DAMA
INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM and WILSHIRE META-DATA CONFERENCE
April
28-May 2, 2002 – San Antonio Convention Center, San Antonio, Texas
Agenda is subject to change.
SUNDAY WORKSHOPS
W1: You Can’t Cost-Justify Architecture!
John A. Zachman
President
Zachman International
Most people still think that the way to acquire funding for new systems is "cost-justification." I would suggest that this is a vestige of the past … the Industrial Age. The game has changed!! We are now clearly well into the Information Age and the value proposition for systems has radically changed. Now Architecture ... Enterprise Architecture ... plays a central role in providing value to the Enterprise. There are four reasons why you "do" Architecture including alignment, integration, change management and reduced time to market. Without Architecture, there is NO WAY you can do any of these things. This presentation begins with a brief tutorial on the Framework for Enterprise Architecture to define what Enterprise Architecture is, and then develops the logic as to its value to the Information Age Enterprise.
John Zachman is the author of the "Framework for Information Systems Architecture", which has received broad acceptance throughout the world as an integrative framework for managing change in Enterprises and in the systems that support them. He has focused on planning and information strategies, and on architecture, since 1970 and has written many articles on these subjects. He travels nationally and internationally, teaching and consulting, and has facilitated innumerable executive team planning sessions. As a conference speaker, John known for motivating messages on information issues. He has spoken to thousands of information professionals and business managers on every continent. John Zachman is a member of the International Advisory Board of DAMA International; and a member of the International Information Resource Management Advisory Council of Smithsonian Institution.
W2: Developing Useful Use Cases: How to Avoid the “Useless Case” Phenomenon
Alec
Sharp
Clariteq Systems Consulting Ltd.
The “use case” concept is
appealingly simple – a “use case” describes a specific case in which an
actor (generally, a “user”) will use a system to receive value – and has
generated enormous interest as a technique for discovering and documenting
requirements. In practice, though, the results are mixed – some
organizations have great success, while others decide that “useless cases”
is a better term. One source of difficulty is that much of the available
material on use cases:
is either theoretical or suitable
only for small applications
concentrates on internal technical
details
treats use cases as a “whole new
thing” that sets aside techniques the business analyst already knows and
uses.
This workshop will take a different and more pragmatic approach – it covers proven techniques for developing use cases, focuses on discovering and verifying the user’s requirements, and puts use cases into context with other popular techniques like data or workflow modeling.
Requirements definition - goals,
issues, and how use cases help
Use cases - essential elements,
evolution, context, and fit with data modeling
Techniques for discovering an
application's use cases
How to describe (document) use
cases at "scope", "concept", and "detail"
levels
Improving use cases with use case
scenarios
Where to now? - interesting uses
of use cases, and other techniques to explore
Wrap up, pitfalls, and key guidelines for success
Attendees will learn:
The common pitfalls in developing
use cases, and how to avoid them
Why use cases don't imply an O-O
approach
The difference between use cases
and use case scenarios, and how to develop and document each
How use cases synergize with data
modeling and workflow modeling and other techniques
Proven formats for describing use cases and scenarios with progressive detail and precision (i.e., using Zachman's framework)
Alec
Sharp · After a stint as a systems
programmer and DBA, Alec caught the modeling bug after building his first data
model in 1979. He founded his consulting business in 1981, and went on to
assist clients with establishing Data Administration functions, developing
large database applications, and applying model-driven requirements definition
techniques. Recent assignments have included helping a leading provider of
enterprise applications depict their applications using business modeling
techniques, leading a process redesign effort, rescuing e-commerce projects
that zeroed in on technology but forgot the business process, and of course,
coaching project teams in the successful application of use cases.
W3: Universal Data Models to Jump-Start and Quality Assure Your Efforts
Len Silverston
President
Universal Data Models, LLC
While critically important, data
modeling and data warehouse design can be costly, time consuming and error
prone. One reason for this is that many standard data model and data warehouse
constructs are being modeled over and over again in various organizations,
instead of re-using common data constructs that have already been proven to be
effective.
In this interactive tutorial, Len
Silverston will share some of the most useful and important data constructs
based upon extensive analysis from his newly revised two volume “The Data
Model Resource Book” series, which provides hundreds of re-usable data
models and data warehouse designs. Mr. Silverston will point out data modeling
pitfalls and provide practical, innovative, and high quality data models that
have been used by a great number of organizations to build integrated data
architectures and high quality databases and data warehouses.
This interactive tutorial will
provide:
A toolkit of the latest
“Universal Data Models” that can be used to save time and quality
assure many common data model and data warehouse design efforts. Concepts,
issues, pitfalls, and real life models will be provided.
CRM, SRM (Supplier relationship
management), ERM (Employee relationship management), and other
relationship management data constructs for modeling people,
organizations, roles, relationships and contact management
Product management models (goods
and/or services) including product features and options, product
electronic object management, and inventory management
E-commerce and click-stream
Universal Data Models for managing and integrating information about
visitors, referrers, web content, logins, visits, cookies, and server hits
Common data warehouse and data
mart designs for sales, financial, human resource, and click-stream
analysis.
Common modeling pitfalls and “War stories” illustrating consequences of incorrect modeling
Len Silverston is the author of the best selling "The Data Model Resource Book" series which describe over 230 re-usable, generic and industry data models. He speaks internationally and has written many articles on database design and data warehousing. Mr. Silverston has developed extensive software versions of his re-usable models, some of which are now licensed world-wide in Microsoft products. Mr. Silverston's company, Universal Data Models, LLC, (www.universaldatamodels.com), provides consulting, training and software that has helped a great number of organizations integrate information and jump-start data modeling and data warehouse design efforts, using his unique methods and repository of models.
W4: Avoiding Catastrophe in Data Integration and ETL
Michael Scofield
Director, Database & Analytical Support Services
Experian
More and more, data stewards (DBA’s,
data architects, data warehouse designers, etc.) are being asked to integrate
data from multiple, dissimilar sources into a common database. This can be
because of companies merging or acquiring each other, or the effort to
integrate customer data from various applications to support a more aggressive
CRM. Or, it can be when a data warehouse seeks to integrate cause and effect
data from disparate source applications.
Successful
mapping of source data to target field depends upon a comprehensive
understanding of the business meaning and data architectures of each source,
and the target. By semantic, we mean ensuring that each source data field has
the comparable meaning, scope, and normal behavior (not merely field-name and
format) corresponding with its peer source field(s). Merging two sources is
exciting enough. Merging three or more can be terrifying.
This workshop will cover a wide
range of techniques showing many practical examples of actual data. It is not
enough to use documentation (file descriptions, etc.) of sources (which may be
obsolete). One must look at the actual data - all of it. We will discuss
step-by-step techniques for uncovering data anomalies, data quality problems,
and semantical discontinuities in how a field is used.
We start by creating an inventory of the data, its architecture, and
its behavior at each source, from the high-level view down to the specific,
detailed behavior of each field and column, and inter-dependencies. Techniques
in data profiling and domain studies will be shown in detail with examples of
surprise findings. For example a field may be used in one way for one entity
subtype, and in a different way for another subtype. Never underestimate the
creativity of application owners to use a field for a purpose different than
its original intent. Even the treatment of negative values (such as total
invoice amount) may be different for different sources.
Then, the task of evaluating the commonality of any pair of source fields, and determining the appropriate target field in the target database is not for the naive. We will review some mistakes of wimp analysts who made unwarranted assumptions about source data, without even looking at the actual business data (gasp!). In contrast, we will review sound analytical techniques for getting the correct mapping and translation to the target database. Also, data quality issues such as validity, complete-ness, richness, and accuracy will be discussed. Finally, we will survey techniques of establishing an on-going data surveillance program to ensure that later production-ized loads of data will not be caught by surprise when a source changes definitions or scope of the data it supplies.
Michael Scofield is Director of Data Quality for Experian (formerly TRW Credit Data) in Orange, California. Prior to this position, he was Vice President and Manager of Information Quality for Home Savings of America (Los Angeles). He is keenly interested in data quality assessment, and reverse engineering and mining of production databases. His articles on data architecture and data quality techniques have been published in Information Week, IBI System Journal, Data Management Review, and the Database Newsletter. His speaking and teaching engagements include DAMA-International conferences, Meta-data Conferences in London and the U.S., The Data Warehousing Institute, various DAMA chapters, and various database user groups. He also writes humor, published in the Los Angeles Times and other journals.
W5: OMG Model Driven Architectures - Modeling, Metadata, Middleware and Mappings for Enterprise Integration
Sridhar Iyengar
Unisys Fellow, Lead Research Director
Unisys Corporation
The software industry continues to
grapple with the challenging problem of dealing with multiple industry
standards and competing middleware architectures and information
models/vocabularies without much regard for software architecture and design
discipline. The OMG Model Driven Architecture (MDA) simplifies this problem by
unifying these diverse technologies using information models/designs and
mapping these models to one or more implementation technologies (middleware,
databases, languages etc)
MDA defines a new software
architecture that allows integration and interoperability to be addressed
across the application life cycle and not just between individual objects or
components. MDA exploits the strengths of Modeling, Metadata, Middleware and
Mappings – the 4 M’s into a unifying framework with UML and XML taking on
a foundational Role. The key standards and frameworks (some emerging) embraced
by and integrated into MDA vision will be addressed by the speaker:
Modeling Standards (UML, MOF)
Metadata Standards (XML, MOF, XMI)
Middleware Standards and Web
Services Middleware
Component Frameworks
Data Warehousing Frameworks (CWM)
‘All-in-one/Über Frameworks’
(Microsoft .Net)
MDA allows a developer to design a model of an application or component once and automatically map these designs to several technologies. A key tenet of MDA includes reverse engineering that allows developers not familiar with modeling to incrementally gain the benefits of modeling and software architecture. This presentation will define the basic principles of MDA, some of the core standards that are part of it and then show with concrete examples how this vision of mapping an abstract model to several implementations is realized. The benefits and pitfalls of this approach and early experiences are described as well. It is strongly suggested that attendees have a basic knowledge of UML, XML and Java/C++/C# (one of them!) for this class.
Attendees will learn:
Principles of Model Driven
Architecture
OMG MDA Technical Architecture
Using UML, MOF, XML and Java for
metadata management
Using SOAP for Middleware
Using MDA for Enterprise Integration
Sridhar Iyengar, a Unisys Fellow, leads the technology research direction for software products in Unisys Global Industries – The Solution and Systems Integration arm of Unisys. Sridhar's current focus includes the integration of application servers, modeling technologies, database, metadata, and distributed object technology products for Unisys. He is the chief architect of the OMG Meta Object Facility (MOF) and the OMG XML Metadata Interchange (XMI) which together with UML forms the core of OMG Modeling and Metadata architecture – now a central part of the OMG Model Driven Architecture - MDA. Sridhar has directly influenced all the major modeling and metadata standards from OMG including MOF, XMI, UML and CWM in diverse areas like application development, application integration and data warehousing. Sridhar represents Unisys at the OMG where he serves on the OMG Architecture Board and the OMG Board of Directors. Sridhar is one of the primary drivers of the OMG Model Driven Architecture Initiative. One of his pet projects is the integration of UML, MOF and all the evolving metamodels at OMG and elsewhere to maximize the benefits of MDA. He has a master's degree in computer science and is a frequent presenter in industry conferences on topics of modeling, metadata, databases, component software and distributed object technology.
W6: Aligning
Data Management Skills with Business Goals
Robert Seiner
Publisher, TDAN.com
& Principal Consultant, CIBER, Inc.
Data managers and data administrators
may be their company’s most valuable players in the war against poor data
& unstructured data management. However, data management professionals often
go unrecognized in large organizations and are typically permitted a small voice
(if any) in deciding the IT activities that get funded and implemented. To make
matters worse, data managers have gotten used to their jobs hanging in the
balance.
What can be done to raise the value and
recognition of the data manager? What skills do they need to learn to truly
become the MVP and guide their team to a successful information management
score? The similarities between skills necessary to manage data and unstructured
data are very consistent. Managing content, intellectual assets and unstructured
data can be tackled more effectively and efficiently when the strategists
responsible for these activities leverage the experiences of the seasoned data
management professional.
In this
half-day workshop, Bob Seiner talks about how to leverage what you know about
data management to adapt to the quickly expanding fields of business
intelligence/data warehousing, knowledge/content management and employee
information portals. He will cover the similarities between data and
unstructured data management as they relate to the implementation of stewardship
& accountability for all information assets, the importance of building and
enforcing data and unstructured data quality processes, and the impact that
managing data and unstructured data will have on the organization culture. Mr.
Seiner will also discuss the development of the information “arti-factory”
and the implementation of a meta data management strategy that addresses the
need for a catalog of enterprise artifacts that will become more valuable over
time than the traditional meta data repository.
This presentation should be informative for established data management professionals and individuals getting involved with developing both data and unstructured data management architectures. Come learn from someone who has straddled both sides of the fence.
What is seen and what is not seen as
it relates to the management of all information assets.
How to build and enforce a complete
information quality program based on data quality principles
How to expand an information
stewardship framework to account for unstructured data assets
How to build & extend a meta
data model (meta model) to record data about all information assets
How to effectively build a complete information asset management environment by leveraging what we have learned from our data management experiences
Robert S. Seiner is the publisher of The Data Administration Newsletter (TDAN.com), an award winning and internationally recognized electronic publication that focuses on the management of data and unstructured data as valued corporate assets. TDAN.com will soon be celebrating its fifth anniversary with monthly visitors numbering close to forty thousand. Mr. Seiner is also a Principal Consultant and the Business Intelligence / Knowledge Management Practice Director for CIBER, Inc. (CIBER.com) in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Mr. Seiner has close to 20 years of experience helping Fortune 100 & 500 companies to solve business problems with data, information and knowledge based solutions. Mr. Seiner speaks often at conferences and meetings on the topics of business intelligence, meta data management, knowledge management and information accountability.
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