Future data analysts will be a “bond” between business and IT, says Diego Klabjan, director of the new Master of Science in Analytics program at Northwestern University. The first cohort starts next month.
by Ted Cuzzillo on August 14, 2012
Future data analysts will be a “bond” between business and IT, says Diego Klabjan, director of the new Master of Science in Analytics program at Northwestern University. The first cohort starts next month.
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Many data repositories are fragile, held together with shaky, ad libbed fixes, observes a busy consultant. Free access for data analysts scares the hell out of administrators.
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In his years in BI, says QlikTech VP of product management Donald Farmer, “I’ve never seen a project fail for purely technical reasons. The organizational aspect was always the principal cause of failure.” Yet tools remain the industry’s obsession.
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Sparks are barely processed bits that may or may not ignite into a full Datadoodle post or on BI This Week or Information Management.
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Wherescape CEO Michael Whitehead says the business intelligence industry is “desperate” for big data to be “a movement, not a moment.”At stake: attention of the mainstream and the momentum that would follow.
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