On Demand
Excellence in analytics is a competitive advantage in nearly all industries. For this reason, organizations need their data scientists, business analysts, and business users to be able to access and interact with more sources and more types of data than ever before. The Hadoop ecosystem is flourishing, producing innovative technologies and frameworks such as Apache Spark, Apache Apex, and more that are becoming important for providing processing speed and power as well as data integration and preparation capabilities for fast, visual, and interactive analytics.
David Stodder
Sponsored by
Cloudera, Talend, DataTorrent, Platfora
There’s a lot of buzz currently about how many types of IT systems need updates, upgrades, extensions, and replacements, due to recent changes in business and technology requirements. Current parlance refers to these collectively as “modernization” projects.
Philip Russom, Ph.D.
Sponsored by
SAS
The term “data-driven” has become an accepted principle for modern organizations, but to drive modern, agile businesses, each data consumer’s view of enterprise data must both align with individual data quality and usability criteria and remain consistent with other data users in the organization. While traditional data quality/data preparation tools were intended to ensure accuracy and trust, the conventional wisdom centered on a technical, IT-centric usage model.
David Loshin
Sponsored by
Trillium Software
Analytics are today’s business weapon of choice. Changing business environments and competitive pressures have driven companies to seek a new edge from innovative technologies such as Hadoop, specialized data stores, and the cloud. This expanding and constantly evolving set of data sources means the enterprise data warehouse can no longer be the singular physical location for all large-scale information management.
Claudia Imhoff, Ph.D.
Sponsored by
TDWI and IBM Content
There is growing awareness that for practitioners to effectively manage data as an asset to the business, that data must not be simply collected and moved between systems, but must be validated to ensure the level of trust that the data is fit for its various downstream purposes. This demands conformance to business rules that accurately reflect meeting the needs of defined business policies. Understanding business policies, transforming them into data rules, and implementing those rules is the process of data governance. Organizations whose understanding enables their ability to effectively govern their data are gaining business advantage as they leverage data quality, metadata, and data governance tools to translate business policies into consistent, useful data.
David Loshin
Sponsored by
Oracle
Business intelligence (BI) sits at the center of many organizations’ efforts to enable data-driven decisions and actions through their enterprises. But BI is changing, both for organizations just getting started with BI and those that have invested in developing an enterprise standard. We have entered the age of BI “democratization”: tools and applications are becoming easier to use, more visual, and more adaptable to the requirements of a greater variety of users. Across business functions, users are excited by the potential of the new BI and visual analytics technologies and are clamoring for the opportunity to move beyond the limits of spreadsheets and canned reporting. However, a balance must be struck because no organization wants BI democratization to devolve into BI chaos.
David Stodder
Sponsored by
TDWI and IBM Content
The conventional approach to data warehousing may satisfy conventional reporting and straightforward analytical needs. Yet outside of the enterprise data warehouse, the information world has rapidly evolved and changed – there are new data sources, streaming different kinds of data, all coming at faster speeds. While we trust our existing data warehouse platforms to meet existing business needs, how can we integrate new technologies to address new business challenges without disrupting the consumers who rely on the trust and security of the established reporting and analysis platforms and applications?
David Loshin
Sponsored by
TDWI and IBM Content