The Currency of Information: Measuring the Value of Data (Part Four)
data needs to be managed for quality, timeliness, consistency, reusability, and business relevance
Larry Burns • The Currency of Information: Managing Data as an Asset (Part Three)
This brings us to our third point: Because data only has meaning within a particular context, consumers of data and information need metadata to help them decide how to use it. This is an important difference between data and other assets. You don’t need much metadata when deciding whether to spend a $20 bill, but you do need metadata when trying t... See more
Larry Burns • The Currency of Information: What Kind of Asset Is Data? (Part Two)
oriented to issues of data management and governance and system reliability.
Thomas H. Davenport • Big Data at Work: Dispelling the Myths, Uncovering the Opportunities
Further, IT asset-optimization and cost-minimization policies, often driven by chief financial officers (CFOs), complicate the BI operation in ways that may not end up being supportive of the BI-driven profit improvement program.
Steve Williams • The Profit Impact of Business Intelligence
Data ownership is much less clear, and responsibilities for ongoing data management haven’t been defined either in most cases.
Thomas H. Davenport • Big Data at Work: Dispelling the Myths, Uncovering the Opportunities
4. The value of data and its relationships with CPGs
Alexandre Dewez • 🥕 Key Learnings From our Webinar on Grocery
Lillian Sheng added
The value of information is determined by what’s discarded in the process of creating it.
thekcpgroup.com • The Attention Span. “Racehorses and Psychopaths.”
Daniel Bakalarz added