible stakeholders? Are you thinking about how to be agile? Are you thinking about standardization and policies? Are you thinking about organizational structures and roles?
Join data.world VP of Product Tim Gasper and Principal Scientist Juan Sequeda for an honest, no-bs discussion about data mesh and its role in data governance.
Slides: The Automated Business GlossaryDATAVERSITY
You can’t do business without being able to successfully extract insights from your organization’s data supply chain. You need a strong foundation for visibility and control of data. Flying by the seat of your pants, when it comes to analyzing your market, your performance, and your competitors’ performances, just doesn’t work.
In this webinar, we’ll examine the real-life daily struggles and frustrations plaguing the data supply chain and discuss how these struggles can be eliminated by automation of metadata operations such as data lineage, data discovery and business glossary.
When you attend this webinar, you will learn about:
• What data consumers are really spending their time on and why they are so frustrated
• The challenges of building a business glossary
• How to get started with an automated business glossary and why it’s critical for BI intelligence
Data-Ed Webinar: Data Modeling FundamentalsDATAVERSITY
Because every organization produces and propagates data as part of their day-to-day operations, data trends are becoming more and more important in the mainstream business world’s consciousness. For many organizations in various industries, though, comprehension of this development begins and ends with buzzwords: “Big Data,” “NoSQL,” “Data Scientist,” and so on. Few realize that any and all solutions to their business problems, regardless of platform or relevant technology, rely to a critical extent on the data model supporting them. As such, Data Modeling is not an optional task for an organization’s data effort, but rather a vital activity that facilitates the solutions driving your business.
Instead of the technical minutiae of Data Modeling, this webinar will focus on its value and practicality for your organization. In doing so, we will:
Address fundamental Data Modeling methodologies, their differences and various practical applications, and trends around the practice of Data Modeling itself
Discuss abstract models and entity frameworks, as well as some basic tenets for application development
Examine the general shift from segmented Data Modeling to more business-integrated practices
Discuss fundamental Data Modeling concepts based on “The DAMA Guide to the Data Management Body of Knowledge” (DAMA DMBOK)
ADV Slides: The Data Needed to Evolve an Enterprise Artificial Intelligence S...DATAVERSITY
This webinar will focus on the promise AI holds for organizations in every industry and every size, and how to overcome some of the challenges today of how to prepare for AI in the organization and how to plan AI applications.
The foundation for AI is data. You must have enough data to analyze to build models. Your data determines the depth of AI you can achieve – for example, statistical modeling, machine learning, or deep learning – and its accuracy. The increased availability of data is the single biggest contributor to the uptake in AI where it is thriving. Indeed, data’s highest use in the organization soon will be training algorithms. AI is providing a powerful foundation for impending competitive advantage and business disruption.
Data-Ed: Data Systems Integration & Business Value PT. 1: MetadataData Blueprint
Certain systems are more data focused than others. Usually their primary focus is on accomplishing integration of disparate data. In these cases, failure is most often attributable to the adoption of a single pillar (silver bullet). The three webinars in the Data Systems Integration and Business Value series are designed to illustrate that good systems development more often depends on at least three DM disciplines (pie wedges) in order to provide a solid foundation.
Much of the discussion of metadata focuses on understanding it and the associated technologies. While these are important, they represent a typical tool/technology focus and this has not achieved significant results to date. A more relevant question when considering pockets of metadata is: Whether to include them in the scope organizational metadata practices. By understanding what it means to include items in the scope of your metadata practices, you can begin to build systems that allow you to practice sophisticated ways to advance their data management and supported business initiatives. After a bit of practice in this manner you can position your organization to better exploit any and all metadata technologies.
You can sign up for future Data-Ed webinars here: http://www.datablueprint.com/resource-center/webinar-schedule/
Data Architecture is foundational to an information-based operational environment. Without proper structure and efficiency in organization, data assets cannot be utilized to their full potential, which in turn harms bottom-line business value. When designed well and used effectively, however, a strong Data Architecture can be referenced to inform, clarify, understand, and resolve aspects of a variety of business problems commonly encountered in organizations.
The goal of this webinar is not to instruct you in being an outright Data Architect, but rather to enable you to envision a number of uses for Data Architectures that will maximize your organization’s competitive advantage. With that being said, we will:
Discuss Data Architecture’s guiding principles and best practices
Demonstrate how to utilize Data Architecture to address a broad variety of organizational challenges and support your overall business strategy
Illustrate how best to understand foundational Data Architecture concepts based on “The DAMA Guide to the Data Management Body of Knowledge” (DAMA DMBOK)
LDM Webinar: Data Modeling & Metadata ManagementDATAVERSITY
Metadata management is critical for organizations looking to understand the context, definition and lineage of key data assets. Data models play a key role in metadata management, as many of the key structural and business definitions are stored within the models themselves. Can data models replace traditional metadata solutions? Or should they integrate with larger metadata management tools & initiatives? Join this webinar to discuss opportunities and challenges around:
- How data modeling fits within a larger metadata management landscape
- When can data modeling provide “just enough” metadata management
- Key data modeling artifacts for metadata
- Organization, Roles & Implementation Considerations
This presentation provides you with an understanding of reference and master data management (MDM) goals, including establishing and implementing authoritative data sources, establishing and implementing more effective means of delivering data to various business processes, and increasing the quality of information used in organizational analytical functions (such as BI). Attendees will learn how to incorporate data quality engineering into the planning of reference and MDM. Finally, we will discuss why MDM is so critical to the organization’s overall data strategy.
Takeaways:
•What is reference and MDM?
•Why are reference and MDM important?
•How to use Reference and MDM Frameworks
•Guiding principles & best practices for MDM
The Missing Link in Enterprise Data Governance - Automated Metadata ManagementDATAVERSITY
So many companies and organizations are in the same boat. They’re drowning in their data — so much data, from so many different sources. They understand that data governance is hugely important for them to be able to know their data inside and out and comply with regulations. What many companies have not yet come to terms with when implementing their data governance strategy and supporting tools, is the criticality of metadata in the process. As the ‘data about data,’ metadata provides the value and purpose of the data content, thereby becoming an extremely effective tool for quickly locating information – a must for BI groups dealing with analytics and business user reporting.
Octopai's CEO, Amnon Drori will discuss this critical missing link in enterprise data governance and the impact of automating metadata management for data discovery and data lineage for BI. He'll demonstrate how BI groups use Octopai to not only locate their data instantly, but to quickly and accurately visualize and understand the entire data journey to enable the business to move forward.
Big data as a gateway to knowledge managementDATAVERSITY
"Knowledge management" may be making a comeback — the term we heard about in the early “noughts,” a formal system that helps manage what an organization knows. Developments in artificial intelligence and database technology have brought the promises of knowledge management back into the forefront.
In this webinar, John and Kelle will cover the “what’s old is new” topic of knowledge management, including:
Its history and definition
How it applies to Big Data and analytics
Its connection to machine learning and the findings from analytics
How to manage the influx of data
Data Architecture Best Practices for Today’s Rapidly Changing Data LandscapeDATAVERSITY
With the rise of the data-driven organization, the pace of innovation in data-centric technologies has been tremendous. New tools and techniques are emerging at an exponential rate, and it is difficult to keep track of the array of technological choices available to today’s data management professional.
At the same time, core fundamentals such as data quality and metadata management remain critical in order for organizations to obtain true business value from their data. This webinar will help demystify the options available: from data lake to data warehouse, to graph database, to NoSQL, and more, and how to integrate these new technologies with core architectural fundamentals that will help your organization benefit from the quick wins that are possible from these exciting technologies, while at the same time build a longer-term sustainable architecture that will support the inevitable change that will continue in the industry.
Data-Ed Online Webinar: Business Value from MDMDATAVERSITY
This presentation provides you with an understanding of the goals of reference and master data management (MDM), including establishing and implementing authoritative data sources, establishing and implementing more effective means of delivery data to various business processes, as well as increasing the quality of information used in organizational analytical functions (such as BI). You will understand the parallel importance of incorporating data quality engineering into the planning of reference and MDM.
Takeaways:
What is reference and MDM?
Why are reference and MDM important?
Reference and MDM Frameworks
Guiding principles & best practices
The first step towards understanding what data assets mean for your organization is understanding what those assets mean for each other. Metadata—literally, data about data—is one of many data management disciplines inherent in good systems development, and is perhaps the most mislabeled and misunderstood out of the lot. Understanding metadata and its associated technologies as more than just straightforward technological tools can provide powerful insight, the efficiency of organizational practices, and can also enable you to combine more sophisticated data management techniques in support of larger and more complex business initiatives.
In this webinar, we will:
Illustrate how to leverage metadata in support of your business strategy
Discuss foundational metadata concepts based on the DAMA Guide to Data Management Book of Knowledge (DAMA DMBOK)
Enumerate guiding principles for and lessons previously learned from metadata and its practical uses
Using Machine Learning to Understand and Predict Marketing ROIDATAVERSITY
Marketing is all about attracting, retaining and building profitable relationships with your customers, but how do you know which customers to target, which campaigns to run, and which marketing programs to invest in, to get most return for your dollar?
Join Alteryx and Keyrus as we demonstrate how to combine all relevant marketing, sales and customer data, and perform sophisticated analytics to deepen customer insight and calculate ROI of marketing programs.
You’ll walk away knowing how to:
Segment and profile your customers – take that raw data and translate it into real value
Build a marketing attribution model within Alteryx, creating a personal answer engine for your company.
Leverage R or Python code in an Alteryx workflow so data scientists can collaborate with non-coding stake holders in a code-friendly and code-free environment.
Join Alteryx and Keyrus and get the actionable insights you need to drive marketing ROI analytics, and answer million-dollar questions without spending millions of dollars on standardized solutions.
Good systems development often depends on multiple data management disciplines that provide a solid foundation. One of these is metadata. While much of the discussion around metadata focuses on understanding metadata itself along with its associated technologies, this perspective often represents a typical tool-and-technology focus, which has not achieved significant results to date. A more relevant question when considering pockets of metadata is whether to include them in the scope of organizational metadata practices. By understanding what it means to include items in the scope of your metadata practices, you can begin to build systems that allow you to practice sophisticated ways to advance their data management and supported business initiatives. After a bit of practice in this manner you can position your organization to better exploit any and all metadata technologies in support of business strategy.
Takeaways:
Metadata value proposition: How to leverage metadata in support of your business strategy
Understanding foundational metadata concepts based on the DAMA DMBOK
Guiding principles & lessons learned
Data Architecture Strategies Webinar: Emerging Trends in Data Architecture – ...DATAVERSITY
A robust data architecture is at the core what’s driving today’s innovative, data-driven organizations. From AI to machine learning to Big Data – a strong data architecture is needed in order to be successful, and core fundamentals such as data quality, metadata management, and efficient data storage are more critical than ever.
With the vast array of new technologies available to support these trends, how do you make sense of it all? Our panel of experts will offer their perspectives on how the latest trends in data architecture can support your organization’s data-driven goals.
Data Modeling, Data Governance, & Data QualityDATAVERSITY
Data Governance is often referred to as the people, processes, and policies around data and information, and these aspects are critical to the success of any data governance implementation. But just as critical is the technical infrastructure that supports the diverse data environments that run the business. Data models can be the critical link between business definitions and rules and the technical data systems that support them. Without the valuable metadata these models provide, data governance often lacks the “teeth” to be applied in operational and reporting systems.
Join Donna Burbank and her guest, Nigel Turner, as they discuss how data models & metadata-driven data governance can be applied in your organization in order to achieve improved data quality.
Emerging Trends in Data Architecture – What’s the Next Big Thing?DATAVERSITY
Digital Transformation is a top priority for many organizations, and a successful digital journey requires a strong data foundation. Creating this digital transformation requires a number of core data management capabilities such as MDM, With technological innovation and change occurring at an ever-increasing rate, it’s hard to keep track of what’s hype and what can provide practical value for your organization. Join this webinar to see the results of a recent DATAVERSITY survey on emerging trends in Data Architecture, along with practical commentary and advice from industry expert Donna Burbank.
Data Catalogues - Architecting for Collaboration & Self-ServiceDATAVERSITY
The interest in Data Catalogs is growing as more business & technical users are looking to gain insight from data using a self-service approach. Architectural techniques for Data Provisioning and Metadata Cataloging have evolved to cater to these new audiences and ways of working. This webinar provides concrete methods of architecting your Self-service BI & Analytics environment to foster collaboration while at the same time maintaining Data Quality and reducing risk.
The recent focus on Big Data in the data management community brings with it a paradigm shift—from the more traditional top-down, “design then build” approach to data warehousing and business intelligence, to the more bottom up, “discover and analyze” approach to analytics with Big Data. Where does data modeling fit in this new world of Big Data? Does it go away, or can it evolve to meet the emerging needs of these exciting new technologies? Join this webinar to discuss:
Big Data –A Technical & Cultural Paradigm Shift
Big Data in the Larger Information Management Landscape
Modeling & Technology Considerations
Organizational Considerations
The Role of the Data Architect in the World of Big Data
Five Things to Consider About Data Mesh and Data GovernanceDATAVERSITY
Data mesh was among the most discussed and controversial enterprise data management topics of 2021. One of the reasons people struggle with data mesh concepts is we still have a lot of open questions that we are not thinking about:
Are you thinking beyond analytics? Are you thinking about all possible stakeholders? Are you thinking about how to be agile? Are you thinking about standardization and policies? Are you thinking about organizational structures and roles?
Join data.world VP of Product Tim Gasper and Principal Scientist Juan Sequeda for an honest, no-bs discussion about data mesh and its role in data governance.
Slides: The Automated Business GlossaryDATAVERSITY
You can’t do business without being able to successfully extract insights from your organization’s data supply chain. You need a strong foundation for visibility and control of data. Flying by the seat of your pants, when it comes to analyzing your market, your performance, and your competitors’ performances, just doesn’t work.
In this webinar, we’ll examine the real-life daily struggles and frustrations plaguing the data supply chain and discuss how these struggles can be eliminated by automation of metadata operations such as data lineage, data discovery and business glossary.
When you attend this webinar, you will learn about:
• What data consumers are really spending their time on and why they are so frustrated
• The challenges of building a business glossary
• How to get started with an automated business glossary and why it’s critical for BI intelligence
Data-Ed Webinar: Data Modeling FundamentalsDATAVERSITY
Because every organization produces and propagates data as part of their day-to-day operations, data trends are becoming more and more important in the mainstream business world’s consciousness. For many organizations in various industries, though, comprehension of this development begins and ends with buzzwords: “Big Data,” “NoSQL,” “Data Scientist,” and so on. Few realize that any and all solutions to their business problems, regardless of platform or relevant technology, rely to a critical extent on the data model supporting them. As such, Data Modeling is not an optional task for an organization’s data effort, but rather a vital activity that facilitates the solutions driving your business.
Instead of the technical minutiae of Data Modeling, this webinar will focus on its value and practicality for your organization. In doing so, we will:
Address fundamental Data Modeling methodologies, their differences and various practical applications, and trends around the practice of Data Modeling itself
Discuss abstract models and entity frameworks, as well as some basic tenets for application development
Examine the general shift from segmented Data Modeling to more business-integrated practices
Discuss fundamental Data Modeling concepts based on “The DAMA Guide to the Data Management Body of Knowledge” (DAMA DMBOK)
ADV Slides: The Data Needed to Evolve an Enterprise Artificial Intelligence S...DATAVERSITY
This webinar will focus on the promise AI holds for organizations in every industry and every size, and how to overcome some of the challenges today of how to prepare for AI in the organization and how to plan AI applications.
The foundation for AI is data. You must have enough data to analyze to build models. Your data determines the depth of AI you can achieve – for example, statistical modeling, machine learning, or deep learning – and its accuracy. The increased availability of data is the single biggest contributor to the uptake in AI where it is thriving. Indeed, data’s highest use in the organization soon will be training algorithms. AI is providing a powerful foundation for impending competitive advantage and business disruption.
Data-Ed: Data Systems Integration & Business Value PT. 1: MetadataData Blueprint
Certain systems are more data focused than others. Usually their primary focus is on accomplishing integration of disparate data. In these cases, failure is most often attributable to the adoption of a single pillar (silver bullet). The three webinars in the Data Systems Integration and Business Value series are designed to illustrate that good systems development more often depends on at least three DM disciplines (pie wedges) in order to provide a solid foundation.
Much of the discussion of metadata focuses on understanding it and the associated technologies. While these are important, they represent a typical tool/technology focus and this has not achieved significant results to date. A more relevant question when considering pockets of metadata is: Whether to include them in the scope organizational metadata practices. By understanding what it means to include items in the scope of your metadata practices, you can begin to build systems that allow you to practice sophisticated ways to advance their data management and supported business initiatives. After a bit of practice in this manner you can position your organization to better exploit any and all metadata technologies.
You can sign up for future Data-Ed webinars here: http://www.datablueprint.com/resource-center/webinar-schedule/
Data Architecture is foundational to an information-based operational environment. Without proper structure and efficiency in organization, data assets cannot be utilized to their full potential, which in turn harms bottom-line business value. When designed well and used effectively, however, a strong Data Architecture can be referenced to inform, clarify, understand, and resolve aspects of a variety of business problems commonly encountered in organizations.
The goal of this webinar is not to instruct you in being an outright Data Architect, but rather to enable you to envision a number of uses for Data Architectures that will maximize your organization’s competitive advantage. With that being said, we will:
Discuss Data Architecture’s guiding principles and best practices
Demonstrate how to utilize Data Architecture to address a broad variety of organizational challenges and support your overall business strategy
Illustrate how best to understand foundational Data Architecture concepts based on “The DAMA Guide to the Data Management Body of Knowledge” (DAMA DMBOK)
Good systems development often depends on multiple data management disciplines that provide a solid foundation. One of these is metadata. While much of the discussion around metadata focuses on understanding metadata itself along with its associated technologies, this perspective often represents a typical tool-and-technology focus, which has not achieved significant results to date. A more relevant question when considering pockets of metadata is whether to include them in the scope of organizational metadata practices. By understanding what it means to include items in the scope of your metadata practices, you can begin to build systems that allow you to practice sophisticated ways to advance their data management and supported business initiatives. After a bit of practice in this manner you can position your organization to better exploit any and all metadata technologies in support of business strategy.
Find more data management webinars here: http://www.datablueprint.com/resource-center/webinar-schedule/
The first step toward understanding what data assets mean for your organization is understanding what those assets mean for each other. Metadata—literally, data about data—is one of many Data Management disciplines inherent in good systems development and is perhaps the most mislabeled and misunderstood of the lot. Understanding metadata and its associated technologies as more than just straightforward technological tools can provide powerful insight into the efficiency of organizational practices and can also enable you to combine more sophisticated Data Management techniques in support of larger and more complex business initiatives.In this webinar, we will:Illustrate how to leverage Metadata Management in support of your business strategyDiscuss foundational metadata concepts based on the DAMA Guide to Data Management Book of Knowledge (DAMA DMBOK)Enumerate guiding principles for and lessons previously learned from metadata and its practical uses
Data Structures - The Cornerstone of Your Data’s HomeDATAVERSITY
To co-opt an old adage: “If data gets lost and no one knows where to find it, does it still take up hard-drive space?” In the interest of avoiding that unfortunate philosophical end, individual data structures enable sorting, storage, and organization of data so that it can be retrieved and used efficiently. Applying the correct data structure to different types of data—whether master, reference, or analytics—allows your organization to tailor its data management to fit its unique business needs.
In this webinar, we will:
Discuss the various data structures available and when to use each one, as well as different design styles for analytics
Illustrate how data structures should support your organizational data strategy
Demonstrate how each method can contribute to business value
Data Lake Architecture – Modern Strategies & ApproachesDATAVERSITY
Data Lake or Data Swamp? By now, we’ve likely all heard the comparison. Data Lake architectures have the opportunity to provide the ability to integrate vast amounts of disparate data across the organization for strategic business analytic value. But without a proper architecture and metadata management strategy in place, a Data Lake can quickly devolve into a swamp of information that is difficult to understand. This webinar will offer practical strategies to architect and manage your Data Lake in a way that optimizes its success.
In order to find value in your organization’s data assets, heroic Data Stewards are tasked with saving the day—every single day! These heroes adhere to a Data Governance framework and work to ensure that data is captured right the first time, validated through automated means, and integrated into business processes. Whether it’s data profiling or in-depth root cause analysis, Data Stewards can be counted on to ensure the organization’s mission-critical data is reliable. In this webinar, we will approach this framework and punctuate important facets of a Data Steward’s role.
- Understand the business need for a Data Governance framework
- Learn why embedded Data Quality principles are an important part of system/process design
- Identify opportunities to help drive your organization to a data-driven culture
The first step towards understanding data assets’ impact on your organization is understanding what those assets mean for each other. Metadata – literally, data about data – is a practice area required by good systems development, and yet is also perhaps the most mislabeled and misunderstood Data Management practice. Understanding metadata and its associated technologies as more than just straightforward technological tools can provide powerful insight into the efficiency of organizational practices and enable you to combine practices into sophisticated techniques supporting larger and more complex business initiatives. Program learning objectives include:
- Understanding how to leverage metadata practices in support of business strategy
- Discuss foundational metadata concepts
- Guiding principles for and lessons previously learned from metadata and its practical uses applied strategy
Metadata strategies include:
- Metadata is a gerund so don’t try to treat it as a noun
- Metadata is the language of Data Governance
- Treat glossaries/repositories as capabilities, not technology
Data-Ed Slides: Best Practices in Data Stewardship (Technical)DATAVERSITY
In order to find value in your organization's data assets, heroic data stewards are tasked with saving the day- every single day! These heroes adhere to a data governance framework and work to ensure that data is: captured right the first time, validated through automated means, and integrated into business processes. Whether its data profiling or in depth root cause analysis, data stewards can be counted on to ensure the organization's mission critical data is reliable. In this webinar we will approach this framework, and punctuate important facets of a data steward’s role.
Learning Objectives:
- Understand the business need for a data governance framework
- Learn why embedded data quality principles are an important part of system/process design
- Identify opportunities to help drive your organization to a data driven culture
DataEd Slides: Data Modeling is FundamentalDATAVERSITY
Because every organization produces and propagates data as part of their day-to-day operations, data trends are becoming more and more important in the mainstream business world’s consciousness. For many organizations in various industries, though, comprehension of this development begins and ends with buzzwords: “Big Data,” “NoSQL,” “Data Scientist,” and so on. Few realize that any and all solutions to their business problems, regardless of platform or relevant technology, rely to a critical extent on the data model supporting them. As such, Data Modeling is not an optional task for an organization’s data effort, but rather a vital activity that facilitates the solutions driving your business. Since quality engineering/architecture work products do not happen accidentally, the more your organization depends on automation, the more important are the data models driving the engineering and architecture activities of your organization. This webinar illustrates Data Modeling as a key activity upon which so much technology depends.
DataEd Slides: Data Architecture vs. Data Modeling – Compare and ContrastDATAVERSITY
Many are confused when it comes to data. Architecture, models, data – it can seem a bit overwhelming. This program offers a clear explanation of both Data Architecture and Data Modeling. Data Modeling is a primary means of achieving better understanding of specific Data Architecture components. Data Architecture is the sum of the various organizational data models. Both are made more useful by the other. Data models are literally the pages, intersecting Data Architecture and Data Modeling. Any time you are talking architecture, it is important to include the complementary role of engineering.
Engineering must be addressed from both forward and reverse perspectives. Only when working in a coordinated manner can organizations take steps to better understand what they have and what they need to accomplish – employing Data Modeling and Data Architecture to achieve their mission. Data models are required for this coordination, providing the means of verifying integration, the primary documentation, and required input to data systems evolution. Program learning objectives include:
• Understanding the role played by models
• Incorporating the interrelated concepts of architecture/engineering
• What is taught: forward engineering with a goal of building
• What is also needed: reverse engineering with a goal of understanding
• How increasing coordination requirements increase design simplicity
Data-Ed Webinar: Data Architecture RequirementsDATAVERSITY
Data architecture is foundational to an information-based operational environment. It is your data architecture that organizes your data assets so they can be leveraged in your business strategy to create real business value. Even though this is important, not all data architectures are used effectively. This webinar describes the use of data architecture as a basic analysis method. Various uses of data architecture to inform, clarify, understand, and resolve aspects of a variety of business problems will be demonstrated. As opposed to showing how to architect data, your presenter Dr. Peter Aiken will show how to use data architecting to solve business problems. The goal is for you to be able to envision a number of uses for data architectures that will raise the perceived utility of this analysis method in the eyes of the business.
Takeaways:
Understanding how to contribute to organizational challenges beyond traditional data architecting
How to utilize data architectures in support of business strategy
Understanding foundational data architecture concepts based on the DAMA DMBOK
Data architecture guiding principles & best practices
Data architecture is foundational to an information-based operational environment. It is your data architecture that organizes your data assets so they can be leveraged in your business strategy to create real business value. Even though this is important, not all data architectures are used effectively. This webinar describes the use of data architecture as a basic analysis method. Various uses of data architecture to inform, clarify, understand, and resolve aspects of a variety of business problems will be demonstrated. As opposed to showing how to architect data, your presenter Dr. Peter Aiken will show how to use data architecting to solve business problems. The goal is for you to be able to envision a number of uses for data architectures that will raise the perceived utility of this analysis method in the eyes of the business.
Find out more: http://www.datablueprint.com/resource-center/webinar-schedule/
Data-Ed Slides: Data Architecture Strategies - Constructing Your Data GardenDATAVERSITY
Data architecture is foundational to an information-based operational environment. Without proper structure and efficiency in organization, data assets cannot be utilized to their full potential, which in turn harms bottom-line business value. When designed well and used effectively, however, a strong data architecture can be referenced to inform, clarify, understand, and resolve aspects of a variety of business problems commonly encountered in organizations.
The goal of this webinar is not to instruct you in being an outright data architect, but rather to enable you to envision a number of uses for data architectures that will maximize your organization’s competitive advantage.
With that being said, we will:
- Discuss data architecture’s guiding principles and best practices
- Demonstrate how to utilize data architecture to address a broad variety of organizational challenges and support your overall business strategy
- Illustrate how best to understand foundational data architecture concepts based on the DAMA International Guide to Data Management Body of Knowledge (DAMA DMBOK)
Many are confused when it comes to data. Architecture, models, data - it can seem a bit overwhelming. This webinar offers a clear explanation of Data Modeling as the primary means of achieving better understanding of Data Architecture. Using a storytelling format, this webinar presents an organization approaching the daunting process of attempting to better leverage its data. The organization is currently not knowledgeable of these concepts and begins the process of understating its current state as well as a desired future state. We join as the organization takes steps to better understand what is has and what it needs to accomplish to employ Data Modeling and Architecture to achieve its mission.
The Importance of Master Data ManagementDATAVERSITY
Despite its immaterial nature, data has a tendency to pile up as time goes on, and can quickly be rendered unusable or obsolete without careful maintenance and streamlining of processes for its management. This presentation will provide you with an understanding of reference and Master Data Management (MDM), one such method for keeping mass amounts of business data organized and functional towards achieving business goals.
MDM’s guiding principles include the establishment and implementation of authoritative data sources and effective means of delivering data to various business processes, as well as increases to the quality of information used in organizational analytical functions (such as BI). To that end, attendees of this webinar will learn how to:
Structure their Data Management processes around these principles
Incorporate Data Quality engineering into the planning of reference and MDM
Understand why MDM is so critical to their organization’s overall data strategy
Discuss foundational MDM concepts based on “The DAMA Guide to the Data Management Body of Knowledge” (DAMA DMBOK)
Unlock Your Data for ML & AI using Data VirtualizationDenodo
How Denodo Complement’s Logical Data Lake in Cloud
● Denodo does not substitute data warehouses, data lakes,
ETLs...
● Denodo enables the use of all together plus other data
sources
○ In a logical data warehouse
○ In a logical data lake
○ They are very similar, the only difference is in the main
objective
● There are also use cases where Denodo can be used as data
source in a ETL flow
Data-Ed Online Webinar: Data Architecture RequirementsDATAVERSITY
Data architecture is foundational to an information-based operational environment. It is data architecture that organizes data assets so they can be used in your business strategy to create real business value. Even though this is important, data architectures are still being used ineffectively. The various uses of data architecture are referenced to inform, clarify, understand, and resolve aspects of a variety of business problems commonly encountered in organizations. As opposed to showing how to architect data, your presenter Dr. Peter Aiken will show how to use data architecture to solve business problems. The goal is for you to be able to envision a number of uses for data architectures that will maximize your organization’s competitive advantage.
Takeaways:
•How to utilize data architecture to address a broad variety of organizational challenges and how to utilize data architectures in support of business strategy
•Understanding foundational data architecture concepts based on the DAMA DMBOK
•Data architecture guiding principles & best practices
Organizations across most industries make some attempt to utilize Data Management and Data Strategies. While most organizations have both concepts implemented, they must fully understand the difference to fully achieve their goals.
This webinar will cover three lessons, each illustrated with examples, that will help you distinguish the difference between Data Strategy and Data Management processes and communicate their value to both internal and external decision-makers:
Understanding the difference between Data Strategy and Data Management
Prioritizing organizational Data Management needs vs. Data Strategy needs
Discuss foundational Data Management and Data Strategy concepts based on “The DAMA Guide to the Data Management Body of Knowledge” (DAMA DMBOK)
Architecture, Products, and Total Cost of Ownership of the Leading Machine Le...DATAVERSITY
Organizations today need a broad set of enterprise data cloud services with key data functionality to modernize applications and utilize machine learning. They need a comprehensive platform designed to address multi-faceted needs by offering multi-function data management and analytics to solve the enterprise’s most pressing data and analytic challenges in a streamlined fashion.
In this research-based session, I’ll discuss what the components are in multiple modern enterprise analytics stacks (i.e., dedicated compute, storage, data integration, streaming, etc.) and focus on total cost of ownership.
A complete machine learning infrastructure cost for the first modern use case at a midsize to large enterprise will be anywhere from $3 million to $22 million. Get this data point as you take the next steps on your journey into the highest spend and return item for most companies in the next several years.
Data at the Speed of Business with Data Mastering and GovernanceDATAVERSITY
Do you ever wonder how data-driven organizations fuel analytics, improve customer experience, and accelerate business productivity? They are successful by governing and mastering data effectively so they can get trusted data to those who need it faster. Efficient data discovery, mastering and democratization is critical for swiftly linking accurate data with business consumers. When business teams can quickly and easily locate, interpret, trust, and apply data assets to support sound business judgment, it takes less time to see value.
Join data mastering and data governance experts from Informatica—plus a real-world organization empowering trusted data for analytics—for a lively panel discussion. You’ll hear more about how a single cloud-native approach can help global businesses in any economy create more value—faster, more reliably, and with more confidence—by making data management and governance easier to implement.
What is data literacy? Which organizations, and which workers in those organizations, need to be data-literate? There are seemingly hundreds of definitions of data literacy, along with almost as many opinions about how to achieve it.
In a broader perspective, companies must consider whether data literacy is an isolated goal or one component of a broader learning strategy to address skill deficits. How does data literacy compare to other types of skills or “literacy” such as business acumen?
This session will position data literacy in the context of other worker skills as a framework for understanding how and where it fits and how to advocate for its importance.
Building a Data Strategy – Practical Steps for Aligning with Business GoalsDATAVERSITY
Developing a Data Strategy for your organization can seem like a daunting task – but it’s worth the effort. Getting your Data Strategy right can provide significant value, as data drives many of the key initiatives in today’s marketplace – from digital transformation, to marketing, to customer centricity, to population health, and more. This webinar will help demystify Data Strategy and its relationship to Data Architecture and will provide concrete, practical ways to get started.
Uncover how your business can save money and find new revenue streams.
Driving profitability is a top priority for companies globally, especially in uncertain economic times. It's imperative that companies reimagine growth strategies and improve process efficiencies to help cut costs and drive revenue – but how?
By leveraging data-driven strategies layered with artificial intelligence, companies can achieve untapped potential and help their businesses save money and drive profitability.
In this webinar, you'll learn:
- How your company can leverage data and AI to reduce spending and costs
- Ways you can monetize data and AI and uncover new growth strategies
- How different companies have implemented these strategies to achieve cost optimization benefits
Data Catalogs Are the Answer – What is the Question?DATAVERSITY
Organizations with governed metadata made available through their data catalog can answer questions their people have about the organization’s data. These organizations get more value from their data, protect their data better, gain improved ROI from data-centric projects and programs, and have more confidence in their most strategic data.
Join Bob Seiner for this lively webinar where he will talk about the value of a data catalog and how to build the use of the catalog into your stewards’ daily routines. Bob will share how the tool must be positioned for success and viewed as a must-have resource that is a steppingstone and catalyst to governed data across the organization.
Data Catalogs Are the Answer – What Is the Question?DATAVERSITY
Organizations with governed metadata made available through their data catalog can answer questions their people have about the organization’s data. These organizations get more value from their data, protect their data better, gain improved ROI from data-centric projects and programs, and have more confidence in their most strategic data.
Join Bob Seiner for this lively webinar where he will talk about the value of a data catalog and how to build the use of the catalog into your stewards’ daily routines. Bob will share how the tool must be positioned for success and viewed as a must-have resource that is a steppingstone and catalyst to governed data across the organization.
In this webinar, Bob will focus on:
-Selecting the appropriate metadata to govern
-The business and technical value of a data catalog
-Building the catalog into people’s routines
-Positioning the data catalog for success
-Questions the data catalog can answer
Because every organization produces and propagates data as part of their day-to-day operations, data trends are becoming more and more important in the mainstream business world’s consciousness. For many organizations in various industries, though, comprehension of this development begins and ends with buzzwords: “Big Data,” “NoSQL,” “Data Scientist,” and so on. Few realize that all solutions to their business problems, regardless of platform or relevant technology, rely to a critical extent on the data model supporting them. As such, data modeling is not an optional task for an organization’s data effort, but rather a vital activity that facilitates the solutions driving your business. Since quality engineering/architecture work products do not happen accidentally, the more your organization depends on automation, the more important the data models driving the engineering and architecture activities of your organization. This webinar illustrates data modeling as a key activity upon which so much technology and business investment depends.
Specific learning objectives include:
- Understanding what types of challenges require data modeling to be part of the solution
- How automation requires standardization on derivable via data modeling techniques
- Why only a working partnership between data and the business can produce useful outcomes
Analytics play a critical role in supporting strategic business initiatives. Despite the obvious value to analytic professionals of providing the analytics for these initiatives, many executives question the economic return of analytics as well as data lakes, machine learning, master data management, and the like.
Technology professionals need to calculate and present business value in terms business executives can understand. Unfortunately, most IT professionals lack the knowledge required to develop comprehensive cost-benefit analyses and return on investment (ROI) measurements.
This session provides a framework to help technology professionals research, measure, and present the economic value of a proposed or existing analytics initiative, no matter the form that the business benefit arises. The session will provide practical advice about how to calculate ROI and the formulas, and how to collect the necessary information.
How a Semantic Layer Makes Data Mesh Work at ScaleDATAVERSITY
Data Mesh is a trending approach to building a decentralized data architecture by leveraging a domain-oriented, self-service design. However, the pure definition of Data Mesh lacks a center of excellence or central data team and doesn’t address the need for a common approach for sharing data products across teams. The semantic layer is emerging as a key component to supporting a Hub and Spoke style of organizing data teams by introducing data model sharing, collaboration, and distributed ownership controls.
This session will explain how data teams can define common models and definitions with a semantic layer to decentralize analytics product creation using a Hub and Spoke architecture.
Attend this session to learn about:
- The role of a Data Mesh in the modern cloud architecture.
- How a semantic layer can serve as the binding agent to support decentralization.
- How to drive self service with consistency and control.
Enterprise data literacy. A worthy objective? Certainly! A realistic goal? That remains to be seen. As companies consider investing in data literacy education, questions arise about its value and purpose. While the destination – having a data-fluent workforce – is attractive, we wonder how (and if) we can get there.
Kicking off this webinar series, we begin with a panel discussion to explore the landscape of literacy, including expert positions and results from focus groups:
- why it matters,
- what it means,
- what gets in the way,
- who needs it (and how much they need),
- what companies believe it will accomplish.
In this engaging discussion about literacy, we will set the stage for future webinars to answer specific questions and feature successful literacy efforts.
The Data Trifecta – Privacy, Security & Governance Race from Reactivity to Re...DATAVERSITY
Change is hard, especially in response to negative stimuli or what is perceived as negative stimuli. So organizations need to reframe how they think about data privacy, security and governance, treating them as value centers to 1) ensure enterprise data can flow where it needs to, 2) prevent – not just react – to internal and external threats, and 3) comply with data privacy and security regulations.
Working together, these roles can accelerate faster access to approved, relevant and higher quality data – and that means more successful use cases, faster speed to insights, and better business outcomes. However, both new information and tools are required to make the shift from defense to offense, reducing data drama while increasing its value.
Join us for this panel discussion with experts in these fields as they discuss:
- Recent research about where data privacy, security and governance stand
- The most valuable enterprise data use cases
- The common obstacles to data value creation
- New approaches to data privacy, security and governance
- Their advice on how to shift from a reactive to resilient mindset/culture/organization
You’ll be educated, entertained and inspired by this panel and their expertise in using the data trifecta to innovate more often, operate more efficiently, and differentiate more strategically.
Emerging Trends in Data Architecture – What’s the Next Big Thing?DATAVERSITY
With technological innovation and change occurring at an ever-increasing rate, it’s hard to keep track of what’s hype and what can provide practical value for your organization. Join this webinar to see the results of a recent DATAVERSITY survey on emerging trends in Data Architecture, along with practical commentary and advice from industry expert Donna Burbank.
Data Governance Trends - A Look Backwards and ForwardsDATAVERSITY
As DATAVERSITY’s RWDG series hurdles into our 12th year, this webinar takes a quick look behind us, evaluates the present, and predicts the future of Data Governance. Based on webinar numbers, hot Data Governance topics have evolved over the years from policies and best practices, roles and tools, data catalogs and frameworks, to supporting data mesh and fabric, artificial intelligence, virtualization, literacy, and metadata governance.
Join Bob Seiner as he reflects on the past and what has and has not worked, while sharing examples of enterprise successes and struggles. In this webinar, Bob will challenge the audience to stay a step ahead by learning from the past and blazing a new trail into the future of Data Governance.
In this webinar, Bob will focus on:
- Data Governance’s past, present, and future
- How trials and tribulations evolve to success
- Leveraging lessons learned to improve productivity
- The great Data Governance tool explosion
- The future of Data Governance
Data Governance Trends and Best Practices To Implement TodayDATAVERSITY
Would you share your bank account information on social media? How about shouting your social security number on the New York City subway? We didn’t think so either – that’s why data governance is consistently top of mind.
In this webinar, we’ll discuss the common Cloud data governance best practices – and how to apply them today. Join us to uncover Google Cloud’s investment in data governance and learn practical and doable methods around key management and confidential computing. Hear real customer experiences and leave with insights that you can share with your team. Let’s get solving.
Topics that you will hear addressed in this webinar:
- Understanding the basics of Cloud Incident Response (IR) and anticipated data governance trends
- Best practices for key management and apply data governance to your day-to-day
- The next wave of Confidential Computing and how to get started, including a demo
It is a fascinating, explosive time for enterprise analytics.
It is from the position of analytics leadership that the enterprise mission will be executed and company leadership will emerge. The data professional is absolutely sitting on the performance of the company in this information economy and has an obligation to demonstrate the possibilities and originate the architecture, data, and projects that will deliver analytics. After all, no matter what business you’re in, you’re in the business of analytics.
The coming years will be full of big changes in enterprise analytics and data architecture. William will kick off the fifth year of the Advanced Analytics series with a discussion of the trends winning organizations should build into their plans, expectations, vision, and awareness now.
Too often I hear the question “Can you help me with our data strategy?” Unfortunately, for most, this is the wrong request because it focuses on the least valuable component: the data strategy itself. A more useful request is: “Can you help me apply data strategically?” Yes, at early maturity phases the process of developing strategic thinking about data is more important than the actual product! Trying to write a good (must less perfect) data strategy on the first attempt is generally not productive –particularly given the widespread acceptance of Mike Tyson’s truism: “Everybody has a plan until they get punched in the face.” This program refocuses efforts on learning how to iteratively improve the way data is strategically applied. This will permit data-based strategy components to keep up with agile, evolving organizational strategies. It also contributes to three primary organizational data goals. Learn how to improve the following:
- Your organization’s data
- The way your people use data
- The way your people use data to achieve your organizational strategy
This will help in ways never imagined. Data are your sole non-depletable, non-degradable, durable strategic assets, and they are pervasively shared across every organizational area. Addressing existing challenges programmatically includes overcoming necessary but insufficient prerequisites and developing a disciplined, repeatable means of improving business objectives. This process (based on the theory of constraints) is where the strategic data work really occurs as organizations identify prioritized areas where better assets, literacy, and support (data strategy components) can help an organization better achieve specific strategic objectives. Then the process becomes lather, rinse, and repeat. Several complementary concepts are also covered, including:
- A cohesive argument for why data strategy is necessary for effective data governance
- An overview of prerequisites for effective strategic use of data strategy, as well as common pitfalls
- A repeatable process for identifying and removing data constraints
- The importance of balancing business operation and innovation
Who Should Own Data Governance – IT or Business?DATAVERSITY
The question is asked all the time: “What part of the organization should own your Data Governance program?” The typical answers are “the business” and “IT (information technology).” Another answer to that question is “Yes.” The program must be owned and reside somewhere in the organization. You may ask yourself if there is a correct answer to the question.
Join this new RWDG webinar with Bob Seiner where Bob will answer the question that is the title of this webinar. Determining ownership of Data Governance is a vital first step. Figuring out the appropriate part of the organization to manage the program is an important second step. This webinar will help you address these questions and more.
In this session Bob will share:
- What is meant by “the business” when it comes to owning Data Governance
- Why some people say that Data Governance in IT is destined to fail
- Examples of IT positioned Data Governance success
- Considerations for answering the question in your organization
- The final answer to the question of who should own Data Governance
It is clear that Data Management best practices exist and so does a useful process for improving existing Data Management practices. The question arises: Since we understand the goal, how does one design a process for Data Management goal achievement? This program describes what must be done at the programmatic level to achieve better data use and a way to implement this as part of your data program. The approach combines DMBoK content and CMMI/DMM processes – permitting organizations with the opportunity to benefit from the best of both. It also permits organizations to understand:
- Their current Data Management practices
- Strengths that should be leveraged
- Remediation opportunities
MLOps – Applying DevOps to Competitive AdvantageDATAVERSITY
MLOps is a practice for collaboration between Data Science and operations to manage the production machine learning (ML) lifecycles. As an amalgamation of “machine learning” and “operations,” MLOps applies DevOps principles to ML delivery, enabling the delivery of ML-based innovation at scale to result in:
Faster time to market of ML-based solutions
More rapid rate of experimentation, driving innovation
Assurance of quality, trustworthiness, and ethical AI
MLOps is essential for scaling ML. Without it, enterprises risk struggling with costly overhead and stalled progress. Several vendors have emerged with offerings to support MLOps: the major offerings are Microsoft Azure ML and Google Vertex AI. We looked at these offerings from the perspective of enterprise features and time-to-value.
Unleashing the Power of Data_ Choosing a Trusted Analytics Platform.pdfEnterprise Wired
In this guide, we'll explore the key considerations and features to look for when choosing a Trusted analytics platform that meets your organization's needs and delivers actionable intelligence you can trust.
06-04-2024 - NYC Tech Week - Discussion on Vector Databases, Unstructured Data and AI
Discussion on Vector Databases, Unstructured Data and AI
https://www.meetup.com/unstructured-data-meetup-new-york/
This meetup is for people working in unstructured data. Speakers will come present about related topics such as vector databases, LLMs, and managing data at scale. The intended audience of this group includes roles like machine learning engineers, data scientists, data engineers, software engineers, and PMs.This meetup was formerly Milvus Meetup, and is sponsored by Zilliz maintainers of Milvus.
Analysis insight about a Flyball dog competition team's performanceroli9797
Insight of my analysis about a Flyball dog competition team's last year performance. Find more: https://github.com/rolandnagy-ds/flyball_race_analysis/tree/main
Levelwise PageRank with Loop-Based Dead End Handling Strategy : SHORT REPORT ...Subhajit Sahu
Abstract — Levelwise PageRank is an alternative method of PageRank computation which decomposes the input graph into a directed acyclic block-graph of strongly connected components, and processes them in topological order, one level at a time. This enables calculation for ranks in a distributed fashion without per-iteration communication, unlike the standard method where all vertices are processed in each iteration. It however comes with a precondition of the absence of dead ends in the input graph. Here, the native non-distributed performance of Levelwise PageRank was compared against Monolithic PageRank on a CPU as well as a GPU. To ensure a fair comparison, Monolithic PageRank was also performed on a graph where vertices were split by components. Results indicate that Levelwise PageRank is about as fast as Monolithic PageRank on the CPU, but quite a bit slower on the GPU. Slowdown on the GPU is likely caused by a large submission of small workloads, and expected to be non-issue when the computation is performed on massive graphs.
Adjusting OpenMP PageRank : SHORT REPORT / NOTESSubhajit Sahu
For massive graphs that fit in RAM, but not in GPU memory, it is possible to take
advantage of a shared memory system with multiple CPUs, each with multiple cores, to
accelerate pagerank computation. If the NUMA architecture of the system is properly taken
into account with good vertex partitioning, the speedup can be significant. To take steps in
this direction, experiments are conducted to implement pagerank in OpenMP using two
different approaches, uniform and hybrid. The uniform approach runs all primitives required
for pagerank in OpenMP mode (with multiple threads). On the other hand, the hybrid
approach runs certain primitives in sequential mode (i.e., sumAt, multiply).
Chatty Kathy - UNC Bootcamp Final Project Presentation - Final Version - 5.23...John Andrews
SlideShare Description for "Chatty Kathy - UNC Bootcamp Final Project Presentation"
Title: Chatty Kathy: Enhancing Physical Activity Among Older Adults
Description:
Discover how Chatty Kathy, an innovative project developed at the UNC Bootcamp, aims to tackle the challenge of low physical activity among older adults. Our AI-driven solution uses peer interaction to boost and sustain exercise levels, significantly improving health outcomes. This presentation covers our problem statement, the rationale behind Chatty Kathy, synthetic data and persona creation, model performance metrics, a visual demonstration of the project, and potential future developments. Join us for an insightful Q&A session to explore the potential of this groundbreaking project.
Project Team: Jay Requarth, Jana Avery, John Andrews, Dr. Dick Davis II, Nee Buntoum, Nam Yeongjin & Mat Nicholas
06-04-2024 - NYC Tech Week - Discussion on Vector Databases, Unstructured Data and AI
Round table discussion of vector databases, unstructured data, ai, big data, real-time, robots and Milvus.
A lively discussion with NJ Gen AI Meetup Lead, Prasad and Procure.FYI's Co-Found
1. Peter Aiken, Ph.D.
Metadata
!1
• DAMA International President 2009-2013 / 2018
• DAMA International Achievement Award 2001
(with Dr. E. F. "Ted" Codd
• DAMA International Community Award 2005
Peter Aiken, Ph.D.
• I've been doing this a long time
• My work is recognized as useful
• Associate Professor of IS (vcu.edu)
• Founder, Data Blueprint (datablueprint.com)
• DAMA International (dama.org)
• 10 books and dozens of articles
• Experienced w/ 500+ data
management practices worldwide
• Multi-year immersions
– US DoD (DISA/Army/Marines/DLA)
– Nokia
– Deutsche Bank
– Wells Fargo
– Walmart
– …
Copyright 2018 by Data Blueprint Slide # !2
PETER AIKEN WITH JUANITA BILLINGS
FOREWORD BY JOHN BOTTEGA
MONETIZING
DATA MANAGEMENT
Unlocking the Value in Your Organization’s
Most Important Asset.
The Case for the
Chief Data Officer
Recasting the C-Suite to Leverage
Your MostValuable Asset
Peter Aiken and
Michael Gorman
2. 1. In the context of data management
2. What is it and why is it important?
3. Major types & subject areas
4. Benefits, application & sources
5. Implementation considerations
6. Guiding principles & building blocks
7. Specific teachable example
8. Take Aways, References and Q&A
!3Copyright 2018 by Data Blueprint Slide #
Metadata
UsesUsesReuses
What is data management?
!4Copyright 2018 by Data Blueprint Slide #
Sources
Data
Engineering
Data
Delivery
Data
Storage
Specialized Team Skills
Data Governance
Understanding the current
and future data needs of an
enterprise and making that
data effective and efficient in
supporting
business activities
Aiken, P, Allen, M. D., Parker, B., Mattia, A.,
"Measuring Data Management's Maturity:
A Community's Self-Assessment"
IEEE Computer (research feature April 2007)
Data management practices connect
data sources and uses in an
organized and efficient manner
• Engineering
• Storage
• Delivery
• Governance
When executed,
engineering, storage, and
delivery implement governance
Note: does not well-depict data reuse
3.
What is data management?
!5Copyright 2018 by Data Blueprint Slide #
Sources
Data
Engineering
Data
Delivery
Data
Storage
Resources
(optimized for reuse)
Data Governance
AnalyticInsight Specialized Team Skills
Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs
!6Copyright 2018 by Data Blueprint Slide #
4. You can accomplish
Advanced Data Practices
without becoming proficient
in the Foundational Data
Practices however
this will:
• Take longer
• Cost more
• Deliver less
• Present
greater
risk (with thanks to
Tom DeMarco)
Data Management Practices Hierarchy
Advanced
Data
Practices
• MDM
• Mining
• Big Data
• Analytics
• Warehousing
• SOA
Foundational Data Practices
Data Platform/Architecture
Data Governance Data Quality
Data Operations
Data Management Strategy
Technologies
Capabilities
Copyright 2018 by Data Blueprint Slide # !7
DMM℠ Structure of
5 Integrated
DM Practice Areas
Data architecture
implementation
Data
Governance
Data
Management
Strategy
Data
Operations
Platform
Architecture
Supporting
Processes
Maintain fit-for-purpose data,
efficiently and effectively
!8Copyright 2018 by Data Blueprint Slide #
Manage data coherently
Manage data assets professionally
Data life cycle
management
Organizational support
Data
Quality
5. Data Management Strategy is often the weakest link
Data architecture
implementation
Data
Governance
Data
Management
Strategy
Data
Operations
Platform
Architecture
Supporting
Processes
Maintain fit-for-purpose data,
efficiently and effectively
!9Copyright 2018 by Data Blueprint Slide #
Manage data coherently
Manage data assets professionally
Data life cycle
management
Organizational support
Data
Quality
3 3
33
1
!10Copyright 2018 by Data Blueprint Slide #
DataManagement
BodyofKnowledge(DMBoK)
7. 1. In the context of data management
2. What is it and why is it important?
3. Major types & subject areas
4. Benefits, application & sources
5. Implementation considerations
6. Guiding principles & building blocks
7. Specific teachable example
8. Take Aways, References and Q&A
!13Copyright 2018 by Data Blueprint Slide #
Metadata
Meta data, Meta-data, or metadata
• In the history of language, whenever two words are
pasted together to form a combined concept initially, a
hyphen links them
• With the passage of time,
the hyphen is lost. The
argument can be made
that that time has passed
• There is a copyright on
the term "metadata," but
it has not been enforced
• So, the term is "metadata"
!14Copyright 2018 by Data Blueprint Slide #
8. !15Copyright 2018 by Data Blueprint Slide #
Data
About
Data
!16Copyright 2018 by Data Blueprint Slide #
UsesSources
Metadata Governance
Metadata
Engineering
Metadata
Delivery
Metadata
Storage
Specialized Team Skills
Metadata Practices
• If metadata is data then what technologies and techniques
should we use to manage it?
• Data management technologies and techniques
10. Definitions
• Metadata is
– Everywhere in every data management activity and integral
to all IT systems and applications.
– To data what data is to real life. Data reflects real life transactions, events,
objects, relationships, etc. Metadata reflects data transactions, events,
objects, relations, etc.
– The data that describe the structure and workings of an
organization’s use of information, and which describe the
systems it uses to manage that information.
[quote from David Hay's book, page 4]
• Data describing various facets of a data asset, for the purpose
of improving its usability throughout its life cycle [Gartner 2010]
• Metadata unlocks the value of data, and therefore requires
management attention [Gartner 2011]
• Metadata Management is
– The set of processes that ensure proper creation, storage, integration, and
control to support associated use of metadata
!19Copyright 2018 by Data Blueprint Slide #
!20Copyright 2018 by Data Blueprint Slide #
12. !23Copyright 2018 by Data Blueprint Slide #
Defining Metadata
Metadata is any
combination of
any circle and the
data in the center
that unlocks the
value of the data!
!24Copyright 2018 by Data Blueprint Slide #
Adapted from Brad Melton
Data
WhereWhy
What How
Who
When
Data
13. Data
Library Metadata Example
Libraries can operate
efficiently through careful
use of metadata (Card
Catalog)
Who: Author
What: Title
Where: Shelf Location
When: Publication Date
A small amount of
metadata (Card Catalog)
unlocks the value of a large
amount of data (the
Library)
!25Copyright 2018 by Data Blueprint Slide #
Library Book
WhereWhy
What How
Who
When
Outlook Example
!26Copyright 2018 by Data Blueprint Slide #
"Outlook" metadata is used
to navigate/manage email
What: "Subject"
How: "Priority"
Where: "USERID/Inbox",
"USERID/Personal"
Why: "Body"
When: "Sent" & "Received”
• Find the important stuff/weed out junk
• Organize for future access/outlook rules
• Imagine how managing e-mail (already non-trivial)
would change if Outlook did not make use of
metadata Who:"To" & "From?"
14. Hedy Lamarr
• Google celebrated her
101st Birthday on 11/8/2015
– Tablets for fizzy drinks
– Improved stop light design
• Invention of “frequency
hopping” radio
– By jumping from one radio
frequency to another rapidly,
only a receiver that shares the
key can find the transmission
– Prevent interference with the radio
guidance controls of torpedoes
• U.S. Patent 2,292,387 (w/ George Antheil)
• Associated traffic analysis
– Looking at other elements of a communication
when you don’t know the actual content
– Time/duration of a message
– Location of transmitters
– Detect specific operator “fists”
– Identify the operator and you could identify a
specific ship or military unit, locate it with
direction finding, and then track its activity over time
!27Copyright 2018 by Data Blueprint Slide #
https://theconversation.com/how-wwi-codebreakers-taught-your-gas-meter-to-snitch-on-you-29924
Why Metadata Matters
• They know you rang a phone sex service at 2:24 am and spoke for 18
minutes. But they don't know what you talked about.
• They know you called the suicide prevention hotline from the Golden Gate
Bridge. But the topic of the call remains a secret.
• They know you spoke with an HIV testing service, then your doctor, then
your health insurance company in the same hour. But they don't know what
was discussed.
• They know you received a call from the local NRA office while it was
having a campaign against gun legislation, and then called your senators
and congressional representatives immediately after. But the content of
those calls remains safe from government intrusion.
• They know you called a gynecologist, spoke for a half hour, and then
called the local Planned Parenthood's number later that day. But nobody
knows what you spoke about.
– https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2013/06/why-metadata-matters
!28Copyright 2018 by Data Blueprint Slide #
15. 1. In the context of data management
2. What is it and why is it important?
3. Major types & subject areas
4. Benefits, application & sources
5. Implementation considerations
6. Guiding principles & building blocks
7. Specific teachable example
8. Take Aways, References and Q&A
!29Copyright 2018 by Data Blueprint Slide #
Metadata
Typically Managed Architectures
• Process Architecture
– Arrangement of inputs -> transformations = value -> outputs
– Typical elements: Functions, activities, workflow, events, cycles, products, procedures
• Systems Architecture
– Applications, software components, interfaces, projects
• Business Architecture
– Goals, strategies, roles, organizational structure, location(s)
• Security Architecture
– Arrangement of security controls relation to IT Architecture
• Technical Architecture/Tarchitecture
– Relation of software capabilities/technology stack
– Structure of the technology infrastructure of an enterprise, solution or system
– Typical elements: Networks, hardware, software platforms, standards/protocols
• Data/Information Architecture
– Arrangement of data assets supporting organizational strategy
– Typical elements: specifications expressed as entities, relationships, attributes,
definitions, values, vocabularies
!30Copyright 2018 by Data Blueprint Slide #
21. 1. In the context of data management
2. What is it and why is it important?
3. Major types & subject areas
4. Benefits, application & sources
5. Implementation considerations
6. Guiding principles & building blocks
7. Specific teachable example
8. Take Aways, References and Q&A
!41Copyright 2018 by Data Blueprint Slide #
Metadata
Investing in Metadata?
• How can IT staff convince managers to plan,
budget, and apply resources for metadata
management?
• What is metadata
and why is it
important?
• What technologies
are involved?
• Internet and intranet
technologies are
part of the answer
and will get the
immediate attention of management.
!42Copyright 2018 by Data Blueprint Slide #
23. Metadata …
• Isn't
– Is not a noun
– One persons data is another's metadata
• Is more of a verb?
– Represents a use of existing facts, rather than a type of data itself
• A gerund
– a form that is derived from
a verb but that functions as a noun
– e.g., asking in do you mind my asking you?
– Describes a use of data - not a type of data
• Describes the use of some attributes
of data to understand or manage that
same data from a different
(usually higher) level of abstraction
• Value proposition
– Is this data worth including within the scope of our metadata practices?
!45Copyright 2018 by Data Blueprint Slide #
Keep the proper focus
• Wrong question:
– Is this metadata?
• Right question:
– Should we include this
data item within the
scope of our
metadata
practices?
!46Copyright 2018 by Data Blueprint Slide #
24. Definition of Bed
!47Copyright 2018 by Data Blueprint Slide #
Entity: BED
Data Asset Type: Principal Data Entity
Purpose: This is a substructure within the Room
substructure of the Facility Location. It contains
information about beds within rooms.
Source: Maintenance Manual for File and Table
Data (Software Version 3.0, Release 3.1)
Attributes: Bed.Description
Bed.Status
Bed.Sex.To.Be.Assigned
Bed.Reserve.Reason
Associations: >0-+ Room
Status: Validated
Purpose statement incorporates motivations
A purpose statement describing
– Why the organization is maintaining information about this business concept;
– Sources of information about it;
– A partial list of the attributes or characteristics of the entity; and
– Associations with other data items;
this one is read as "One room contains zero or many beds."
!48Copyright 2018 by Data Blueprint Slide #
Draft
25. MetadataImplementationPhases
!49Copyright 2018 by Data Blueprint Slide #
F o r 1 m a n a g e a b l e b u s i n e s s p r o b l e m !
0 500 1000 1500 2000 2500
Manage Positions(2%)
Plan Careers (~5%)
AdministerTraining (~5%)
Plan Successions(~5%
Manage Competencies(20%)
Recruit Workforce (62%)
DevelopWorkforce(29.9%)
AdministerWorkforce(28.8%)
CompensateEmployees(23.7%)
MonitorWorkplace(8.1%)
DefineBusiness(4.4%)
TargetSystem (3.9%)
EDI Manager (.9%)
TargetSystem Tools(.3%)
Administer Workforce
Metadata Uses
!50Copyright 2018 by Data Blueprint Slide #
27. Build Your Own Metadata Repository
!53Copyright 2018 by Data Blueprint Slide #
Sample
Low-tech
Repository
!54Copyright 2018 by Data Blueprint Slide #
28. !55Copyright 2018 by Data Blueprint Slide #
FTI Metadata Model
!56Copyright 2018 by Data Blueprint Slide #
33. Example: iTunes Metadata
• Example:
– iTunes
Metadata
• Insert a recently
purchased CD
• iTunes can:
– Count the
number of
tracks (25)
– Determine the
length of each
track
!65Copyright 2018 by Data Blueprint Slide #
• When connected to the
Internet iTunes connects to
the Gracenote(.com) Media
Database and retrieves:
– CD Name
– Artist
– Track Names
– Genre
– Artwork
• Sure would be a pain to
type in all this information
!66Copyright 2018 by Data Blueprint Slide #
34. • To organize iTunes
– I create a "New Smart Playlist" for
Artist's containing "Miles Davis"
!67Copyright 2018 by Data Blueprint Slide #
• Notice I didn't get the desired results
• I already had another Miles Davis recording in iTunes
• Must fine-tune the request to get the desired results
– Album contains "The complete birth of the cool"
• Now I can move the playlist "Miles Davis" to a folder
!68Copyright 2018 by Data Blueprint Slide #
35. • The same:
–Interface
–Processing
–Data Structures
• are applied to
–Podcasts
–Movies
–Books
–.pdf files
• Economies of scale
are enormous
!69Copyright 2018 by Data Blueprint Slide #
1. In the context of data management
2. What is it and why is it important?
3. Major types & subject areas
4. Benefits, application & sources
5. Implementation considerations
6. Guiding principles & building blocks
7. Specific teachable example
8. Take Aways, References and Q&A
!70Copyright 2018 by Data Blueprint Slide #
Metadata
36. Metadata Take Aways
• 'Data about data'
• Metadata unlocks the value of data, and therefore requires
management attention [Gartner 2011]
• Metadata is less about what and more about how
• Metadata is the language of data governance
• Metadata defines the essence of integration challenges
• Should we include this data item within the scope of our
metadata practices?
!71Copyright 2018 by Data Blueprint Slide #
UsesSources
Metadata Governance
Metadata
Engineering
Metadata
Delivery
Metadata Practices
Metadata
Storage
Specialized Team Skills
!72Copyright 2018 by Data Blueprint Slide #
1. In the context of data management
2. What is it and why is it important?
3. Major types & subject areas
4. Benefits, application & sources
5. Implementation considerations
6. Guiding principles & building blocks
7. Specific teachable example
8. Take Aways, References and Q&A
Metadata
39. It’s your turn!
Use the chat
feature or Twitter
(#dataed) to submit
your questions now!
Questions?
+ =
!77Copyright 2018 by Data Blueprint Slide #
Data Architecture Summit (DAS)
Data Architecture Bootcamp
October 8, 2018 @ 8:00 AM CT
October Webinar:
Data Quality Strategies: Rethinking Data Quality
October 9, 2018 @ 2:00 PM ET
November Webinar:
Data Architecture v Data Modeling
November 12, 2018 @ 2:00 PM ET
Sign up for webinars at: www.datablueprint.com/webinar-schedule or at www.dataversity.net
Upcoming Events
!78Copyright 2018 by Data Blueprint Slide #
Brought to you by:
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Copyright 2018 by Data Blueprint Slide # !79