On Demand
Certainly, every business leader wants to have trusted, secure, consistent and usable information. But data volumes and systems complexity has been increasing for years and most organizations rarely prioritize data governance, so why care now? We’re at the brink of a perfect storm of unprecedented IT megatrends. The convergence of Cloud, Social, Mobile and Big Data foreshadows the upcoming tsunami of data ripe with potential business value. But it will also make the frustrating complexity of your traditional on-premises transactional data management challenges appear amazingly “manageable” in contrast.
Claudia Imhoff, Ph.D.
Sponsored by
TDWI and IBM Content
Many organizations have a serious interest in data lakes, at the moment, because of the business analytics and new data-driven practices that lakes promise. Yet, these organizations still aren’t quite ready to take a dive into a data lake. Whether they are unable to define standard structures, align and maintain business meanings, or create a governance strategy, these companies struggle to anticipate what truly lies beneath the surface of the data lake.
Philip Russom, Ph.D.
Sponsored by
TDWI and IBM Content
Both product and tech leaders have always recognized that business intelligence (BI) is most valuable when it is pervasive, contextual, and actionable. A new generation of solutions -- embedded BI – provides unprecedented power to weave reporting and analytics into the fabric of apps and business processes.
David Stodder
Sponsored by
Information Builders, SAS
Many firms have mandates to move to clouds, control IT costs, integrate disparate applications, deliver data-driven solutions faster, and provide integration infrastructure for hybrid data ecosystems.
Philip Russom, Ph.D.
Sponsored by
Liaison Technologies
Both product and tech leaders have always recognized that business intelligence (BI) is most valuable when it is pervasive, contextual, and actionable. A new generation of solutions -- embedded BI – provides unprecedented power to weave reporting and analytics into the fabric of apps and business processes.
David Stodder
Sponsored by
Qlik®
The data and analytics landscape is changing. Although many organizations are still analyzing structured data from their data warehouse, TDWI research indicates organizations have increasing interest in analyzing disparate kinds of data. This data is often large in volume and can require modernizing data infrastructures and platforms. The industry around big data and data science and the emerging role of the data scientist is one result of this evolution/revolution.
Fern Halper, Ph.D.
Users of all types are spending more and more time on mobile devices, whether they are business executives, a line-of-business (LOB) managers, retail inventory clerks, or frontline service technicians. While engaged with customers, managing operations, or strategizing about new products, they need access to critical business intelligence (BI) reports and analytics. For an increasing number of organizations, it is now a high priority to extend BI and analytics to the mobile workforce.
David Stodder
Sponsored by
MicroStrategy