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TOP TEN TIPS FOR DATA WAREHOUSE SUCCESS
by Sid Adelman
- Use what has already been purchased -- Most installations have an RDBMS
which will serve them well as the store for the data warehouse as well as a
query or report writer. By using what is already available, the cost of the
data warehouse is reduced and the organization does not have to spend as much
time and money on the training and the learning curve required for bringing
in as many new software products.
- Don't let management set an artificial deadline- - The data warehouse
project manager needs to be proactive, develop a project plan complete with
tasks, deliverables, durations and assignment of responsibilities. The
project plan will produce a completion date that management can now see and,
hopefully, will accept.
- Assemble a small team of good people for the data warehouse project.
Since the data warehouse is new, and all the good people are already actively
involved with other projects, management will often try to staff with people
who have nothing to do. Don't accept incompetents or naysayers on the team.
- Chose an application of reasonable size. The initial pilot should not
be so large that the inevitable performance problems of a very large data
base will jeopardize the success of the project. Nor should it be so small
that little is learned about managing a data warehouse.
- Choose an application that makes a real contribution to the
organization. Every organizations has a wealth of data warehouse
opportunities. There is never a reason to choose a data warehouse
application that will be a throw away or will make no contribution to the
company.
- If a consultant is engaged, be sure that Job One is skills transfer.
Too often consultants come in, work their magic and leave without teaching
the IT staff how to develop the next data warehouse application.
- The sponsor should desperately want and need the capabilities of the
data warehouse. This helps to ensure their support when problems arise (they
will).
- Ask the vendors to back their claims with seasoned references and
written assurances of their product's capabilities. Don't be snowed (or let
your users be snowed) by flashy demos.
- Allow adequate time for training -- Even if the tools are intuitive,
training is still required to understand the data and know how to validate
the query results.
- Clean the data -- The users will walk away if their reports and queries
are wrong. Dirty data will deliver incorrect reports.
- Measure results, usage and report benefits - If you don't know how the
data warehouse is being employed and you don't know how it benefits the
users, it will be difficult to ask for the budgets and resources necessary to
maintain and enhance what has already been built.
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