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Are you struggling with the formal design of your organisation's
data resource? Do you find yourself forced into generic data
architectures and universal data models? Do you find yourself
warping the business to fit a purchased application? Do you find
yourself pushed into developing physical databases without formal
logical design? Do you find disparate data throughout the
organisation? If the answer to any of these questions is Yes, then
you need to read Data Resource Design to help guide you through a
formal design process that produces a high quality data resource
within a single common data architecture. Most public and private
sector organisations do not consistently follow a formal data
resource design process that begins with the organisation's
perception of the business world, proceeds through logical data
design, through physical data design, and into implementation. Most
organisations charge ahead with physical database implementation,
physical package implementation, and other brute-force-physical
approaches. The result is a data resource that becomes disparate
and does not fully support the organisation in its business
endeavours. This book describes how to formally design an
organisation's data resource to meet its current and future
business information demand. It builds on "Data Resource
Simplexity", which described how to stop the burgeoning data
disparity, and on "Data Resource Integration", which described how
to understand and resolve an organisation's disparate data
resource. It describes the concepts, principles, and techniques for
building a high quality data resource based on an organisation's
perception of the business world in which they operate. Like "Data
Resource Simplexity" and "Data Resource Integration", Michael
Brackett draws on five decades of data management experience
building and managing data resources, and resolving disparate data
in both public and private sector organisations. He leverages
theories, concepts, principles, and techniques from a wide variety
of disciplines, such as human dynamics, mathematics, physics,
chemistry, philosophy, and biology, and applies them to properly
designing data as a critical resource of an organisation. He shows
how to understand the business environment where an organisation
operates and design a data resource that supports the organisation
in that business environment.
Do you fully understand all the data in your organisation's data
resource? Can you readily find and easily access the data you need
to support your business activities? If you find multiple sets of
the same data, can you readily determine which is the most current
and correct? No? Then consider this book essential reading. It will
help you develop a high quality data resource that supports
business needs. The book explains how a data resource goes
disparate, how to stop that trend toward disparity, and how to
develop a high quality, comparate data resource. It explains how to
stop the costly business impacts of disparate data. It explains
both the architectural and the cultural aspects of developing a
comparate data resource. It explains how to manage data as a
critical resource equivalent to the other critical resources of an
organisation - finances, human resource, and real property. Drawing
from his nearly five decades of data management experience, plus
his leveraging of theories, concepts, principles, and techniques
from disciplines as diverse as human dynamics, mathematics,
physics, agriculture, chemistry, and biology, Michael Brackett
shows how you can transform your organisation's data resource into
a trusted invaluable companion for both business and data
management professionals. Chapter 1 reviews the trend toward
rampant data resource disparity that exists in most public and
private sector organisations today - why the data resource becomes
complex. Chapter 2 introduces the basic concepts of planned data
resource comparity - how to make the data resource elegant and
simple. Chapter 3 presents the concepts, principles, and techniques
of a Common Data Architecture within which all data in the
organisation are understood and managed. Chapters 4 to 8 present
the five architectural aspects of data resource management. Chapter
4 explains the development of formal data names. Chapter 5 explains
the development of comprehensive data definitions. Chapter 6
explains the development of proper data structures. Chapter 7
explains the development of precise data integrity rules. Chapter 8
explains the management of robust data documentation. Chapters 9
through 13 present the five cultural aspects of data resource
management. Chapter 14 presents a summary explaining that
development of a comparate data resource is a cultural choice of
the organisation and the need for a formal data resource management
profession.
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