By Bob Wall, Senior Consultant
Imagine if you will you're the CIO of a mid-market pharmaceutical company and you've just been to a TDWI conference that had a session (“Introduction to MDM for BI Professionals”) that provides an overview of master data management. You’re heading back to your corporate headquarters by train. You feel convinced that like this train, MDM is speeding along gathering momentum, and you don’t want to be left at the platform and miss the opportunity to get your company on the MDM Express!
You may have heard that MDM offers a single version of the truth, enterprise-wide, about customers, products, and other information types. As CIO, if you look around at your company’s issues you realize right off the bat that customer data integration is a real issue. You think to yourself that it would be nice to be able to take an MDM strategy and implement it to consolidate, integrate and synchronize all of the customer data so that it would be more accurate and it would enable your sales and marketing teams to better leverage the market value of your customer relationships. However, you're faced with the daunting fact that MDM is a very complex concept—and potentially an expensive one. Moreover, many MDM vendors price their products such that they’re out of reach for the small to medium size company.
How do you get started? Here are four proven starting-points for MDM:
- Find the business sponsor. I know it’s trite and overused, but since you’re the CIO it’s likely you know where the pain is among your C-level colleagues. Enlist the CFO whose numbers don’t reconcile across billing and invoicing systems, or the CMO who struggles with a growing number of customer lists.
- Engage a readiness assessment. You can do this with internal or external resources, but do it. Gauging readiness has little to do with whether people know what MDM is and more to do with your incumbent skills, data management practices, toolsets, and needs.
- Define a Small, Controlled Project. Work with the sponsor and cut a slice out of the overall problem that you can use to not only demonstrate the value of MDM, but establish the technology foundation.
- Build the team. You can’t just “assign” MDM to your BI or CRM team. You need to construct a new team of data-savvy practitioners who will own enterprise master data for the long-term.
Sure, there are other deliberate steps. Maybe you want to do an educational workshop to get everyone on the same page, or talk to some incumbent vendors about their offerings. But these tactics and others could backfire if they are ill-timed. Better to think globally but act locally, and reap the rewards.
photo by jurvetson (via Flickr)
Bob Wall is a senior consultant with Baseline Consulting. He is an information technology specialist with 30 years experience in all areas of data warehouse administration, data architecture, data resource management, training, and applications systems development, as well as in corporate management.

Recent Comments