Next Generation Data Integration. For the New Data Warehouse.
From Lean Integration Principles to a Mean
Data Warehouse
An Informatica On-Demand Webinar
Here’s what survey after survey tells us about the current state of data warehousing...
It takes too long to make changes to reports and data warehouses. Integration costs too much. End-users still don’t trust the data. And, achieving scalability means throwing more hardware at the problem.
Hear Lean Integration author David Lyle, George Yuhasz from HealthNow NY and Rob Myers from Corporate Technologies discuss how world-class organizations are applying lean principles and new technologies to re-engineer their processes and architecture. Discover how your organization can achieve unparalleled agility, lower costs, greater scalability and real business impact.
Our panel of experts discuss how you can...
- Unwind the data integration hairball that makes changing reports and warehouses so time-consuming
- Cut the time and cost of data warehouse projects in half
- Give end users complete real-time visibility and trust in the data.
Don’t miss this opportunity to hear proven, real-world strategies for data integration and data warehousing that meet and exceed today’s organization goals.
Register today!
George Yuhasz
Director, Data Process & Governance, HealthNow New York, Inc.With more than 10 years of business intelligence experience, George evangelizes the concepts of visibility, traceability, empowerment, and partnerships within the business intelligence disciplines for technology and business stakeholders at all levels.
Rob Myers
BI Lead Consultant, Corporate TechnologiesRobert Myers specializes in Data Integration and Data Warehousing best practices. He has 22 years of experience in solution design, development and consulting; application design; data warehousing; business intelligence; and operational application development across a variety of platforms.
David Lyle
Vice President of Product Strategy, InformaticaDavid Lyle is the Vice President of Product Strategy at Informatica, where he leads Informatica’s research on model-driven architecture as it extends to integration automation. He graduated from Stanford University with a BS degree in Electrical Engineering.
