Laura Hahn - MIT CDOIQ Symposium 2015 - theCUBE - #MITIQ
01. Laura Hahn, Ameritrade vists #TheCube. (00:26) 02. What Does The Senior Data Governance Consultant Do. (00:46) 03. Will There be More Metadata than Data. (01:26) 04. The Blanace Between Data as an Asset and Data as a Liability. (02:42) 05. The Pulse of the CEO Panel. (03:38) 06. Who Owns the Data. (04:42) 07. Do All Organizations need to be Data and Analytics Oriented. (05:46) 08. CEO's as Evangalists and Where That Role is Going. (07:28) 09. What is the Role of the CEO And Are They Providing Strategic Value. (08:14) 10. What are the Cultural Differences in How People Look at Data. (10:00) 11. What are the Differences in Use of Data for Retail Stores Versus Banks. (11:17) 12. Real Time Services. (12:15) 13. Is Your Financial Background the Perfect Fit for Your Role. (13:13) 14. Citizens Data Science and Every Day People's Use. (15:27) 15. Big Data and Privacy. (16:58) 16. What Did We Learn From Targets Incident on Privacy. (18:43) 17. Is The Data Officer Responsible for Speaking For the Customer. (21:36) 18. How Do You Avoid The Position Of Saying No. (22:28) 19. Being Smart About How the Business Operates. (24:01) 20. Giving Visulization Tools to Create Charts. (24:36) 21. Making a Career Out of Data Governance. (25:41) 22. What Do You Want to Accomplish in the Next Twelve Months. (27:40) 23. What Kind Of Outcome Do you Look For During these Power Projects. (28:24) Track List created with http://www.vinjavideo.com. --- --- The third-party data-sharing debacle | #MITCDOIQ by Amber Johnson | Jul 23, 2015 Many businesses are focusing on the acquisition of Big Data, but Laura Hahn believes that businesses should be focusing on taking raw data and turning it into something actionable. The senior data governance consultant for TD Ameritrade, Inc. told theCUBE, SiliconANGLE’s Media team, during MITCDOIQ Symposium 2015 that Chief Data Officers (CDOs) “must continue to advocate” data governance “less it be trumped” by other concerns. Particularly in regards to metadata, which “can feel big” and sometimes result in businesses feeling “spread thin” with the multiple forms, Hahn advises to pick and choose where to use resources. Hahn has found that there is a lot of heavy lifting to do in correcting data and getting it usable. “A lot of hard work in organizations have been avoided for a long time,” she said, but data integrity is the “foundation of the house”; anayltics cannot function properly without the it. Data governance as the foundation of solid business One area that cannot be overlooked is liability. There are steps to take to protect data in order to be responsible citizens with that data, explained Hahn. Third-party sharing is a particularly concerning aspect of data governance for Hahn: “We have to careful … because you never think it will be you leaking data,” she said. Therefore, many CDOs might feel the tug-a-war between access and security. The solution is to “be a lot more thoughtful about” third-party data sharing, she added. Hahn suggested that in situations where a CDO might be forced to say “no” to a data request, that scenario can become a “seek to understand conversation.” Instead of denying the request outright, Hahn asks the third party more about what they are trying to do. Usually, the request can be fulfilled with a single metric or trend-line rather than the raw data. Therefore, Hahn is able to help the third party with their problem and improve the image of her business by not saying “no” outright. @theCUBE #MITIQ