CRM - January 2008 - (Page 48) CONNECT BY CONSOLIDATING DATA A SPECIAL 4-PART SERIES PART 2 JAMES KOBIELUS Quality Really Is Job No.1 The “single version of the truth” is impossible without tools to ensure data quality A S N O T E D in my previous column (see “Mas- tering Customer Records,” December 2007, page 48), today’s CRM applications depend on services-oriented architecture (SOA) to ensure that customer data is truly ready for business. But CRM without data-quality–infused SOA is inconceivable—or just far too risky. High-quality data supports both low-level operations and high-level strategic planning. No organization can tolerate critical decisions based on garbage data. To begin with, low-quality data undermines the trustworthiness of key performance indicators (KPIs) central not only to CRM, but to corporate performance management (CPM), business intelligence (BI), master data management (MDM), data integration, governance/risk/compliance, and other business applications. Without automated MANY CRM APPLICATION VENDORS HAVE STRONG DATA QUALITY CAPABILITIES, BUT THERE ARE LAGGARDS. cleansing of data records prior to consolidation, users can’t be sure they’re really getting a “single version of the truth.” Data quality (DQ) capabilities—to discover and profile source data; validate, de-duplicate, match, merge, and cleanse that data; and enhance, enrich, and augment it with additional data—are key to avoiding the “garbage in, garbage out” trap, but not all SOA application and middleware vendors offer strong DQ tools. (Likewise, many CRM and other application vendors have strong DQ capabilities, but laggards—such as Actuate, Infor, Information Builders, MicroStrategy, Sybase, and Teradata—must partner with DQ vendors in order to offer such capabilities.) In fact, much of the recent industry consolidation was driven by SOA vendors’ need to incorporate strong DQ—a trend set off in the early 2000s by SAS Institute’s acquisition of DQ specialist DataFlux. Most of the leading pure-play DQ vendors have since been acquired by larger SOA, BI, or CPM vendors: Ascential by IBM, for example. The consolidation trend really picked up steam late in 2007, first with SAP’s announced acquisition of Business Objects and then with IBM’s move for Cognos. SAP had offered some data-profiling and -cleansing features, but many of its customers preferred standalone DQ offerings from Business Objects and other best-of48 CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIP MANAGEMENT | JANUARY 2008 breed vendors. After the acquisition, SAP will be able to sell Business Objects’ SOA-enabled DQ offerings into its huge worldwide customer base. In the case of IBM/Cognos, it’s the acquired party that sorely needed strong DQ: Cognos had historically been at a competitive disadvantage against rivals—such as Business Objects, Oracle, SAS, and SAP—that had built-in DQ features. As part of IBM, Cognos will leverage the best-ofbreed DQ tools that IBM acquired from Ascential, along with IBM’s own DQ professional services. But the IBM deal complicates a two-monthold partnership between Cognos and Informatica, in which Cognos was to integrate into its deployments the Informatica DQ solutions. Partnering with Informatica was never going to address Cognos’ chief competitive disadvantage: relying on a strategic partner, rather than proprietary products, to address critical customer requirements involving DQ. Furthermore, the Informatica partnership overlapped with Cognos’ existing DQ relationship with IBM, creating the risk of consulting, channel, and customer confusion regarding which solutions—Informatica’s or IBM’s—Cognos would recommend in which scenarios. That potential for confusion has grown even more acute with IBM’s pending takeover of Cognos. The remaining pure-play DQ vendors will continue to be attractive targets for SOA suite providers—such as Microsoft, BEA Software, Progress Software, Software AG, and Tibco—looking to improve their DQ capabilities. (Most of those suites provide only basic data cleansing.) The newly independent Teradata may even snatch up a pure-play DQ vendor to flesh out its MDM, data warehousing, and CPM offerings. The importance of DQ in the SOA arena will continue to grow. The more data sloshing around the SOA universe, the more critically we’ll all rely on middleware to ensure that we’re not running our businesses on inaccurate, inconsistent, or out-of-date information. James Kobielus (jkobielus.blogspot.com) is principal analyst for data management at Current Analysis. You can email him at jkobielus@currentanalysis.com. www.destinationCRM.com http://jkobielus.blogspot.com http://www.destinationCRM.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of CRM - January 2008 CRM - January 2008 Contents Front Office Reality Check Customer Centricity The Tipping Point Facebook's About-Face On the Scene: Oracle OpenWorld 2007 CRM Market Set to Double Customers, Meet your Makers Required Reading Oh, Behave! Fine-Tuning the Channel Listen Up! The Master Piece Flying High on Customer Service Let's Get Digital The Big Rigs Get Revved Up Putting Asia in Your Pocket Secret of My Success Connect Re:Tooling Pint of View CRM - January 2008 CRM - January 2008 - CRM - January 2008 (Page Cover1) CRM - January 2008 - CRM - January 2008 (Page 2) CRM - January 2008 - Contents (Page 3) CRM - January 2008 - Contents (Page 4) CRM - January 2008 - Contents (Page 5) CRM - January 2008 - Front Office (Page 6) CRM - January 2008 - Front Office (Page 7) CRM - January 2008 - Reality Check (Page 8) CRM - January 2008 - Reality Check (Page 9) CRM - January 2008 - Customer Centricity (Page 10) CRM - January 2008 - Customer Centricity (Page 11) CRM - January 2008 - The Tipping Point (Page 12) CRM - January 2008 - The Tipping Point (Page 13) CRM - January 2008 - The Tipping Point (Page 14) CRM - January 2008 - The Tipping Point (Page 15) CRM - January 2008 - The Tipping Point (Page 16) CRM - January 2008 - On the Scene: Oracle OpenWorld 2007 (Page 17) CRM - January 2008 - On the Scene: Oracle OpenWorld 2007 (Page 18) CRM - January 2008 - CRM Market Set to Double (Page 19) CRM - January 2008 - Customers, Meet your Makers (Page 20) CRM - January 2008 - Customers, Meet your Makers (Page 21) CRM - January 2008 - Required Reading (Page 22) CRM - January 2008 - Required Reading (Page 23) CRM - January 2008 - Oh, Behave! (Page 24) CRM - January 2008 - Oh, Behave! (Page 25) CRM - January 2008 - Oh, Behave! (Page 26) CRM - January 2008 - Oh, Behave! (Page 27) CRM - January 2008 - Oh, Behave! (Page 28) CRM - January 2008 - Oh, Behave! (Page 29) CRM - January 2008 - Fine-Tuning the Channel (Page 30) CRM - January 2008 - Fine-Tuning the Channel (Page 31) CRM - January 2008 - Fine-Tuning the Channel (Page 32) CRM - January 2008 - Fine-Tuning the Channel (Page 33) CRM - January 2008 - Listen Up! (Page 34) CRM - January 2008 - Listen Up! (Page 35) CRM - January 2008 - Listen Up! (Page 36) CRM - January 2008 - Listen Up! (Page 37) CRM - January 2008 - Listen Up! (Page 38) CRM - January 2008 - The Master Piece (Page 39) CRM - January 2008 - The Master Piece (Page 40) CRM - January 2008 - The Master Piece (Page 41) CRM - January 2008 - The Master Piece (Page 42) CRM - January 2008 - Let's Get Digital (Page 43) CRM - January 2008 - Let's Get Digital (Page 44) CRM - January 2008 - The Big Rigs Get Revved Up (Page 45) CRM - January 2008 - Putting Asia in Your Pocket (Page 46) CRM - January 2008 - Secret of My Success (Page 47) CRM - January 2008 - Connect (Page 48) CRM - January 2008 - Re:Tooling (Page 49) CRM - January 2008 - Pint of View (Page 50) CRM - January 2008 - Pint of View (Page 51) CRM - January 2008 - Pint of View (Page Cover2)
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