Master data is data essential to operations in a specific subject area. Information treated as master data varies from one subject to another and even from one company to another. However defined, one thing for certain is that it does not become master data unless it is governed.
Join Bob Seiner for this RWDG webinar where he outlines a repeatable way to activate your Data Governance program by focusing on your master data initiatives. Get people to trust your data as the “master” by implementing a formal certification process.
In this webinar, Bob will discuss:
• What makes it Master Data Governance
• Aligning roles and responsibilities with Master Data Management (MDM)
• Qualities of “governed data”
• Governing to a “master” version of the truth
• Implementing Data Governance domain by domain
RWDG Slides: Data and Metadata Will Not Govern ThemselvesDATAVERSITY
There is a direct relationship between the value your organization gets from its data, the trust your organization has in its data, and how formally that data is being governed. This is not new news. In fact, this has always been the case.
Join Bob Seiner for the RWDG webinar to kick off the year, where he will discuss how data does not naturally or automatically increase in value or become more trusted without a resolute effort. That effort focuses on governance. The webinar will focus on the effort that must be orchestrated at the strategic, tactical, and operational levels of the organization to demonstrate value and gain the trust of the people at all levels.
In this webinar, Bob will share:
• How governance applies equally to data and metadata
• The meaning of a “resolute effort” to govern important assets
• How the governance of data and metadata increases their value
• The people who must be held formally accountable for data and metadata
• Communicating the webinar’s title with people who can make a difference
RWDG Slides: Building Data Governance Through Data StewardshipDATAVERSITY
Data stewards play an important role in Data Governance solutions. That is why it is critical that organizations get data stewardship right when setting up their program. The data is governed by people. Some people will even tell you that the discipline should be called people governance.
Bob Seiner has a lot to say on this subject. In this RWDG webinar, Bob shares the reasons why you must build your Data Governance program through the stewardship of the data. There is no governance without formal accountability for data. People become stewards when their relationship to data is formalized. It is the only way.
This webinar will focus on:
• The definition of data stewardship that MUST be adopted
• The critical role stewardship plays in governing data
• What it means to formalize accountability
• Why everybody in the organization is a data steward
• How to build Data Governance through stewardship
RWDG Slides: Data Architecture Is Data GovernanceDATAVERSITY
Data Architecture and Data Governance are the same thing! Aren’t they?
Most people would say that this line of thinking is absurd — or even worse. There is NO WAY that they are the same thing. Or are they?
This RWDG webinar with Bob Seiner and his special guest Anthony Algmin looks at the disciplines of Data Governance and Data Architecture and explores how much they are the same … and how they are different. The speakers will let you draw your own conclusion, but they will get you thinking about whether Data Architecture and Data Governance are two sides of the same coin.
In this webinar, Bob and Anthony will discuss:
• What is meant by the saying two sides of the same coin … and how it relates
• The similarities between Data Architecture and Data Governance
• The differences between the two
• How to use Data Architecture to sell Data Governance … and the other way around
• Deciding if the two disciplines are the same … or different
RWDG Slides: Data Governance versus Information GovernanceDATAVERSITY
If Data Governance is the execution and enforcement of authority over the management of data and data-related assets, what is Information Governance? How are they the same and how do they differ? This is a question pondered by the greatest minds in Data Management. And there is no correct answer.
Join Bob Seiner for this month’s RWDG webinar where he will compare Data and Information Governance and share situations when it is makes sense to call it one over the other. Most organizations name their program after they select exactly what will be governed and how that governed “stuff” will be used. What are you governing?
In this webinar, Bob will discuss:
- Describing what it means to “Govern” something
- How to define Governance in both contexts
- Differences between Data and Information Governance
- How to select what to call your program
- Why what you call your program matters … or does it?
Slides: Knowledge Graphs vs. Property GraphsDATAVERSITY
We are in the era of graphs. Graphs are hot. Why? Flexibility is one strong driver: Heterogeneous data, integrating new data sources, and analytics all require flexibility. Graphs deliver it in spades.
Over the last few years, a number of new graph databases came to market. As we start the next decade, dare we say “the semantic twenties,” we also see vendors that never before mentioned graphs starting to position their products and solutions as graphs or graph-based.
Graph databases are one thing, but “Knowledge Graphs” are an even hotter topic. We are often asked to explain Knowledge Graphs.
Today, there are two main graph data models:
• Property Graphs (also known as Labeled Property Graphs)
• RDF Graphs (Resource Description Framework) aka Knowledge Graphs
Other graph data models are possible as well, but over 90 percent of the implementations use one of these two models. In this webinar, we will cover the following:
I. A brief overview of each of the two main graph models noted above
II. Differences in Terminology and Capabilities of these models
III. Strengths and Limitations of each approach
IV. Why Knowledge Graphs provide a strong foundation for Enterprise Data Governance and Metadata Management
RWDG Slides: Activate Your Data Governance PolicyDATAVERSITY
What does it mean to activate a Data Governance policy? Can an inactive policy be effective? Data Governance policies can address different things depending on the organization. Some policies are very general and introduce the awareness of formal Data Governance to the organization. Other policies address specific needs like Data Quality, data documentation, and data protection.
Join Bob Seiner and a special guest for this RWDG webinar where they will tackle of the subject of how to develop and deploy an active Data Governance policy. Bob and his guest will provide specific examples of policy components and examples of how organizations use policies to govern their data.
In this webinar, Bob and his guest will discuss:
- When a Data Governance policy is necessary (and when it isn’t)
- The difference between an active and inactive policy
- Tips for activating a Data Governance policy
- Using the policy to drive Data Governance
- Getting people to follow a Data Governance policy
If you define, produce, or use data as part of your job and you are held formally accountable for how you define, produce, and use the data, then you are a data steward. If that statement is true, then everybody is a data steward. Does this make your Data Governance program more complex?
Join Bob Seiner for this thought-provoking webinar that asks and answers the question, how can everybody be a data steward? His approach to Data Stewardship will at the same time make your program less invasive to deliver and add a touch of complexity when it is recognized that the governance of data involves everybody in the organization.
In this webinar, Bob will talk about:
- Defining the levels and roles of data stewards
- What the term “formalized accountability” means
- How to handle the complexity of everybody being a data steward
- The complete coverage that is deployed by this approach
- How to “get over” everybody being a data steward
RWDG Slides: Data Governance and Three Levels of Metadata ManagementDATAVERSITY
There are three levels of metadata that every organization must govern well. These levels are the semantic level, the business level, and the technical level. All three levels are important components of Data Governance and must be stewarded to focus on the goals and scope of your Data Governance program.
In this month’s installment of the Real-World Data Governance webinar series, Bob Seiner will present a three-tiered approach to defining, producing, and using all levels of metadata to further the cause of Data Governance. Governing the processes associated with this metadata tends to be a central focus of successful Data Governance programs. Join Bob to learn how to simplify the metadata focus.
In this webinar, Bob will discuss:
• The three levels of metadata and how they differ
• Sources of the metadata at each level
• Metadata linkage between the levels
• Processes to govern all the levels of metadata
• Institutionalizing policy to assure quality metadata at all levels
RWDG Slides: Data and Metadata Will Not Govern ThemselvesDATAVERSITY
There is a direct relationship between the value your organization gets from its data, the trust your organization has in its data, and how formally that data is being governed. This is not new news. In fact, this has always been the case.
Join Bob Seiner for the RWDG webinar to kick off the year, where he will discuss how data does not naturally or automatically increase in value or become more trusted without a resolute effort. That effort focuses on governance. The webinar will focus on the effort that must be orchestrated at the strategic, tactical, and operational levels of the organization to demonstrate value and gain the trust of the people at all levels.
In this webinar, Bob will share:
• How governance applies equally to data and metadata
• The meaning of a “resolute effort” to govern important assets
• How the governance of data and metadata increases their value
• The people who must be held formally accountable for data and metadata
• Communicating the webinar’s title with people who can make a difference
RWDG Slides: Building Data Governance Through Data StewardshipDATAVERSITY
Data stewards play an important role in Data Governance solutions. That is why it is critical that organizations get data stewardship right when setting up their program. The data is governed by people. Some people will even tell you that the discipline should be called people governance.
Bob Seiner has a lot to say on this subject. In this RWDG webinar, Bob shares the reasons why you must build your Data Governance program through the stewardship of the data. There is no governance without formal accountability for data. People become stewards when their relationship to data is formalized. It is the only way.
This webinar will focus on:
• The definition of data stewardship that MUST be adopted
• The critical role stewardship plays in governing data
• What it means to formalize accountability
• Why everybody in the organization is a data steward
• How to build Data Governance through stewardship
RWDG Slides: Data Architecture Is Data GovernanceDATAVERSITY
Data Architecture and Data Governance are the same thing! Aren’t they?
Most people would say that this line of thinking is absurd — or even worse. There is NO WAY that they are the same thing. Or are they?
This RWDG webinar with Bob Seiner and his special guest Anthony Algmin looks at the disciplines of Data Governance and Data Architecture and explores how much they are the same … and how they are different. The speakers will let you draw your own conclusion, but they will get you thinking about whether Data Architecture and Data Governance are two sides of the same coin.
In this webinar, Bob and Anthony will discuss:
• What is meant by the saying two sides of the same coin … and how it relates
• The similarities between Data Architecture and Data Governance
• The differences between the two
• How to use Data Architecture to sell Data Governance … and the other way around
• Deciding if the two disciplines are the same … or different
RWDG Slides: Data Governance versus Information GovernanceDATAVERSITY
If Data Governance is the execution and enforcement of authority over the management of data and data-related assets, what is Information Governance? How are they the same and how do they differ? This is a question pondered by the greatest minds in Data Management. And there is no correct answer.
Join Bob Seiner for this month’s RWDG webinar where he will compare Data and Information Governance and share situations when it is makes sense to call it one over the other. Most organizations name their program after they select exactly what will be governed and how that governed “stuff” will be used. What are you governing?
In this webinar, Bob will discuss:
- Describing what it means to “Govern” something
- How to define Governance in both contexts
- Differences between Data and Information Governance
- How to select what to call your program
- Why what you call your program matters … or does it?
Slides: Knowledge Graphs vs. Property GraphsDATAVERSITY
We are in the era of graphs. Graphs are hot. Why? Flexibility is one strong driver: Heterogeneous data, integrating new data sources, and analytics all require flexibility. Graphs deliver it in spades.
Over the last few years, a number of new graph databases came to market. As we start the next decade, dare we say “the semantic twenties,” we also see vendors that never before mentioned graphs starting to position their products and solutions as graphs or graph-based.
Graph databases are one thing, but “Knowledge Graphs” are an even hotter topic. We are often asked to explain Knowledge Graphs.
Today, there are two main graph data models:
• Property Graphs (also known as Labeled Property Graphs)
• RDF Graphs (Resource Description Framework) aka Knowledge Graphs
Other graph data models are possible as well, but over 90 percent of the implementations use one of these two models. In this webinar, we will cover the following:
I. A brief overview of each of the two main graph models noted above
II. Differences in Terminology and Capabilities of these models
III. Strengths and Limitations of each approach
IV. Why Knowledge Graphs provide a strong foundation for Enterprise Data Governance and Metadata Management
RWDG Slides: Activate Your Data Governance PolicyDATAVERSITY
What does it mean to activate a Data Governance policy? Can an inactive policy be effective? Data Governance policies can address different things depending on the organization. Some policies are very general and introduce the awareness of formal Data Governance to the organization. Other policies address specific needs like Data Quality, data documentation, and data protection.
Join Bob Seiner and a special guest for this RWDG webinar where they will tackle of the subject of how to develop and deploy an active Data Governance policy. Bob and his guest will provide specific examples of policy components and examples of how organizations use policies to govern their data.
In this webinar, Bob and his guest will discuss:
- When a Data Governance policy is necessary (and when it isn’t)
- The difference between an active and inactive policy
- Tips for activating a Data Governance policy
- Using the policy to drive Data Governance
- Getting people to follow a Data Governance policy
If you define, produce, or use data as part of your job and you are held formally accountable for how you define, produce, and use the data, then you are a data steward. If that statement is true, then everybody is a data steward. Does this make your Data Governance program more complex?
Join Bob Seiner for this thought-provoking webinar that asks and answers the question, how can everybody be a data steward? His approach to Data Stewardship will at the same time make your program less invasive to deliver and add a touch of complexity when it is recognized that the governance of data involves everybody in the organization.
In this webinar, Bob will talk about:
- Defining the levels and roles of data stewards
- What the term “formalized accountability” means
- How to handle the complexity of everybody being a data steward
- The complete coverage that is deployed by this approach
- How to “get over” everybody being a data steward
RWDG Slides: Data Governance and Three Levels of Metadata ManagementDATAVERSITY
There are three levels of metadata that every organization must govern well. These levels are the semantic level, the business level, and the technical level. All three levels are important components of Data Governance and must be stewarded to focus on the goals and scope of your Data Governance program.
In this month’s installment of the Real-World Data Governance webinar series, Bob Seiner will present a three-tiered approach to defining, producing, and using all levels of metadata to further the cause of Data Governance. Governing the processes associated with this metadata tends to be a central focus of successful Data Governance programs. Join Bob to learn how to simplify the metadata focus.
In this webinar, Bob will discuss:
• The three levels of metadata and how they differ
• Sources of the metadata at each level
• Metadata linkage between the levels
• Processes to govern all the levels of metadata
• Institutionalizing policy to assure quality metadata at all levels
RWDG Slides: What is a Data Steward to do?DATAVERSITY
Most people recognize that Data Stewards play an essential role in their Data Governance and Information Governance programs. However, the manner in which Data Stewards are used is not the same from organization to organization. How you use Data Stewards depends on your goals for Data Governance.
Join Bob Seiner for this month’s RWDG webinar where he will share different ways to activate Data Stewards based on the purpose of your program. Bob will talk about options to extend existing Data Steward activity and how to build new functionality into the role of your Data Stewards.
In this webinar, Bob will discuss:
- The crucial role of the Data Steward in Data Governance
- Different types of Data Stewards and what they do
- Aligning Data Steward activities with program goals
- Improving existing Data Steward actions
- Finding new ways to use your Data Stewards
Data Governance and the Internet of ThingsDATAVERSITY
Several years back there were already more devices connected to the internet than people. It is estimated that more than 20 billion devices will be connected by 2020 and that number will never fall. Connecting to the internet implies the transfer of data. The numbers of devices and what they transfer imply a lot of data. Who is governing all of this data?
Join Bob Seiner for this month’s installment of Real-World Data Governance to expand your appreciation of the data issues that pertain to the Internet of Things (IoT). You may be surprised how much of what you already know about data governance applies to governing this new definition, production and use of data.
In this webinar Bob will talk about:
•Clear Description of IoT Focused on the data
•Addressing Data Management Concerns
•Applications of IoT Data
•Dimensions of IoT Data Processes and Quality
•Risk Associated with Interoperability
Data Governance and Metadata ManagementDATAVERSITY
Metadata is a tool that improves data understanding, builds end-user confidence, and improves the return on investment in every asset associated with becoming a data-centric organization. Metadata’s use has expanded beyond “data about data” to cover every phase of data analytics, protection, and quality improvement. Data Governance and metadata are connected at the hip in every way possible. As the song goes, “You can’t have one without the other.”
In this RWDG webinar, Bob Seiner will provide a way to renew your energy by focusing on the valuable asset that can make or break your Data Governance program’s success. The truth is metadata is already inherent in your data environment, and it can be leveraged by making it available to all levels of the organization. At issue is finding the most appropriate ways to leverage and share metadata to improve data value and protection.
Throughout this webinar, Bob will share information about:
- Delivering an improved definition of metadata
- Communicating the relationship between successful governance and metadata
- Getting your business community to embrace the need for metadata
- Determining the metadata that will provide the most bang for your bucks
- The importance of Metadata Management to becoming data-centric
Real-World Data Governance Webinar: Big Data Governance - What Is It and Why ...DATAVERSITY
Big Data is all the rage. Everybody is asking about Big Data, researching Big Data, considering Big Data, some are even doing Big Data. Certainly many people are asking questions about Big Data Governance. We have some answers for them.
This Real-World Data Governance webinar with Bob Seiner will focus on the strength of Big Data Governance as a concept and a practice and will highlight how the concepts of each, Big Data and Data Governance, both benefit and hurt each other.
This session will include:
Defining Big Data Governance
Ways to Govern Big Data
Making the Connection for IT and Business People
Determining the Vitality of Big Data Governance
Considerations for Big Data Governance
Real-World Data Governance: Build Your Own Data Governance ToolsDATAVERSITY
There are many tools available to assist your organization to govern your data better. The value from these tools is proven and organizations come to rely on using these tools to deliver high quality and protected data. Some of these tools are available for purchase however many can be developed and provided internally.
This RWDG webinar with Bob Seiner will address the design, development and deployment of several key instruments of data governance success. Bob will describe the purpose of these tools, ways to build these tools and how to deliver value from tools you can construct with little or no cost.
In this webinar, Bob will discuss tools focused on:
Formalizing accountability for governing data definition, production and use
Recording critical data governance metadata
Applying governance to existing and/or new processes
Providing necessary awareness and communications
Building and improving data understanding
Data Governance vs. Information GovernanceDATAVERSITY
What is the difference between Data Governance and information governance? Organizations either use these terms interchangeably — or they have a distinct, separate meaning. Either way, it is important to discuss the discipline of governance as it pertains to different types of data and information — and what the discipline is called.
Join Bob Seiner for this important RWDG webinar where he will share examples of organizations using each term, what it has meant for them, where their focuses have been, and how the terminology is evolving over time. A lot has been written about Data Governance and information governance. However, it is time to compare and contrast these disciplines and make a decision as to the right name to call it in your organization.
This webinar will focus on:
• Similarities and differences between data and information
• Definitions of data and information governance
• Examples of how organizations have selected their label
• Brief case studies of governance named both ways
• Considerations for naming your program
DAS Slides: Building a Future-State Data Architecture Plan - Where to Begin?DATAVERSITY
This document summarizes a webinar on building a future-state data architecture. It discusses defining data management and identifying current and future hot technologies. Relational databases dominate currently while cloud adoption is increasing. Stakeholders beyond IT are increasingly involved in data decisions. The webinar also outlines key steps to create a data management program, including defining goals, identifying critical data, assessing maturity, and creating a roadmap. An effective roadmap balances business priorities and shows quick wins while building to long term goals.
RWDG Slides: Stay Non-Invasive in Your Data Governance ApproachDATAVERSITY
There are three distinct approaches to implement Data Governance. The Command-and-Control Approach, the Traditional (if you build it they will come) Approach and the Non-Invasive Data Governance Approach. Some organizations select a single approach for their program while others select to follow a hybrid method.
Bob Seiner will provide information about each approach and indicate how the Non-Invasive Approach can follow the path of least resistance with the greatest success. You may be surprised to learn that many of your present activities can be leveraged to address Stewardship, Metadata, and governed processes – all directed at staying as non-invasive as possible.
In this webinar, Bob will discuss:
- A Data Governance framework completed in a Non-Invasive way
- How the three approaches differ and when to use each
- Sticking to a single approach versus implementing a hybrid model
- How to sell Data Governance as something you are already doing
- Using the Non-Invasive Approach to win friends and influence people.
Metadata turns data into information by providing context. Metadata is a determining factor of a successful Data Governance initiative and becomes an important asset that needs to be managed. The metadata will not govern itself.
Join Bob Seiner for a webinar that focuses on the governance of metadata following the non-invasive approach. In this session, Bob will share tips and techniques for assuring that the appropriate metadata is being collected and utilized to support your Data Governance program.
In this webinar, Bob will discuss:
Concepts of Non-Invasive Metadata Governance
Metadata as a valuable data resource
Aligning Data Governance with Metadata Governance
Implementing effective Metadata Governance tools
Maximizing metadata resources with accountability
Everybody is a Data Steward – Get Over It!DATAVERSITY
When Data Stewardship is based on people’s relationships to data, the program is assured to cover the entire organization. People that define, produce, and use data must be held formally accountable for their actions. That may include every person in your organization. Is this a good thing? Of course, it is.
Join Bob Seiner for this month’s installment of his Real-World Data Governance webinar series, where he will share how formalizing accountability, based on the actions people take with data, requires heightened awareness and enforcement of data rules. These rules focus on improving Data Quality, protecting sensitive data, and increasing people’s knowledge of the data that adds value for their business.
In this webinar, Bob will discuss:
Why the “Everybody is a Data Steward” approach is different (and better)
How to recognize the Data Stewards
Formalizing accountability based on data relationships
Coverage of the entire organization
Leveraging the technique to sell stewardship
Data-Ed Webinar: Data Governance StrategiesDATAVERSITY
Much like project team management and home improvement, Data Governance sounds a lot simpler than it actually is. In a nutshell, Data Governance is the process by which an organization delegates responsibility and exercises control over mission-critical data assets. In practice, though, Data Governance directs how all other Data Management functions are performed, meaning that much of your Data Management strategy’s capacity to function at all depends on your effectiveness in governing its implementation. Understanding these aspects of governance is necessary to eliminate the ambiguity that often surrounds effective Data Management and stewardship programs, since the goal of governance is to manage the data that supports organizational strategy.
This webinar will:
Illustrate what Data Governance functions are required for effective Data Management, how they fit with other Data Management disciplines, and why Data Governance can be tricky for many organizations
Help you develop a detailed vocabulary and set of narratives to facilitate understanding of your business objectives and imperatives that demand governance
Provide direction for selling Data Governance to organizational management as a specifically motivated initiative
Discuss foundational Data Governance concepts based on “The DAMA Guide to the Data Management Body of Knowledge” (DAMA DMBOK)
Real-World Data Governance: What is a Data Steward and What Do They Do?DATAVERSITY
This document is a transcript from a webinar on the topic of "What is a Data Steward?". It discusses different definitions and approaches to defining the role of a Data Steward. Key points include:
- A Data Steward is someone who is responsible for data used in their job, including defining, producing, and ensuring quality of data.
- The role of a Data Steward depends on the organization's data governance approach. It should leverage existing responsibilities rather than assigning new roles.
- Different types of Data Stewards are discussed, including Operational Stewards, Domain Stewards, and Steward Coordinators.
- The responsibilities of Data Stewards include data definition, production
Enterprise Data World Webinar: How to Get Your MDM Program Up & RunningDATAVERSITY
How to get your MDM program up & running”
This session will deliver a Master Data Management primer to introduce:
Master vs Reference data
Multi vs Single domain MDM solutions
A MDM reference architecture and
MDM implementation architectures
This will be illustrated with a real world example from describing how to identify & justify the appropriate data subjects areas that are right for mastering and how to align an MDM initiative with in-flight business initiatives and make the business case.
Real-World Data Governance: Metadata to Empower Data Stewards - Introducing t...DATAVERSITY
Metadata is the most valuable tool of the Data Steward. Where the stewards get their metadata and how they participate in the process of delivering core metadata is an issue organizations have been struggling with for years. The Operational Metadata Store or OMS may be the answer.
The traditional Operational Data Store or ODS is a database designed to integrate data from numerous sources that supports business operations and then feeds that data back into the operational systems. This Real-World Data Governance webinar with Bob Seiner and a panel of industry pundits will hold a lively discussion on the practicality of creating the ODS using metadata as the data, utilizing the metadata from a variety of existing sources to operationalize your data stewards.
The session will focus on:
Identifying the most significant metadata for your organization
Identifying existing sources of metadata – known and hidden
Identifying when that metadata will be most useful to your data stewards
Defining a lifecycle that encourages data steward participation
Delivering a model that incorporates all of the above
Real-World Data Governance: Comparing World Class Solutions in Data Governanc...DATAVERSITY
This document outlines the agenda for a webinar on comparing world class data governance solutions. The webinar will feature a panel of practitioners discussing their approaches to data stewardship, metadata, and master data governance. The panelists include professionals from PNC Bank, the Church of Latter Day Saints, and the Data Governance Institute. The webinar will be moderated by Robert Seiner and cover identifying data stewards, handling metadata, governing master data, and taking questions from the audience.
Data-Ed Slides: Best Practices in Data Stewardship (Technical)DATAVERSITY
In order to find value in your organization's data assets, heroic data stewards are tasked with saving the day- every single day! These heroes adhere to a data governance framework and work to ensure that data is: captured right the first time, validated through automated means, and integrated into business processes. Whether its data profiling or in depth root cause analysis, data stewards can be counted on to ensure the organization's mission critical data is reliable. In this webinar we will approach this framework, and punctuate important facets of a data steward’s role.
Learning Objectives:
- Understand the business need for a data governance framework
- Learn why embedded data quality principles are an important part of system/process design
- Identify opportunities to help drive your organization to a data driven culture
ADV Slides: Increasing Artificial Intelligence Success with Master Data Manag...DATAVERSITY
Companies all over the world are going through a digital transformation now, which in many cases, is all about maturing the data environment and the use of data. Master data is key to this effort. All transformative projects require master data and usually many subject areas. Current efforts to deliver master data to the enterprise are cumbersome, inefficient, and met with limited acceptance.
We’ll look at enterprise use cases of artificial intelligence and show the master data that is needed. We’ll see what some MDM vendors are doing with AI and how the future of MDM will be shaped by looking at some specific MDM actions influenced by AI.
RWDG Webinar: Build Your Own Data Governance ToolsDATAVERSITY
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<p>Data Governance tools can be enablers of program success…or the reason why Data Governance fails to meet people’s expectations. Software tools can be leveraged or acquired from reliable vendors or developed internally to attempt to address your organization’s needs. Sometimes the best environment is made up of a combination of internal and external tools. What is a practitioner to do?</p>
<!-- /wp:paragraph -->
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<p>Join Bob Seiner for this month’s RWDG webinar where he will share tools that you can build yourself and talk about how the tools can be used to determine requirements to acquire outside tools. Tools developed internally at little or no cost have helped to solve many Data Governance problems. Several of these problems and their solutions will be described in detail during this webinar.</p>
<!-- /wp:paragraph -->
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<p>In this webinar, Bob will discuss:</p>
<!-- /wp:paragraph -->
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<ul><li>Several easy to build Data Governance tools</li><li>Customizing these tools to address specific issues</li><li>How internally developed tools can lead to tool acquisition</li><li>Knowing when it is time to acquire tools</li><li>Integrating DIY tools with acquired tools</li></ul>
<!-- /wp:list -->
The document discusses data quality success stories and provides an overview of a program on the topic. It introduces the program, which will discuss data quality as an engineering challenge, putting a price on data quality, how components of data management complement each other, savings-based and innovation-based success stories, and non-monetary success stories. The program aims to provide takeaways and allow for questions and answers.
RGA Master Data Management at TDWI St. LouisTDWI St. Louis
RGA is a global life and health reinsurer and the second largest in North America. It implemented a Master Data Management (MDM) system to support a $20 million enterprise resource planning project. Lessons from the project highlighted the need for consistent data dictionaries and a versioning process. RGA's MDM strategy now includes financial, organizational, and investment master data and aims to expand into claims and valuation data. Governance processes involve data stewards, business rules, and request forms to maintain authoritative master data across systems.
RWDG Slides: The Stewardship Approach to Data GovernanceDATAVERSITY
This document discusses the stewardship approach to data governance. It describes how everybody who defines, produces, or uses data is a data steward. Rather than assigning data steward roles, the stewardship approach recognizes the existing responsibilities that people have. This reduces the invasiveness of data governance initiatives. The document provides guidance on engaging different types of data stewards based on their relationships to data and leveraging their existing responsibilities. It also addresses how the large number of stewards impacts the complexity of data governance programs and how best to deal with accountability.
RWDG Slides: Data Governance Roles and ResponsibilitiesDATAVERSITY
Roles and responsibilities are the backbone to a successful Data Governance program. The way you define and utilize the roles will be the biggest factor of program success. From data stewards to the steering committee and everyone in between, people will need to understand the role they play, why they are in the role, and how the role fits in with their existing job.
Join Bob Seiner for this RWDG webinar, where he will provide a complete and detailed set of Data Governance roles and responsibilities. Bob will share an operating model of roles and responsibilities that can be customized to address the specific needs of your organization.
In this webinar, Bob will discuss:
• Executive, strategic, tactical, operational, and support-level roles
• How to customize an operating model to fit your organization
• Detailed responsibilities for each level
• Defining who participates at each level
• Using working teams to implement tactical solutions
RWDG Slides: What is a Data Steward to do?DATAVERSITY
Most people recognize that Data Stewards play an essential role in their Data Governance and Information Governance programs. However, the manner in which Data Stewards are used is not the same from organization to organization. How you use Data Stewards depends on your goals for Data Governance.
Join Bob Seiner for this month’s RWDG webinar where he will share different ways to activate Data Stewards based on the purpose of your program. Bob will talk about options to extend existing Data Steward activity and how to build new functionality into the role of your Data Stewards.
In this webinar, Bob will discuss:
- The crucial role of the Data Steward in Data Governance
- Different types of Data Stewards and what they do
- Aligning Data Steward activities with program goals
- Improving existing Data Steward actions
- Finding new ways to use your Data Stewards
Data Governance and the Internet of ThingsDATAVERSITY
Several years back there were already more devices connected to the internet than people. It is estimated that more than 20 billion devices will be connected by 2020 and that number will never fall. Connecting to the internet implies the transfer of data. The numbers of devices and what they transfer imply a lot of data. Who is governing all of this data?
Join Bob Seiner for this month’s installment of Real-World Data Governance to expand your appreciation of the data issues that pertain to the Internet of Things (IoT). You may be surprised how much of what you already know about data governance applies to governing this new definition, production and use of data.
In this webinar Bob will talk about:
•Clear Description of IoT Focused on the data
•Addressing Data Management Concerns
•Applications of IoT Data
•Dimensions of IoT Data Processes and Quality
•Risk Associated with Interoperability
Data Governance and Metadata ManagementDATAVERSITY
Metadata is a tool that improves data understanding, builds end-user confidence, and improves the return on investment in every asset associated with becoming a data-centric organization. Metadata’s use has expanded beyond “data about data” to cover every phase of data analytics, protection, and quality improvement. Data Governance and metadata are connected at the hip in every way possible. As the song goes, “You can’t have one without the other.”
In this RWDG webinar, Bob Seiner will provide a way to renew your energy by focusing on the valuable asset that can make or break your Data Governance program’s success. The truth is metadata is already inherent in your data environment, and it can be leveraged by making it available to all levels of the organization. At issue is finding the most appropriate ways to leverage and share metadata to improve data value and protection.
Throughout this webinar, Bob will share information about:
- Delivering an improved definition of metadata
- Communicating the relationship between successful governance and metadata
- Getting your business community to embrace the need for metadata
- Determining the metadata that will provide the most bang for your bucks
- The importance of Metadata Management to becoming data-centric
Real-World Data Governance Webinar: Big Data Governance - What Is It and Why ...DATAVERSITY
Big Data is all the rage. Everybody is asking about Big Data, researching Big Data, considering Big Data, some are even doing Big Data. Certainly many people are asking questions about Big Data Governance. We have some answers for them.
This Real-World Data Governance webinar with Bob Seiner will focus on the strength of Big Data Governance as a concept and a practice and will highlight how the concepts of each, Big Data and Data Governance, both benefit and hurt each other.
This session will include:
Defining Big Data Governance
Ways to Govern Big Data
Making the Connection for IT and Business People
Determining the Vitality of Big Data Governance
Considerations for Big Data Governance
Real-World Data Governance: Build Your Own Data Governance ToolsDATAVERSITY
There are many tools available to assist your organization to govern your data better. The value from these tools is proven and organizations come to rely on using these tools to deliver high quality and protected data. Some of these tools are available for purchase however many can be developed and provided internally.
This RWDG webinar with Bob Seiner will address the design, development and deployment of several key instruments of data governance success. Bob will describe the purpose of these tools, ways to build these tools and how to deliver value from tools you can construct with little or no cost.
In this webinar, Bob will discuss tools focused on:
Formalizing accountability for governing data definition, production and use
Recording critical data governance metadata
Applying governance to existing and/or new processes
Providing necessary awareness and communications
Building and improving data understanding
Data Governance vs. Information GovernanceDATAVERSITY
What is the difference between Data Governance and information governance? Organizations either use these terms interchangeably — or they have a distinct, separate meaning. Either way, it is important to discuss the discipline of governance as it pertains to different types of data and information — and what the discipline is called.
Join Bob Seiner for this important RWDG webinar where he will share examples of organizations using each term, what it has meant for them, where their focuses have been, and how the terminology is evolving over time. A lot has been written about Data Governance and information governance. However, it is time to compare and contrast these disciplines and make a decision as to the right name to call it in your organization.
This webinar will focus on:
• Similarities and differences between data and information
• Definitions of data and information governance
• Examples of how organizations have selected their label
• Brief case studies of governance named both ways
• Considerations for naming your program
DAS Slides: Building a Future-State Data Architecture Plan - Where to Begin?DATAVERSITY
This document summarizes a webinar on building a future-state data architecture. It discusses defining data management and identifying current and future hot technologies. Relational databases dominate currently while cloud adoption is increasing. Stakeholders beyond IT are increasingly involved in data decisions. The webinar also outlines key steps to create a data management program, including defining goals, identifying critical data, assessing maturity, and creating a roadmap. An effective roadmap balances business priorities and shows quick wins while building to long term goals.
RWDG Slides: Stay Non-Invasive in Your Data Governance ApproachDATAVERSITY
There are three distinct approaches to implement Data Governance. The Command-and-Control Approach, the Traditional (if you build it they will come) Approach and the Non-Invasive Data Governance Approach. Some organizations select a single approach for their program while others select to follow a hybrid method.
Bob Seiner will provide information about each approach and indicate how the Non-Invasive Approach can follow the path of least resistance with the greatest success. You may be surprised to learn that many of your present activities can be leveraged to address Stewardship, Metadata, and governed processes – all directed at staying as non-invasive as possible.
In this webinar, Bob will discuss:
- A Data Governance framework completed in a Non-Invasive way
- How the three approaches differ and when to use each
- Sticking to a single approach versus implementing a hybrid model
- How to sell Data Governance as something you are already doing
- Using the Non-Invasive Approach to win friends and influence people.
Metadata turns data into information by providing context. Metadata is a determining factor of a successful Data Governance initiative and becomes an important asset that needs to be managed. The metadata will not govern itself.
Join Bob Seiner for a webinar that focuses on the governance of metadata following the non-invasive approach. In this session, Bob will share tips and techniques for assuring that the appropriate metadata is being collected and utilized to support your Data Governance program.
In this webinar, Bob will discuss:
Concepts of Non-Invasive Metadata Governance
Metadata as a valuable data resource
Aligning Data Governance with Metadata Governance
Implementing effective Metadata Governance tools
Maximizing metadata resources with accountability
Everybody is a Data Steward – Get Over It!DATAVERSITY
When Data Stewardship is based on people’s relationships to data, the program is assured to cover the entire organization. People that define, produce, and use data must be held formally accountable for their actions. That may include every person in your organization. Is this a good thing? Of course, it is.
Join Bob Seiner for this month’s installment of his Real-World Data Governance webinar series, where he will share how formalizing accountability, based on the actions people take with data, requires heightened awareness and enforcement of data rules. These rules focus on improving Data Quality, protecting sensitive data, and increasing people’s knowledge of the data that adds value for their business.
In this webinar, Bob will discuss:
Why the “Everybody is a Data Steward” approach is different (and better)
How to recognize the Data Stewards
Formalizing accountability based on data relationships
Coverage of the entire organization
Leveraging the technique to sell stewardship
Data-Ed Webinar: Data Governance StrategiesDATAVERSITY
Much like project team management and home improvement, Data Governance sounds a lot simpler than it actually is. In a nutshell, Data Governance is the process by which an organization delegates responsibility and exercises control over mission-critical data assets. In practice, though, Data Governance directs how all other Data Management functions are performed, meaning that much of your Data Management strategy’s capacity to function at all depends on your effectiveness in governing its implementation. Understanding these aspects of governance is necessary to eliminate the ambiguity that often surrounds effective Data Management and stewardship programs, since the goal of governance is to manage the data that supports organizational strategy.
This webinar will:
Illustrate what Data Governance functions are required for effective Data Management, how they fit with other Data Management disciplines, and why Data Governance can be tricky for many organizations
Help you develop a detailed vocabulary and set of narratives to facilitate understanding of your business objectives and imperatives that demand governance
Provide direction for selling Data Governance to organizational management as a specifically motivated initiative
Discuss foundational Data Governance concepts based on “The DAMA Guide to the Data Management Body of Knowledge” (DAMA DMBOK)
Real-World Data Governance: What is a Data Steward and What Do They Do?DATAVERSITY
This document is a transcript from a webinar on the topic of "What is a Data Steward?". It discusses different definitions and approaches to defining the role of a Data Steward. Key points include:
- A Data Steward is someone who is responsible for data used in their job, including defining, producing, and ensuring quality of data.
- The role of a Data Steward depends on the organization's data governance approach. It should leverage existing responsibilities rather than assigning new roles.
- Different types of Data Stewards are discussed, including Operational Stewards, Domain Stewards, and Steward Coordinators.
- The responsibilities of Data Stewards include data definition, production
Enterprise Data World Webinar: How to Get Your MDM Program Up & RunningDATAVERSITY
How to get your MDM program up & running”
This session will deliver a Master Data Management primer to introduce:
Master vs Reference data
Multi vs Single domain MDM solutions
A MDM reference architecture and
MDM implementation architectures
This will be illustrated with a real world example from describing how to identify & justify the appropriate data subjects areas that are right for mastering and how to align an MDM initiative with in-flight business initiatives and make the business case.
Real-World Data Governance: Metadata to Empower Data Stewards - Introducing t...DATAVERSITY
Metadata is the most valuable tool of the Data Steward. Where the stewards get their metadata and how they participate in the process of delivering core metadata is an issue organizations have been struggling with for years. The Operational Metadata Store or OMS may be the answer.
The traditional Operational Data Store or ODS is a database designed to integrate data from numerous sources that supports business operations and then feeds that data back into the operational systems. This Real-World Data Governance webinar with Bob Seiner and a panel of industry pundits will hold a lively discussion on the practicality of creating the ODS using metadata as the data, utilizing the metadata from a variety of existing sources to operationalize your data stewards.
The session will focus on:
Identifying the most significant metadata for your organization
Identifying existing sources of metadata – known and hidden
Identifying when that metadata will be most useful to your data stewards
Defining a lifecycle that encourages data steward participation
Delivering a model that incorporates all of the above
Real-World Data Governance: Comparing World Class Solutions in Data Governanc...DATAVERSITY
This document outlines the agenda for a webinar on comparing world class data governance solutions. The webinar will feature a panel of practitioners discussing their approaches to data stewardship, metadata, and master data governance. The panelists include professionals from PNC Bank, the Church of Latter Day Saints, and the Data Governance Institute. The webinar will be moderated by Robert Seiner and cover identifying data stewards, handling metadata, governing master data, and taking questions from the audience.
Data-Ed Slides: Best Practices in Data Stewardship (Technical)DATAVERSITY
In order to find value in your organization's data assets, heroic data stewards are tasked with saving the day- every single day! These heroes adhere to a data governance framework and work to ensure that data is: captured right the first time, validated through automated means, and integrated into business processes. Whether its data profiling or in depth root cause analysis, data stewards can be counted on to ensure the organization's mission critical data is reliable. In this webinar we will approach this framework, and punctuate important facets of a data steward’s role.
Learning Objectives:
- Understand the business need for a data governance framework
- Learn why embedded data quality principles are an important part of system/process design
- Identify opportunities to help drive your organization to a data driven culture
ADV Slides: Increasing Artificial Intelligence Success with Master Data Manag...DATAVERSITY
Companies all over the world are going through a digital transformation now, which in many cases, is all about maturing the data environment and the use of data. Master data is key to this effort. All transformative projects require master data and usually many subject areas. Current efforts to deliver master data to the enterprise are cumbersome, inefficient, and met with limited acceptance.
We’ll look at enterprise use cases of artificial intelligence and show the master data that is needed. We’ll see what some MDM vendors are doing with AI and how the future of MDM will be shaped by looking at some specific MDM actions influenced by AI.
RWDG Webinar: Build Your Own Data Governance ToolsDATAVERSITY
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<p>Data Governance tools can be enablers of program success…or the reason why Data Governance fails to meet people’s expectations. Software tools can be leveraged or acquired from reliable vendors or developed internally to attempt to address your organization’s needs. Sometimes the best environment is made up of a combination of internal and external tools. What is a practitioner to do?</p>
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<p>Join Bob Seiner for this month’s RWDG webinar where he will share tools that you can build yourself and talk about how the tools can be used to determine requirements to acquire outside tools. Tools developed internally at little or no cost have helped to solve many Data Governance problems. Several of these problems and their solutions will be described in detail during this webinar.</p>
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<p>In this webinar, Bob will discuss:</p>
<!-- /wp:paragraph -->
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<ul><li>Several easy to build Data Governance tools</li><li>Customizing these tools to address specific issues</li><li>How internally developed tools can lead to tool acquisition</li><li>Knowing when it is time to acquire tools</li><li>Integrating DIY tools with acquired tools</li></ul>
<!-- /wp:list -->
The document discusses data quality success stories and provides an overview of a program on the topic. It introduces the program, which will discuss data quality as an engineering challenge, putting a price on data quality, how components of data management complement each other, savings-based and innovation-based success stories, and non-monetary success stories. The program aims to provide takeaways and allow for questions and answers.
RGA Master Data Management at TDWI St. LouisTDWI St. Louis
RGA is a global life and health reinsurer and the second largest in North America. It implemented a Master Data Management (MDM) system to support a $20 million enterprise resource planning project. Lessons from the project highlighted the need for consistent data dictionaries and a versioning process. RGA's MDM strategy now includes financial, organizational, and investment master data and aims to expand into claims and valuation data. Governance processes involve data stewards, business rules, and request forms to maintain authoritative master data across systems.
RWDG Slides: The Stewardship Approach to Data GovernanceDATAVERSITY
This document discusses the stewardship approach to data governance. It describes how everybody who defines, produces, or uses data is a data steward. Rather than assigning data steward roles, the stewardship approach recognizes the existing responsibilities that people have. This reduces the invasiveness of data governance initiatives. The document provides guidance on engaging different types of data stewards based on their relationships to data and leveraging their existing responsibilities. It also addresses how the large number of stewards impacts the complexity of data governance programs and how best to deal with accountability.
RWDG Slides: Data Governance Roles and ResponsibilitiesDATAVERSITY
Roles and responsibilities are the backbone to a successful Data Governance program. The way you define and utilize the roles will be the biggest factor of program success. From data stewards to the steering committee and everyone in between, people will need to understand the role they play, why they are in the role, and how the role fits in with their existing job.
Join Bob Seiner for this RWDG webinar, where he will provide a complete and detailed set of Data Governance roles and responsibilities. Bob will share an operating model of roles and responsibilities that can be customized to address the specific needs of your organization.
In this webinar, Bob will discuss:
• Executive, strategic, tactical, operational, and support-level roles
• How to customize an operating model to fit your organization
• Detailed responsibilities for each level
• Defining who participates at each level
• Using working teams to implement tactical solutions
Data Management and Data Governance are the same thing! Aren’t they? Most people would say that this line of thinking is absurd – or even worse. There is NO WAY that they are the same thing. Or are they?
Join Bob Seiner and Anthony Algmin for a lively, interactive, and entertaining discussion targeted at providing attendees ways to consider relating these two disciplines. You’ve never attended a session like this.
In this session, Bob and Anthony will discuss:
- The similarities between Data Management and Data Governance
- The differences between the two
- How to use Data Management to sell Data Governance … and the other way around
- Deciding if the two disciplines are the same … or different
RWDG Webinar: Mastering and Master Data GovernanceDATAVERSITY
Master Data and Data Governance are connected at the hip. Master Data implies that the data in the MDM resource is well defined, quality produced and effectively used. Data Governance for MDM is put in place to assure that these three things are handled properly. We can learn important lessons from Master Data Governance that will help us in Mastering Data Governance.
In this month’s RWDG webinar, Bob Seiner will focus on using the governance of Master Data initiatives to put effective Data Governance practices in place across the entire organization. Master Data requires all of the core components of a Data Governance program that can be leveraged in ways that will interest MDM and DG practitioners alike.
This webinar will cover:
• The connection between MDM and Data Governance
• Components of MDM that Require Data Governance
• Leveraging Master Data Governance for the Greater Good
• Mastering the Master Data Governance Roles
• The Role of MDM in Enterprise Data Governance
Real-World Data Governance Webinar: Data Governance and Metadata Best PracticeDATAVERSITY
Best practices are defined as a method or technique that has consistently shown results superior to those achieved with other means, and that is used as a benchmark. In addition the definition goes on to say that a "best" practice can evolve to become better as improvements are discovered. A best practice can also be considered a target behavior to which you can compare your organization to deliver the actionable steps you can follow to achieve best practice.
In this Real-World Data Governance webinar, Bob Seiner focuses on defining, assessing and deploying Data Governance and metadata best practice that will move your organization in the best possible direction of success. Participants can expect to leave the webinar with a working list that can be used for self or contracted assessment.
This session will cover:
Criteria to Determine if Something is Best Practice
Development of Data Governance Best Practice
The Process to Complete the Best Practice Assessment
The Delivery of the Assessment to Management
How to Use the Assessment to Deliver Action
This document discusses governing master data. It defines key terms like data governance and data stewardship. It explains the connection between master data and data governance, and why master data needs to be governed. It discusses applying governance roles and responsibilities to master data processes. Finally, it concludes that master data governance is focusing a data governance program on improving an organization's master data.
RWDG Webinar: A Data Governance Framework for Smart DataDATAVERSITY
Does your organization have smart data? How does your company define smart data? Smart data is data that is used in non-traditional ways such as through machine learning, through the semantic web and by taking advantage of new data opportunities such as the Internet of Thing. Businesses have embraced the importance of Big Data. Now we are being asked to embrace and govern Smart Data.
Join Bob Seiner and a Smart Data Expert for this Real-World Data Governance webinar focused on the governing the use of emerging data technologies and smart data practices as a way of maximizing the value of data in your organization. Smart data is new. Smart data will be the next Big Data. Attend this webinar to learn why Smart Data must be governed.
In the webinar, Bob and a special guest will share:
• An easy to understand definition of Smart Data
• Why you should provide a framework to govern Smart Data
• How Smart Data Governance sources differs from traditional Data Governance
• How Smart Data can and will be used in the present and future
• What it means to provide a Framework to govern Smart Data
Real-World Data Governance: Governing Data – Big and Small, Come One Come AllDATAVERSITY
This document describes a webinar on governing big and small data. The webinar discusses definitions of data governance, considerations for governing big data, and similarities and differences between governing big versus small data. It explores what constitutes big data, characteristics of big data, and statistics on data growth. The webinar aims to answer whether there is such a thing as big data governance and how governance can be applied regardless of data size.
The Role of Metadata in a Data Governance ProgramDATAVERSITY
1) Metadata is defined as data recorded in IT tools that improves the business and technical understanding of data and data-related assets.
2) There are three actions people take with data: define, produce, and use data. Metadata helps improve these actions.
3) Metadata needs governance roles at the executive, strategic, tactical, and operational levels to ensure its quality and usability.
RWDG Slides: Applying Governance to Business ProcessesDATAVERSITY
This document discusses applying governance to business processes. It begins by defining key terms like data governance, data stewardship, and non-invasive data governance. It then discusses how data governance is not a single process, but the application of governance to various business processes using the components of the data governance framework, including roles, processes, communications, metrics, and tools. The document provides examples of processes that can be governed and emphasizes that the goal is to involve the right roles in processes to achieve the right results.
RWDG Webinar: Metadata to Support Data GovernanceDATAVERSITY
This document describes a webinar on using metadata to support data governance. It provides definitions of key terms like data governance, metadata, and non-invasive data governance. It explains that metadata is a byproduct of good governance practices like formalizing accountability and standards. The webinar will cover selecting important initial metadata, using metadata to support the governance program, and incorporating governance into processes to manage metadata. It promotes integrating governance roles and responsibilities into existing methodologies.
RWDG Slides: A Complete Set of Data Governance Roles & ResponsibilitiesDATAVERSITY
The document discusses roles and responsibilities in data governance. It describes five levels of roles - executive, strategic, tactical, operational, and support. For each level, it provides examples of common roles and discusses customizing roles to an organization's structure. The webinar will cover defining roles at each level, who participates, and detailed responsibilities. It emphasizes starting with existing roles and terminology.
Real-World Data Governance: Modeling Data GovernanceDATAVERSITY
There are a lot of ways Data Modeling and Data Governance are connected. The discipline of quality data definition through Data Modeling, involving technicians and business people, is obvious. The practices of normalization, cardinality, business rules, domain definition … all reek of best practices in data discipline. This is what Data Governance is all about.
Join Bob Seiner and data modeling guru Donna Burbank for a Real-World Data Governance webinar that will focus on using a Data Model of the components of Data Governance as a way of describing the components themselves, the relationships between the components of Data Governance, and how to use this model as a way of getting everybody in your organization on-board with Data Governance.
The session will cover:
Data Modeling as a part of Data Governance
The Components of Data Governance as Entities
The Entity Relationships of Data Governance
Attribution of Data Governance Entities
Using the Model as a Communications Tool
Data Governance and Data Science to Improve Data QualityDATAVERSITY
Data Science uses systematic methods, algorithms, and systems to extract knowledge and insights from structured and unstructured data. Data Science requires high-quality data that is trusted by the organization and data scientists. Many organizations focus their Data Governance programs on improving Data Quality results. These three concepts (governance, science, and quality) seem to be made for each other.
In this RWDG webinar, Bob Seiner and his special guest will discuss how the people focusing on Data Governance and Data Science must work together to improve the level of confidence the organization has in its most critical data assets. Heavy investments are being made in Data Science but not so much for Data Governance. Bob will talk about how Data Governance and Data Science must work together to improve Data Quality.
RWDG Slides: Operationalize Data Governance for Business OutcomesDATAVERSITY
Data Governance adds value to the organization when it becomes operationalized and focused on providing improved business outcomes. People in the organization acknowledge Data Governance success when they see results based on how the formalized program operates.
Join Bob Seiner for this month’s webinar, where he will focus on how to operationalize Data Governance based on your program’s purpose and demonstrate value through the communications of business outcomes. New ways to operationalize Data Governance and engage data stewards will be highlighted.
Bob will discuss :
• What it means to operationalize Data Governance
• How to link Data Governance to business outcomes – both good and bad
• Program operations designed to provide business outcomes
• Using the program purpose to demonstrate value
• Ways to engage your stewards through their job function
Driving Data Intelligence in the Supply Chain Through the Data Catalog at TJXDATAVERSITY
Roles and responsibilities are a critical component of every Data Governance program. Building a set of roles that are practical and that will not interfere with people’s “day jobs” is an important consideration that will influence how well your program is adopted. This tutorial focuses on sharing a proven model guaranteed to represent your organization.
Join Bob Seiner for this lively webinar where he will dissect a complete Operating Model of Roles and Responsibilities that encompasses all levels of the organization. Seiner will detail the roles and describe the most effective way to associate people with the roles. You will walk out of this webinar with a model to apply to your organization.
In this session Bob will share:
- The five levels of Data Governance roles
- A proven Operating Model of Roles and Responsibilities
- How to customize the model to meet your requirements
- Setting appropriate role expectations
- How to operationalize the roles and demonstrate value
Real-World Data Governance: Data Governance Roles & ResponsibilitiesDATAVERSITY
Well thought out data governance roles and responsibilities lie at the heart of successful data governance programs. All activities focus on the roles. From how we recognize stewards and apply governance, to how we engage and communicate with the people in the roles – the roles become the operating model for how governance works.
Join Bob Seiner for this month’s installment of the DATAVERSITY Real-World Data Governance webinar series focused on defining an operating model that can be assimilated to your organization. This model includes an easy-to-explain set of roles and responsibilities aligned with how your organization functions.
The session will cover:
Operational, Tactical, Strategic and Support Roles
How to recognize your stewards and other roles
How to apply roles consistently through all facets of your program
Providing incentive for active involvement
Convincing Stakeholders Data Governance Is EssentialDATAVERSITY
Organizations are investing heavily in becoming data-centric. Data Governance practitioners must begin to deploy effective Data Governance techniques to support these investments. One of these techniques is to tackle the problem of convincing stakeholders that Data Governance is necessary. This webinar will help you address that challenge.
Join Bob Seiner for this RWDG webinar, where he will provide three questions that must be answered thoroughly and honestly from a business and technical perspective. The answers to these questions will provide practitioners with the artillery needed to break down barriers preventing the organization from being convinced that the time is right to formalize Data Governance.
This webinar will focus on:
- Identifying the stakeholders that must be convinced
- The three questions that must be asked of the stakeholders
- What answers you should expect to receive
- The answers that may surprise you
- Using the answers to convince stakeholders that Data Governance is necessary
RWDG Webinar: Data Steward Definition and Other Data Governance RolesDATAVERSITY
1. The document discusses defining data steward roles and responsibilities in a data governance program. It describes different approaches to defining data stewards and levels of data stewards, from operational to tactical.
2. The webinar will cover selecting the right approach to data stewardship for an organization and discussing an operating model of data governance roles at different levels, from executive to operational.
3. The role of the data steward is critical to data governance success and there are various ways to identify and recognize data stewards based on their existing responsibilities and relationships to the data they define, produce and use.
RWDG Slides: Data Governance and Policy ManagementDATAVERSITY
Do you know what data policies are in place at your organization? Are the policies shelf-ware or do people know, understand, and follow what is stated in the policies? Many organizations have data policies – but don’t monitor their effectiveness. That is where Data Governance fits in.
In this month’s RWDG webinar, Bob Seiner will address data policy from several angles and suggest ways to leverage the guidelines to activate your Data Governance program. It’s time to take policies off the shelf and put them in the cubicles.
In this webinar, Bob will share:
• The relationship between Data Governance and Policy Management
• How to recognize the data policies already in place
• Using data policy to bolster your Data Governance program
• The makeup of a Data Governance policy
• Having a policy to manage data policies – meta-policies?
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In this webinar, you'll learn:
- How your company can leverage data and AI to reduce spending and costs
- Ways you can monetize data and AI and uncover new growth strategies
- How different companies have implemented these strategies to achieve cost optimization benefits
Data Catalogs Are the Answer – What is the Question?DATAVERSITY
Organizations with governed metadata made available through their data catalog can answer questions their people have about the organization’s data. These organizations get more value from their data, protect their data better, gain improved ROI from data-centric projects and programs, and have more confidence in their most strategic data.
Join Bob Seiner for this lively webinar where he will talk about the value of a data catalog and how to build the use of the catalog into your stewards’ daily routines. Bob will share how the tool must be positioned for success and viewed as a must-have resource that is a steppingstone and catalyst to governed data across the organization.
Data Catalogs Are the Answer – What Is the Question?DATAVERSITY
Organizations with governed metadata made available through their data catalog can answer questions their people have about the organization’s data. These organizations get more value from their data, protect their data better, gain improved ROI from data-centric projects and programs, and have more confidence in their most strategic data.
Join Bob Seiner for this lively webinar where he will talk about the value of a data catalog and how to build the use of the catalog into your stewards’ daily routines. Bob will share how the tool must be positioned for success and viewed as a must-have resource that is a steppingstone and catalyst to governed data across the organization.
In this webinar, Bob will focus on:
-Selecting the appropriate metadata to govern
-The business and technical value of a data catalog
-Building the catalog into people’s routines
-Positioning the data catalog for success
-Questions the data catalog can answer
Because every organization produces and propagates data as part of their day-to-day operations, data trends are becoming more and more important in the mainstream business world’s consciousness. For many organizations in various industries, though, comprehension of this development begins and ends with buzzwords: “Big Data,” “NoSQL,” “Data Scientist,” and so on. Few realize that all solutions to their business problems, regardless of platform or relevant technology, rely to a critical extent on the data model supporting them. As such, data modeling is not an optional task for an organization’s data effort, but rather a vital activity that facilitates the solutions driving your business. Since quality engineering/architecture work products do not happen accidentally, the more your organization depends on automation, the more important the data models driving the engineering and architecture activities of your organization. This webinar illustrates data modeling as a key activity upon which so much technology and business investment depends.
Specific learning objectives include:
- Understanding what types of challenges require data modeling to be part of the solution
- How automation requires standardization on derivable via data modeling techniques
- Why only a working partnership between data and the business can produce useful outcomes
Analytics play a critical role in supporting strategic business initiatives. Despite the obvious value to analytic professionals of providing the analytics for these initiatives, many executives question the economic return of analytics as well as data lakes, machine learning, master data management, and the like.
Technology professionals need to calculate and present business value in terms business executives can understand. Unfortunately, most IT professionals lack the knowledge required to develop comprehensive cost-benefit analyses and return on investment (ROI) measurements.
This session provides a framework to help technology professionals research, measure, and present the economic value of a proposed or existing analytics initiative, no matter the form that the business benefit arises. The session will provide practical advice about how to calculate ROI and the formulas, and how to collect the necessary information.
How a Semantic Layer Makes Data Mesh Work at ScaleDATAVERSITY
Data Mesh is a trending approach to building a decentralized data architecture by leveraging a domain-oriented, self-service design. However, the pure definition of Data Mesh lacks a center of excellence or central data team and doesn’t address the need for a common approach for sharing data products across teams. The semantic layer is emerging as a key component to supporting a Hub and Spoke style of organizing data teams by introducing data model sharing, collaboration, and distributed ownership controls.
This session will explain how data teams can define common models and definitions with a semantic layer to decentralize analytics product creation using a Hub and Spoke architecture.
Attend this session to learn about:
- The role of a Data Mesh in the modern cloud architecture.
- How a semantic layer can serve as the binding agent to support decentralization.
- How to drive self service with consistency and control.
Enterprise data literacy. A worthy objective? Certainly! A realistic goal? That remains to be seen. As companies consider investing in data literacy education, questions arise about its value and purpose. While the destination – having a data-fluent workforce – is attractive, we wonder how (and if) we can get there.
Kicking off this webinar series, we begin with a panel discussion to explore the landscape of literacy, including expert positions and results from focus groups:
- why it matters,
- what it means,
- what gets in the way,
- who needs it (and how much they need),
- what companies believe it will accomplish.
In this engaging discussion about literacy, we will set the stage for future webinars to answer specific questions and feature successful literacy efforts.
The Data Trifecta – Privacy, Security & Governance Race from Reactivity to Re...DATAVERSITY
Change is hard, especially in response to negative stimuli or what is perceived as negative stimuli. So organizations need to reframe how they think about data privacy, security and governance, treating them as value centers to 1) ensure enterprise data can flow where it needs to, 2) prevent – not just react – to internal and external threats, and 3) comply with data privacy and security regulations.
Working together, these roles can accelerate faster access to approved, relevant and higher quality data – and that means more successful use cases, faster speed to insights, and better business outcomes. However, both new information and tools are required to make the shift from defense to offense, reducing data drama while increasing its value.
Join us for this panel discussion with experts in these fields as they discuss:
- Recent research about where data privacy, security and governance stand
- The most valuable enterprise data use cases
- The common obstacles to data value creation
- New approaches to data privacy, security and governance
- Their advice on how to shift from a reactive to resilient mindset/culture/organization
You’ll be educated, entertained and inspired by this panel and their expertise in using the data trifecta to innovate more often, operate more efficiently, and differentiate more strategically.
Emerging Trends in Data Architecture – What’s the Next Big Thing?DATAVERSITY
With technological innovation and change occurring at an ever-increasing rate, it’s hard to keep track of what’s hype and what can provide practical value for your organization. Join this webinar to see the results of a recent DATAVERSITY survey on emerging trends in Data Architecture, along with practical commentary and advice from industry expert Donna Burbank.
Data Governance Trends - A Look Backwards and ForwardsDATAVERSITY
As DATAVERSITY’s RWDG series hurdles into our 12th year, this webinar takes a quick look behind us, evaluates the present, and predicts the future of Data Governance. Based on webinar numbers, hot Data Governance topics have evolved over the years from policies and best practices, roles and tools, data catalogs and frameworks, to supporting data mesh and fabric, artificial intelligence, virtualization, literacy, and metadata governance.
Join Bob Seiner as he reflects on the past and what has and has not worked, while sharing examples of enterprise successes and struggles. In this webinar, Bob will challenge the audience to stay a step ahead by learning from the past and blazing a new trail into the future of Data Governance.
In this webinar, Bob will focus on:
- Data Governance’s past, present, and future
- How trials and tribulations evolve to success
- Leveraging lessons learned to improve productivity
- The great Data Governance tool explosion
- The future of Data Governance
Data Governance Trends and Best Practices To Implement TodayDATAVERSITY
1) The document discusses best practices for data protection on Google Cloud, including setting data policies, governing access, classifying sensitive data, controlling access, encryption, secure collaboration, and incident response.
2) It provides examples of how to limit access to data and sensitive information, gain visibility into where sensitive data resides, encrypt data with customer-controlled keys, harden workloads, run workloads confidentially, collaborate securely with untrusted parties, and address cloud security incidents.
3) The key recommendations are to protect data at rest and in use through classification, access controls, encryption, confidential computing; securely share data through techniques like secure multi-party computation; and have an incident response plan to quickly address threats.
It is a fascinating, explosive time for enterprise analytics.
It is from the position of analytics leadership that the enterprise mission will be executed and company leadership will emerge. The data professional is absolutely sitting on the performance of the company in this information economy and has an obligation to demonstrate the possibilities and originate the architecture, data, and projects that will deliver analytics. After all, no matter what business you’re in, you’re in the business of analytics.
The coming years will be full of big changes in enterprise analytics and data architecture. William will kick off the fifth year of the Advanced Analytics series with a discussion of the trends winning organizations should build into their plans, expectations, vision, and awareness now.
Too often I hear the question “Can you help me with our data strategy?” Unfortunately, for most, this is the wrong request because it focuses on the least valuable component: the data strategy itself. A more useful request is: “Can you help me apply data strategically?” Yes, at early maturity phases the process of developing strategic thinking about data is more important than the actual product! Trying to write a good (must less perfect) data strategy on the first attempt is generally not productive –particularly given the widespread acceptance of Mike Tyson’s truism: “Everybody has a plan until they get punched in the face.” This program refocuses efforts on learning how to iteratively improve the way data is strategically applied. This will permit data-based strategy components to keep up with agile, evolving organizational strategies. It also contributes to three primary organizational data goals. Learn how to improve the following:
- Your organization’s data
- The way your people use data
- The way your people use data to achieve your organizational strategy
This will help in ways never imagined. Data are your sole non-depletable, non-degradable, durable strategic assets, and they are pervasively shared across every organizational area. Addressing existing challenges programmatically includes overcoming necessary but insufficient prerequisites and developing a disciplined, repeatable means of improving business objectives. This process (based on the theory of constraints) is where the strategic data work really occurs as organizations identify prioritized areas where better assets, literacy, and support (data strategy components) can help an organization better achieve specific strategic objectives. Then the process becomes lather, rinse, and repeat. Several complementary concepts are also covered, including:
- A cohesive argument for why data strategy is necessary for effective data governance
- An overview of prerequisites for effective strategic use of data strategy, as well as common pitfalls
- A repeatable process for identifying and removing data constraints
- The importance of balancing business operation and innovation
Who Should Own Data Governance – IT or Business?DATAVERSITY
The question is asked all the time: “What part of the organization should own your Data Governance program?” The typical answers are “the business” and “IT (information technology).” Another answer to that question is “Yes.” The program must be owned and reside somewhere in the organization. You may ask yourself if there is a correct answer to the question.
Join this new RWDG webinar with Bob Seiner where Bob will answer the question that is the title of this webinar. Determining ownership of Data Governance is a vital first step. Figuring out the appropriate part of the organization to manage the program is an important second step. This webinar will help you address these questions and more.
In this session Bob will share:
- What is meant by “the business” when it comes to owning Data Governance
- Why some people say that Data Governance in IT is destined to fail
- Examples of IT positioned Data Governance success
- Considerations for answering the question in your organization
- The final answer to the question of who should own Data Governance
This document summarizes a research study that assessed the data management practices of 175 organizations between 2000-2006. The study had both descriptive and self-improvement goals, such as understanding the range of practices and determining areas for improvement. Researchers used a structured interview process to evaluate organizations across six data management processes based on a 5-level maturity model. The results provided insights into an organization's practices and a roadmap for enhancing data management.
MLOps – Applying DevOps to Competitive AdvantageDATAVERSITY
MLOps is a practice for collaboration between Data Science and operations to manage the production machine learning (ML) lifecycles. As an amalgamation of “machine learning” and “operations,” MLOps applies DevOps principles to ML delivery, enabling the delivery of ML-based innovation at scale to result in:
Faster time to market of ML-based solutions
More rapid rate of experimentation, driving innovation
Assurance of quality, trustworthiness, and ethical AI
MLOps is essential for scaling ML. Without it, enterprises risk struggling with costly overhead and stalled progress. Several vendors have emerged with offerings to support MLOps: the major offerings are Microsoft Azure ML and Google Vertex AI. We looked at these offerings from the perspective of enterprise features and time-to-value.
Interview Methods - Marital and Family Therapy and Counselling - Psychology S...PsychoTech Services
A proprietary approach developed by bringing together the best of learning theories from Psychology, design principles from the world of visualization, and pedagogical methods from over a decade of training experience, that enables you to: Learn better, faster!
06-18-2024-Princeton Meetup-Introduction to MilvusTimothy Spann
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We are pleased to share with you the latest VCOSA statistical report on the cotton and yarn industry for the month of March 2024.
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