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Good master data management needs a focus on data

Good master data management needs a focus on data

By:  Kathleen Lau  On: 29 Jun 2009 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

At the MDM Summit in Toronto last Friday, an oil and gas exploration company shared how its engineers have better faith in data. SAS Institute Canada describes the journey that is MDM, and the MDM Institute names vendors who will monopolize the market in 2009

Businesses in the retail sector, for instance, have the ability to respond to predictable events, such as not shipping an even distribution of goods knowing the varying consumption rates of different geographical regions, said Smith. “But organizations still don’t do it. If they have the data, why don’t they do it?” he asked.

The answer is it’s not easy. It takes an investment, and requires some will, said Smith, and there is “just a general lack of fire in the belly for analytics,” said Smith. “In my mind, analytics are worth the money.”

According to Aaron Zornes, chief research officer with Burlingame, Calif.-based MDM Institute, the MDM market is expected to grow to US$2 billion by 2012, and will become a large and strategic market for vendors and system integrators.

Zornes said MDM has progressed to mainstream from the early adopter stage, and that in 2009 certain vendors like IBM Corp., Oracle Corp. and SAP AG will monopolize the market share. But that’s not to say new entrants like Microsoft Corp. won’t make an MDM presence as well, he added.

Recent research by the MDM Institute revealed five top business drivers for adopting an MDM strategy. They are compliance and regulatory reporting; economies of scale for mergers and acquisitions; synergies for cross-selling and up-selling; legacy systems for integration and augmentation; and end-to-end customer data updates.

Acknowledging the advantages of MDM and the journey that such a strategy entails, Zornes said "the challenge is, how much do you chew off in that first bite?”










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Kathleen Lau Kathleen Lau was a senior writer with ITWorldCanada.com and ComputerWorld Canada from December 2006 to August 2011.In her role as senior writer, she covered broadly technology news and issues r... more

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