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  • Produktbild: Manager's Guide DW w/WS
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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

01.05.2009

Verlag

John Wiley & Sons

Seitenzahl

416

Maße (L/B/H)

23.5/19.1/2.6 cm

Gewicht

888 g

Auflage

1. Auflage

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-470-17638-2

Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

01.05.2009

Verlag

John Wiley & Sons

Seitenzahl

416

Maße (L/B/H)

23.5/19.1/2.6 cm

Gewicht

888 g

Auflage

1. Auflage

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-470-17638-2

Herstelleradresse

Libri GmbH
Europaallee 1
36244 Bad Hersfeld
DE

Email: GPSR Kontakt

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  • Produktbild: Manager's Guide DW w/WS
  • Produktbild: Manager's Guide DW w/WS
  • Introduction xxiii

    Part One The Essentials of Data Warehousing 1

    Chapter 1 Gaining Data Warehouse Success 3

    The Essentials of Data Warehousing 3

    What Is a Data Warehouse? 4

    Differences Between Operational and DW Systems 4

    The Data Warehousing Environment 4

    What Is a Data Model? 6

    Understanding Industry Perspectives 7

    Design and Development Sequence 8

    Why Build a Data Warehouse? 11

    The Value of Data Warehousing 12

    The Promises of Data Warehousing 15

    Keys to Success 16

    Developing and Maintaining Strong Business and Technology Partnerships 17

    Identifying True Business Requirements 17

    Shifting to a Global Perspective 18

    Overcoming Unrealistic Expectations 19

    Providing Clear Communication 20

    Treating Data As a Corporate Asset 21

    Effectively Leveraging Technology 21

    Roadblocks to Success 22

    Believing the Myth: ''If You Build It, They Will Come'' 22

    Falling into the Project Deadline Trap 23

    Failing to Uphold Organizational Discipline 23

    Lacking Business Process Change 24

    Narrowing the Focus Too Much 25

    Resting on Your Laurels 27

    Relying on the Technology Fix 27

    Getting the Right People Involved 28

    Finding Lost Institutional Knowledge 29

    Summary 30

    Chapter 2 The Executive's FAQ for Data Warehousing 31

    Question: What is the business benefit of a data warehouse? 32

    Answer 32

    Question: How much will it cost? 33

    Answer 33

    Question: How long will it take? 34

    Answer 35

    Question: How can I ensure success? 36

    Answer 36

    Question: Do other companies really build these in 90 days? 37

    Answer 37

    Question: How will we know we are doing this right? 38

    Answer 38

    Question: Why didn't this work last time? What is different this time? 39

    Answer 39

    Question: Do we have the right technology in place? 39

    Answer 40

    Question: Are we the only company with data warehouse problems? 40

    Answer 41

    Question: Will I get one version of the truth? 41

    Answer 42

    Question: Why can't we just use our current systems? 43

    Answer 44

    Question: Will the data warehouse replace our old systems? 45

    Question: Who needs to be involved? 45

    Question: Do we know where we are going? How will we know when we get there? 46

    Answer 46

    Question: How do we get started and stay focused? 47

    Answer 47

    Summary 48

    Part Two The Business Side of Data Warehousing 49

    Chapter 3 Understanding Where You Are and Finding Your Way 51

    Assessing Your Current State 51

    What Is Your Company's Strategic Direction? 52

    What Are the Company's Top Initiatives? 54

    How Healthy Is Your Data? 55

    Does the Business Place Value on Analysis? 56

    Reflecting on Your Data Warehouse History 57

    Understanding Your Existing Reporting Environment 58

    Finding the Reporting Systems 59

    Compiling an Inventory 60

    Identifying the Business Purpose 61

    Discovering the Data You Already Have 63

    Understanding the People 65

    Tracking Technology and Tools 65

    Understanding Enterprise Resources 66

    Netting It All Out 68

    Introducing the Case Studies 70

    The Call Center Data Warehouse Project 70

    In Real Life 70

    Giant Company 71

    Agile, Inc. 72

    Summary 72

    Chapter 4 Successful IT-Business Partnerships 75

    What a Partnership Really Means 75

    What the Business Partners Should Expect to Do 76

    Business Executives and Senior Management 78

    The Executive Business Sponsor 78

    Business Managers 81

    The Business Champion 82

    Business Analysts 83

    Helping the Business Analyst Deal with Change 85

    Business User Audience 86

    Project Manager 86

    What You Should Expect from IT 88

    CIO/IT Executive Sponsor 89

    Data Warehouse Manager 89

    Business Systems Analyst 90

    Source System Analyst 91

    Data Modeler/Data Architect 92

    ETL Developer(s) 93

    Business Intelligence Application Developer 94

    Other Supporting Roles 95

    Tips for Building and Sustaining a Partnership 95

    Leveraging External Consulting 97

    Building Strong Project Teams 98

    Effective Communication 99

    Netting Out Key Messages 99

    Presenting in Business Terms 100

    Meeting Preparation 101

    Presentation Tips 102

    When to Communicate 103

    Partnerships Beyond a Project 104

    The Decision-Making Process 104

    Executive Steering Committee 104

    DW Business Support Team 106

    Enterprise Considerations 107

    In Real Life 107

    A Glimpse into Giant, Co. 107

    Insight from Agile, Inc. 108

    Summary 109

    Chapter 5 Setting Up a Successful Project 111

    Defining the Project 111

    Setting Up the Project Charter 112

    Documenting Project Scope 117

    Developing a Statement of Work 117

    How Much Will It Cost? 120

    Project Approval 122

    Starting the Project 122

    Launching the Project 123

    Managing a Successful Project 124

    Issue Tracking 124

    Using Project Change Control 125

    Discussing Change in Business Terms 126

    Managing Expectations 128

    In Real Life 129

    Structured Projects with Giant 129

    Freedom for Creativity at Agile, Inc. 130

    Summary 131

    Chapter 6 Providing Business Requirements 133

    What Requirements Are Needed? 134

    Peeling Back the Layers of Requirements Gathering 134

    Who Provides Input? 137

    Who Gathers the Requirements? 137

    Providing Business Requirements 138

    Strategic Requirements 138

    Broad Business Requirements 140

    Business Analyses 143

    Business Data Requirements 145

    Systems and Technical Requirements 147

    Communicating What You Really Need 149

    What Else Would Help the Project Team? 150

    Data Integration Challenges 151

    Assess Organizational Motivation 151

    Complete Picture of the Data 152

    What If No One Is Asking? 152

    Practical Techniques for Gathering Requirements 153

    Interview Session Characteristics 153

    Individual Interviews 153

    Group Interviews 153

    Project Team Participation 154

    Interview Tips 154

    Who Needs to Be Included? 155

    Setting a Good Example 156

    Preparing for Interview Sessions 157

    Conducting the Interview Sessions 157

    Capturing Content: Notes vs. Tapes 157

    Running the Interview 158

    Concluding the Interview 158

    Putting the Pieces Together 158

    Individual Interview Documentation 159

    Responsibilities 159

    Business Themes 159

    Business Data 160

    Consolidated Requirements Documentation 161

    Executive Summary 161

    Consolidated Business Themes 162

    Candidate Business Analyses 162

    Consolidated Business Data Requirements 162

    Identification of Non-Data Warehouse Requirements 163

    Common Requirements Gathering Challenges 163

    Sifting Through Reports 163

    Listing Data Elements 164

    Developing Functional Specifications 164

    Moving Beyond Immediate 164

    Lack of Requirements 165

    The Cynic 165

    Setting Attainable Goals 166

    Exploring Alternatives 167

    Setting Priorities 168

    In Real Life 170

    A Glimpse into Giant Company 170

    Insight from Agile, Inc. 170

    Summary 171

    Part Three Dealing with the Data 173

    Chapter 7 Modeling the Data for your Business 175

    The Purpose of Dimensional Models 176

    Ease of Use 176

    Query Performance 177

    Understanding Your Data 177

    What Is a Dimensional Model? 178

    Dimensions 178

    Facts 180

    Using Both Parts of the Model 180

    Implementing a Dimensional Model 181

    Diagramming Your Dimensional Model 182

    The Business Dimensional Model 182

    Business Dimensions 183

    Fact Groups 184

    A Call Center Case Study 186

    Call Center Dimensions 187

    Date Dimension 187

    Time Dimension 187

    Customer Dimension 189

    Employee Dimension 191

    Call Dimension 191

    Call Outcome Dimension 194

    Employee Task Dimension 195

    Call Center Fact Groups 196

    Calls Fact Group 196

    Call Center Time Tracking Fact Group 196

    Call Forecast Fact Group 198

    Working with the Model 199

    Business Dimensional Model Index 200

    Enterprise Considerations 200

    Conformed Dimensions 200

    Conformed Facts 202

    Practical Guidelines 202

    Guidelines for a Single Dimension 202

    Guidelines for a Single Fact Group 203

    Characteristics of the Model across the Enterprise 204

    Business Participation in the Modeling Process 205

    Creating the First Draft 205

    Preparing for Modeling Sessions 205

    Brainstorming the Framework 206

    Drafting the Initial Dimensions 206

    Drafting the Initial Fact Groups 207

    Documenting the Model 208

    Logging Questions and Issues 208

    Building the Business Measures Worksheet 209

    Preliminary Source to Target Data Map 211

    Completing or Fleshing Out the Model 211

    Working Through the Issues 211

    Completing the Documentation 212

    Working Through All the Data Elements 212

    Refining the Model 213

    Business Reviews of the Model 213

    Small Business Reviews 214

    When Are You Done? 214

    Gaining Final Commitment 215

    Expanding Business Data Over Time 215

    Enhancing Dimensions 215

    Adding More Fact Groups 215

    Reflecting on Business Realities: Advanced Concepts 216

    Supporting Multiple Perspectives: Multiple Hierarchies 216

    Tracking Changes in the Dimension: Slowly Changing Dimensions 216

    Depicting the Existence of a Relationship: Factless Fact Tables 218

    Linking Parts of a Transaction: Degenerate Dimensions 219

    Pulling Together Components: Junk Dimensions 221

    Multiple Instances of a Dimension: Role Playing 222

    Other Notation 224

    Dimension Connectors 224

    Clusters of Future Attributes 225

    Notation Summary 225

    Taking the Model Forward 225

    Translating the Business Dimensional Model 226

    Dimension Table Design 226

    Translating Fact Groups 227

    Physical Database Design 228

    In Real Life 228

    A Glimpse into Giant Co. 229

    Insight from Agile, Inc. 229

    Chapter 8 Managing Data As a Corporate Asset 231

    What Is Information Management? 232

    Information Management Example-Customer Data 235

    IM Beyond the Data Warehouse 239

    Master Data Management 240

    Master Data Feeds the Data Warehouse 242

    Finding the Right Resources 242

    Data Governance 243

    Data Ownership 243

    Who Really Owns the Data? 244

    Your Responsibilities If You Are ''the Owner'' 246

    What are IT's Responsibilities? 247

    Challenges with Data Ownership 247

    Data Quality 248

    Profiling the Data 249

    How Clean Does the Data Really Need to Be? 250

    Measuring Quality 250

    Quality of Historical Data 251

    Cleansing at the Source 253

    Cleaning Up for Reporting 254

    Managing the Integrity of Data Integration 254

    Quality Improves When It Matters 256

    Example: Data Quality and Grocery Checkout Scanners 257

    Example: Data Quality and the Evaluation of Public Education 257

    Realizing the Value of Data Quality 258

    Implementing a Data Dictionary 259

    The Data Dictionary Application 259

    Populating the Data Dictionary 261

    Accessing the Data Dictionary 263

    Maintaining the Data Dictionary 263

    Getting Started with Information Management 264

    Understanding Your Current Data Environment 264

    What Data Do You Have? 265

    What Already Exists? 266

    Where Do You Want to Be? 267

    Develop a Realistic Strategy 268

    Sharing the Information Management Strategy 269

    Setting Up a Sustainable Process 270

    Enterprise Commitment 270

    The Data Governance Committee 270

    Revising the Strategy 271

    In Real Life 271

    A Glimpse into Giant, Co. 272

    Insight from Agile, Inc. 272

    Summary 274

    Part Four Building the Project 275

    Chapter 9 Architecture, Infrastructure, and Tools 277

    What Is Architecture? 278

    Why Do We Need Architecture? 278

    Making Architecture Work 281

    Data Architecture 282

    Revisiting DW Goals 283

    Components of DW Data Architecture 285

    A Closer Look at Common Data Warehouse Architectures 286

    Bottom-Up Data Architecture 286

    Top-Down Data Architecture 290

    Publish the Data: Data Marts 294

    Adopting an Architecture 295

    Technical Architecture 297

    Technical Architecture Basics 298

    Components of Technical Architecture 299

    Infrastructure 300

    Technical Architecture in Action 300

    What You Need to Know about Technical Architecture 301

    Navigating the Technology Jungle 302

    Weighing Technology Options 303

    Best of Breed 303

    End-to-End Solutions 303

    Deciding Not to Buy a Tool 304

    Finding the Right Products 304

    Requests for Information or Proposals 305

    Business Participation in the Selection Process 305

    Understanding Product Genealogy 306

    Understanding Value and Evaluating Your Options 306

    Cutting through the Marketing Hype 308

    The Value of References 309

    Making Architecture Work for You 310

    Just-In-Time Architecture 311

    In Real Life 311

    Architecture at Giant 311

    Agile Ignores the Need for Architecture 312

    Summary 313

    Chapter 10 Implementation: Building the Database 315

    Extract, Transform, and Load (ETL) Fundamentals 315

    What Work Is Being Done? 315

    ETL System Functionality 317

    Extraction 318

    Transformation 318

    Load 322

    The Business Role in ETL 323

    Why Does the Business Need to Help? 323

    Defining Business Rules 324

    Defining Expected Results-The Test Plan 325

    Development Support 326

    Testing the ETL System-Is the data Right? 326

    Why Does It Take So Long and Cost So Much? 327

    Balancing Requirements and Data Reality 329

    Discovering the Flaws in Your Current Systems 330

    Applying New Business Rules 331

    Working Toward Long-Term Solutions 332

    Manually Including Business Data 333

    Tracking Progress-Are We There Yet? 333

    What Else Can You Do to Help? 334

    Encouragement and Support 334

    Ensuring Continued Business Participation 335

    Proactive Communication 336

    In Real Life 337

    Building the Data Warehouse at Giant, Co. 337

    Agile, Inc., Builds a Data Warehouse Quickly 338

    Summary 339

    Chapter 11 Data Delivery: What you Finally See 341

    What Is Business Intelligence? 341

    Business Intelligence without a DW 342

    BI in Action 343

    Tabular Reports 343

    Parameter-Driven Reports 343

    Interactive Reports-Drilling Down and Across 344

    Exception Reports 344

    Other BI Capabilities 345

    Complex Analysis 345

    BI Building Blocks 346

    Data Content-Understanding What You Have 346

    Navigation-Finding What You Need 347

    Presentation-How Do You Want to See Results? 347

    Delivery-How Do You Receive the Results? 351

    Supporting Different Levels of Use 352

    Construction of the BI Solution 354

    Planning for Business Change 354

    Design-What Needs to Be Delivered? 355

    Development 357

    Testing BI Applications and Validating Data 358

    Additional Responsibilities 359

    Security-Who Can Look at the Data? 359

    System Controls-Who Can Change What? 360

    Planning a Successful Launch 361

    Marketing the Solution 361

    Learning to Use the Data without a Technical Degree 362

    Learning about the Data 362

    Learning about the BI Tool/Application 362

    Ensuring That the Right Help Is Available 363

    In Real Life 364

    BI at Giant Company 364

    Agile, Inc. Dives into BI 365

    Summary 366

    Part Five Next Steps-Expanding On Success 367

    Chapter 12 Managing the Production Data Warehouse 369

    Finishing the Project 369

    Recapping the BI Application Launch 369

    Post-Implementation Review 370

    Looking Back-Did you Accomplish Your Objectives? 371

    Adopting the Solution 371

    Tracking Data Warehouse Use 372

    Getting the Rest of the Business Community on Board 372

    Business Process Change 374

    Changing How Data Is Used 374

    Streamlining Business Processes 374

    Encouraging Change 375

    The Production Data Warehouse 375

    Staffing Production Activities 376

    Maintaining the Environment 376

    Keeping Up with Technology 376

    Monitoring Performance and Capacity Planning 378

    Maintaining the Data Warehouse 380

    Maintaining the ETL System 380

    Maintaining the BI Application 381

    Tracking Questions and Problems 382

    Fixing Bugs 384

    When the Data Warehouse Falls Short 384

    Common Causes for a Stalled Warehouse 385

    Jump-Starting a Stalled Data Warehouse 388

    Conducting an Assessment 388

    Determining What Can Be Salvaged 389

    Developing a Plan to Move On 390

    Aligning DW Objectives with Business Goals 391

    Getting It Right This Time 392

    Launching the Improved Data Warehouse and BI Solution 393

    In Real Life 394

    Lack of Support for the Production DW at Giant Co. 394

    Unleashing BI at Agile, Inc. 395

    Summary 396

    Chapter 13 Achieving Long-Term Success 397

    Planning for Expansion and Growth 397

    Exploring Expansion Opportunities 398

    Prioritization of Feedback 399

    Managing Enterprise DW Resources 400

    Creating an Enterprise Data Warehouse Team 400

    The Centralized Enterprise Data Warehouse Team 401

    The Virtual Enterprise Data Warehouse Team 401

    Enterprise DW Team Responsibilities 403

    Funding the Enterprise DW Team 404

    Pushing into the Future 405

    Embedded Business Intelligence 405

    Operational Business Intelligence 406

    Real-Time Data Warehousing 407

    Unstructured Data 408

    Monitoring Industry Innovation 409

    Moving Toward Business Value 410

    Measuring Success One Step at a Time 410

    Adjusting Expectations to Reality 412

    Keeping the Momentum Going 413

    Celebrating Progress 416

    Success Can Be Attained 417

    Conclusion 419

    Glossary 421

    Index 429