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Master your data management challenges

Master your data management challenges

By:  Shane Schick  On: 16 Aug 2007 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

An envolving area of enterprise analytics aims to succeed where customer relationship management and data warehousing projects failed. Turn your dirty data records into gold with our crash course

Jill Dyche’s favourite New Yorker cartoon shows an old woman talking on the phone to someone who is obviously a telemarketer of some kind. She is saying, “If you don’t stop touching base with me, I’m going to call the police!”

Dyche, a partner with Sherman Oaks, Calif.-based Baseline Consulting, used the cartoon to illustrate a common problem: different parts of the business keep harassing the customer because the systems in each division have different information about that customer.

That’s why Dyche is helping enterprises create master data management (MDM) strategies.

“We’re talking about who someone is, rather than the fact that they used an ATM to take out money,” she explained to local IT executives during a recent seminar in Toronto. “It’s not transactional. It’s subject area-specific. It’s the groupings, categories and hierarchies that exist across a company.”

Vendors have been promising a “single version of the truth” for years, but Dyche predicts more companies will be setting up an MDM “hub,” or repository of master data that becomes the basis for a “golden record” feeding into other systems.

Here are some answers to some common MDM questions to help IT managers get rolling with their own projects.

? How do you define this stuff?

Dyche simply calls it “data about stuff,” but San Mateo, Calif.-based Ventana Research has a more elaborate explanation. “Master data includes information about customers, products, suppliers, regions, hierarchies, business rules and other detailed aspects of a company’s business,” an addendum to a report on MDM it released last month reads.

“An MDM system delivers the capability to define master data (including definitions, references and metadata) uniformly across the organization and synchronize its use. It allows organizations to retain and derive maximum value from their existing IT investments.”

? What if I’ve already deployed CRM tools or set up a data warehouse?

Not good enough, the experts say. In many cases, you’re more likely to take on MDM because those things failed.

“ERP systems didn’t solve the problem, CRM didn’t solve the problem, data warehousing — go down the list,” says Marty Mosley, CTO with Initiate Systems in Chicago.

Anurag Wadehra, vice-president of marketing and product management with Siperian in San Mateo, Calif., agrees.

“Data warehousing is good for reporting and analysis after the fact. It is not where data conflicts are resolved,” he says. “Managing the master data — the identifier and relationships and the resolution of conflicting identifiers and making a source of truth across all systems — is a completely different task.”

? Should I pick a point product or a module to an existing platform like SAP or Oracle?

The point solution vendors, not surprisingly, don’t advise the latter. “A company having a homogeneous system, a single platform that manages all their assets, is very, very rare,” Mosley says. “SAP works great if you’re an SAP shop, but especially if you’re using software as a service, you’re dealing with a lot of data residing outside the firewall. How does a closed big box architecture like SAP or IBM play in that world?”


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Shane Schick Shane Schick is the Editor-in-Chief of IT World Canada. Follow him at Twitter.com/shaneschick, Facebook.com/Shane.Schick.Media or myi.tw/ShaneSchickGoogle.

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