PRESENTATION TRANSCRIPT:
This presentation transcript features speaker Evan Levy, partner and co-founder of Baseline Consulting, a professional services firm concentrating on enterprise data issues. This discussion is about data quality and some of the challenges and pitfalls that are seen during data quality implementation.
PRESENTATION TRANSCRIPT:
In today's economic environment, it is imperative that companies begin addressing ways to manage all information assets in an integrated, holistic way. Philip Howard, Research Director for Bloor Research, and Chris Baker, Senior Vice President at Oracle, discuss best practices for obtaining a fully integrated Enterprise Data Management platform.
WHITE PAPER:
Discover how a private technical compute cloud can help your business provide access to remote, full 3D technical visualization and rendering capabilities that can help to enhance collaboration and productivity.
WHITE PAPER:
Enterprise data is largely falling short of a standard that makes it possible to utilize in how business will be conducted in the next decade. Most enterprise data is “adequate” for basic operational needs today. Download this paper to learn how to get the most out of your enterprise data.
WHITE PAPER:
The key enterprise risk management (ERM) issue for many financial institutions is to get enriched data in a single place in order to report on it. Learn best practices for data management that are critical for ERM.
WHITE PAPER:
Read on to find details about SAPs BusinessObjects Predictive Analysis, including how the NBA used HANA to help cater to stat-hungry fans.
PRODUCT OVERVIEW:
Complete capabilities in one product, on a single architecture. See key features for both business and IT users, including Framework Manager, the Administration Console, and integration with Microsoft Excel.
WHITE PAPER:
In the following paper, we briefly describe, and illustrate from examples, what we believe are the “Top 10” mistakes of data mining, in terms of frequency and seriousness. Most are basic, though a few are subtle. All have, when undetected, left analysts worse off than if they’d never looked at their data.