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Sep 16

I really enjoyed being a guest on DM Radio’s broadcast last week where we discussed “Innovation in Information Management”.

CrystalBallWe live in a time of rapid change through an accelerated flow of information.  The time span between market fluctuations and subsequently the time to make appropriate decisions in direction or strategy is shortening each day.  More than ever it’s become necessary to look into the “crystal ball” to know what’s ahead so we can react quicker (and correctly).

The “old school” solution is to pre-build all the data access you could ever think of so it’s ready when you need it. This is the normal approach of SOA, Data Warehousing and Data Integration products.  It’s very resource intensive with a “something’s bound to stick” approach to providing the right data at the right time.

The “new approach” is to provide IT with the tools so they can deliver relevant, timely data from anywhere in an on-demand fashion when it is needed.

When I was asked, “What is the biggest innovation you have seen in data governance?” I responded that I’ve seen a common thread where most of the innovation is powered by enabling technologies with Web Data.  And it’s not simply a “better, cheaper, faster” approach, but quite honestly a paradigm shift in taking advantage of the accelerated world to turbo-charge business intelligence tools with web data services.

That’s real innovation in an accelerated world.

By:  Stefan Andreasen Stefan Andreasen, CTO and Founder, Kapow Technologies

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Aug 27

I’m just coming back from our (great) yearly company kick-off which reminded me of this interesting blog post, “Who owns the data?”, by Philip Howard.

There are really two aspects to this question.  First is the challenge of day to day usage and governance.  Second is legal ownership (which I’ll cover in a later post).

So who owns the data? Business?  Or IT?  As Philip writes, business owns the data but IT has the key. So it’s as if you own your house but have to go to your neighbor to unlock the front door.

I have visited many companies where line of business managers work with their data through business applications.  They develop new ideas on how to improve the business which leads to further analysis modeling and business case development.  In other words, they need to use the same data but in a new context.  However, they can’t get to the data.  IT usually has a huge backlog so at best they have to wait 6-12 months, but then it’s too late.   So they end up reverting to a lot of manual cut-and-paste.

Isn’t it absurd that you can own data, and even work with the data every day in your application interfaces, but then not be able to get the data when you need it?

Luckily there is a solution.  Web Data Services eliminates the disconnect between LOB and IT.  It allows IT to easily and automatically access not only the data but also the meta data and business logic via HTML/AJAX web application front-ends.  So essentially if you can see the data using accepted standard access credentials in a browser, you can now also access, enrich, and load the data into any BI tool for LOB to use.

Think Outside the Black Box

Philip also talks about “information and data governance”, processes that ensure the quality and relevance of data.  Be careful not to depend on outsourced black box solutions to deliver static data feeds based upon fixed requirements.  You need to make real-time decisions based on real-time data.  Therefore you need a product or tool that can deliver timely, relevant, customized data while giving you complete data governance control. Kapow Web Data Server allows line of business and content owners to do exactly that.  Give it a try!

By:  Stefan Andreasen Stefan Andreasen, CTO Kapow Technologies

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