Enterprise Data Planning

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Enterprise Data Planning is the starting point for enterprise wide change. It states the destination and describes how you will get there. It defines benefits, costs and potential risks. It provides measures to be used along the way to judge progress and adjust the journey according to changing circumstances.

Data is fundamental to investment enterprises. Effective, economic management of data underpins operations and enables transformations needed to satisfy customer demands, competition and regulation. Data warehouse(s) and other aspects of the overall data architecture are critical to the enterprise.

EDMworks has created a strategic data planning approach for the Investment Sector. It consists of a planning process, planning intranets, templates and training materials.

EDMworks planning process is based on the belief that extensive domain knowledge significantly shortens planning iterations and enables progressively higher quality plans to be produced and implemented.[1][2] This approach drives the development of an effective and economic Enterprise Data Architecture.

Enterprise Data Planning is based on proven business disciplines.[3] Key architectural layers for data and applications are then added in order to provide an enterprise wide understanding of the uses and interdependencies of data.[4] This enables the definition of the core components of the EDM plan:

EDMworks uses several components from the Open Systems Group TOGAF enterprise systems planning process. TOGAF acts as an extension to good business planning methods to provide a framework for the development of the systems and data architectural components.

History

James Martin was one of the pathfinders in data planning methodologies. He was one of the first to identify data as being an enterprise wide asset that required management. He developed a series of tools and methods to support that process.[5]

Most of the large consulting firms developed their own methods to address the same basic issue. Frequently, their approaches were incorporated into their own branded system development methodologies that encompassed the complete systems development life-cycle.

Others, such as Ed Tozer, developed more focused offerings that dealt with the complexities of extracting key business needs from senior management and then defining relevant architectural visions for the specific enterprise.[4]

From these various sources, the concepts of Business, Data, Applications and Technology Architectures emerged.

The Open Group Architectural Framework (TOGAF) has taken this work forward and has established a sound method in TOGAF version 9.

EDMworks approach is to adopt these planning and architectural practices as a basis and then add two additional dimensions to the planning and implementation focus:

References

  1. Introduction to Futures and Options Markets (John Hull) 1995
  2. Mastering Derivatives Markets (Francesca Taylor) 2007
  3. The Definitive Business Plan (Richard Stutely) 2002
  4. 1 2 Planning for Effective Business Information Systems (Edwin E. Tozer) 1998
  5. Martin 1982

External links

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