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by Tom

How fast can you set-up a working Data Govenance Framework?

Januar 3, 2011 in Financial Services, Investment Banking, Private Banking, Success Stories

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Many organizations which have lived through data quality pains – really suffer from a data governance issue. And there are not many organizations in the large to global scale out there, that can claim not to have any data quality issues. So how fast can you, in the best of circumstances, really establish a working data governance, that i turn has a lasting positive effect on your data quality?

We have led many clients through the process of establishing a working data governance framework and what seems to be unique to most of them, is the lack of ownership for data items that are not directly linked to revenues, performance and success. While it is easy to nail down owners for clients, for profit-centers or for contracts, it is far more challenging to find the responsible person or organizational unit that owns a company’s more generic data items like organizational structure, product catalogue or business calendar. How can you go about these precious, little obstacles?

  • One takes them all – the seemingly easiest way is to define one person or unit, that is responsible for all of these generic items – let’s call them shared data – and owns all of the quality responsibility for the same. In order to successfully incentivize that unit, you need to tie their overall objectives and performance into the more visible success measures, be that revenues, turn-over or client count. Only by instilling that direct link will you underline the importance of data quality for non-strategic (or generic) data objects.
  • All take one – the opposite approach is to link one “community job” to each strategic data item, thus spreading out the maintenance and quality job for the shared data items to a number of well-liked and sought after objects. So whoever takes the client, has to take the business calendar along. Since every governing unit already has a direct revenue link, you don’t have to go through the additional exercise of installing a dedicated incentivation layer.

And how fast is this realistically implemented? I have seen global organizations setting up a new data governance and living the same within three months, including the build-up and usage of an entire master data management framework across three countries. And I also have seen medium sized firms taking two years and not getting the new data governance even settled and decided. So to my experience it’s mostly about the speed in which companies decide that also determines their ability to execute.

What do you think and what have you seen in your companies? Let us know…

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by Tom

14 days of Sun & Fun

August 16, 2009 in Financial Services

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It´s amazing what a few days off the net, off the schedule and off your daily tasks can do to your creativity. I´ve come up with three new and three related new ventures worth pursuing over the weeks and months to come.
But first let´s get back to the tasks at hand in our immediate future and on our roadmap to active BI for Wealth Management put to work in a SaaS delivery model:

1) Our active prototype is due to go live with the initial client this month still (and he´s on vacation you might think)
2) Our lab SaaS version is scheduled for beta-testing to start end of September (interested in these beta-tests – just drop us a few lines on the when and what)
3) Our next big marketing event is to be the Teradata Partners conference this October.

Keep out on the watch for these items to appear – and if I find some additional time in between – I might let you know about these other six creative ideas…

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by Tom

Measure your Measures

Juli 8, 2009 in Active Business Intelligence, Financial Services, Help Wanted

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Are you working in an efficient or an effective organization? Or even both? And how do you measure where your BI delivery unit ranges on a maturity scale of those two attributes.

I’ve spoken to a range of experts from both the consulting end or company end of BI delivery. Here’s a brief account on their take of these questions:

a) Efficiency or Effectiveness

While many state-of-play controlling and performance measurement frameworks claim their grasp on efficiency very few seem to have tried to tackle effectiveness. One of the few approaches put into practice is trying to compare the effectiveness of different projects from all functions of a large Financial Services firm. Here the top 500 projects – whether IT, marketing, HR or accounting related – where put to the effectiveness test. A dedicated effectiveness business case template was developped converging existing financial and qualitative metrics into a common grid. Just this baselining effort skinned out a staggering number of 40 projects that were discarded as non-strategic. Out of the rest the anticipated change budget was alloted across the functions dependent on the projects decreasing effectiveness measure. After 18 months of following this practice the Organization in question increased their effectiveness by 40% – instead of just lowering their cost they were able to use their staff according to current priorities and available skills.

b) Specialized vs. Generalized

The second religious battle one can find in almost any BI competency center is whether it is favourable to have few generalized reports & dashboards understood by the majority of the people or to have dedicated detailed reports and dashboards catering to all the specific questions of the experts. Our approach is to grow from the generic to the specialized and not to tackle these different levels of complexity at once. While you can use the broader, mostly Top down driven Big Picture View to generate and firm up senior sponsorship and involvement it is hard to play the game bottom-up. The usual exception is if you can cater to a broad and important circle of experts – say the client advisors and relationship managers at a private bank. But even these guys these days need to have a broad and holistic picture of their clients, their client’s portfolio, the product and service offering en vogue and the current risk appetite of their organization. So as a generic rule of thumb I would suggest a broad yet powerful audience with a good grasp of the entire organization is a fair bet.

c) Active vs. Passive

BI tradinionalists would rate this one academic but to me it’s the make or break of successful BI solutions. If your report, dashboard or interactive analysis tool is nothing more than a tool showing off glitzy charts and color coded tables, chances are that it will not have a big impact on your organization. So if you really want to see your cause to have an effect you should think about process and feedback. Process embedding is a sure and proven way to integrate reporting checkpoints along the ways business moves. Even more powerful though harder to implement are self contained or self propelling feedback loops that enable an organization to reflect about itself. Think about a client advisor that actively analyses her client book to hunt for new opportunities and actions within – and even records them while analyzing. Think of the team head that structures her feedback sessions based on facts analyzed from the portfolio of her advisor’s client books. Think about the advisor peer that has seen and knows it all but has an additional (financial or appreciative) incentive to share her tactics with her peers.

So if you now sit back and take stock it seems quite easy to take a qualitative verdict on your measurement framework. Not so easy still to measure its effectiveness. One line of thought we are assessing for one client may be promising: Just the experienced investor does with stock picks – decide the quantitative hurdle for each KPI before it’s launched. Review after 3 and 6 month and discard it if it hasn’t made a difference. Go ahead – you make the difference.

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by Tom

Private Banking cloud is gathering

Juli 7, 2009 in Active Business Intelligence, Financial Services

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While summer storms are brewing over Zurich the anvalad active BI cloud platform offering is starting to take shape. Our lab servers and ourselves are crackling with flashy excitement and we can’t wait to get it to the general public to receive comments and constructive feedback.

The following component building blocks will form the anvalad SaaS offering:

• an integrated Private Banking data model
• a J2EE based generic integration platform
• loads of banking specific business rules
• a full-service portfolio management framework
• state-of-the-art sales management features
• a generic reporting & write-back framework
• banking specific semantic web features

all wrapped into a sleek multi entity, multi-portal communications front-end to integrate seemlessly with your existing applications, processes and information.

Are you getting exited yet? So are we. And if you want to be posted on upcoming release schedules and details, simply drop me a note at tomdebus@anvalad.com or sign up for our newsletter on our main site. Should you consider to participate in our beta testing program let us know the intended business problem you are intending to solve and we chat about the potential fit.

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by Tom

Where does BI start and Integration end?

April 28, 2009 in Tales of Tools

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Whenever I speak to clients about BI, and more and more often active BI, we slip into integration challenges and how to best tackle them. Having our main client base in the financial services, they most often prefer the good old data integration approach. Sound yet expensive, complete yet inflexible I would add my judgemental pennies.

The more daring or technology savvy would then inquire about service layers, often already dreaming of the enterprise wide service bus, or at least a project to implement it, or at least the budget to architect it. Didn’t the musical ETs already know it back in RHPS times – if you can dream it, you can be it.

But when I start to fantasize about mashups and that they should let go even further from their strict reigns of strong integration I regularly get the odd look. That’s where you come into play:

- Who has made some practical use of mashups with regards to BI use cases for the Financial Services?
- And who is willing to share them?

Thanks for your feedback
-Tom

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