[WORKSHOPS ON APRIL 3 ARE IN-PERSON ONLY, IN UTRECHT.]
In his LinkedIn article ‘Data is Dead,’ Wouter van Aerle sparked a significant debate: many organizations manage their data in ways that are fundamentally inadequate. This includes a lack of clear responsibilities, an overly technological approach, or the absence of a strategic vision for data use. As a result, ambitions to become ‘data-driven’ often fail before they can truly take off.
Wouter offers a forward-looking perspective: how can organizations break entrenched patterns in data management, what fundamental changes are required, and what first steps can they take immediately?
This session will cover the following topics:
In an era where data and artificial intelligence play a central role in business strategies, it is crucial to understand not only the new opportunities but also the latest European legislation in this field. This session offers an engaging and accessible overview of the three most influential European laws of the moment: the AI Act, the Data Governance Act, and the Data Act. What do these laws mean for your organization, and how can you foster innovation while complying with complex legal requirements? With a unique combination of technical and legal expertise, the key aspects of these laws will be explained, offering practical insights to help organizations future-proof themselves. You can expect an informative session filled with concrete tips, potential pitfalls, and real-world examples.
Data engineers are in short supply, but imagine being able to build a data warehouse yourself with GenAI! Victor de Graaff, founder of D-Data, will showcase how, even without extensive technical knowledge, you can set up a complete data warehouse, populate it, and create a BI dashboard—all in just 45 minutes.
Using public APIs and the power of GenAI, Victor will reveal the potential of automation and artificial intelligence, with Azure and ChatGPT as his ‘digital assistants,’ making the seemingly impossible possible.
With GenAI-generated code, we will:
This session will demonstrate that even highly specialized tasks, like building data warehouses, are within reach for a broader audience thanks to GenAI. Get ready to be “in awe” and experience the future of BI and data engineering with artificial intelligence!
Our data processes and systems are becoming increasingly complex, and dynamic. Many companies are struggling with maintaining data quality and increasing trust in the data landscape.
Testing offers insight into risks and quality of the data, the systems, and the dataflows. It investigates for instance the performance, the data integrity and the business logic. Much more than finding issues and bugs, testing is about providing confidence and building trust for end-users in the solution that is being built. Testing should therefore be a critical component in any business intelligence and data environment.
In this talk, I address testing knowledge targeted to data environments using TMAP and the VOICE model. I will address DAMA quality characteristics you can adopt and encourage you to communicate the level of confidence you have in the quality of your systems and data. Gain insight and tips on how to test BI & Data solutions.
Key points:
Erasmus University and TU-Delft joined forces in 2023 to start a new era of research collaboration through an innovative open data sharing platform. Built on the foundations of seamless user experience, robust security, and modern infrastructure, this platform makes sharing and discovering research data effortless. Researchers benefit from intuitive dataset management with automated Digital Object Identifier (DOI) creation, while sophisticated security ensures GDPR compliance without compromising accessibility. The platform features automated dataset synchronization and unique compute-to-data capabilities, allowing secure algorithm execution while protecting sensitive information. Built as an open-source solution, the platform encourages community participation and continuous improvement. Whether you’re a bank analyzing market trends, an insurer seeking risk insights, or a retailer exploring customer behavior patterns, discover how this platform enables secure data collaboration while protecting your intellectual property and maintaining full control over your sensitive information.
This session will highlight the following:
How can you truly harness data as a business asset? We will explore the central pillar of Data Mesh: Federated Computational Data Governance. Gain insights into structuring data teams to meet your needs both centrally and locally, and learn how federated data governance can ensure accountability across the organization. We will dive into some Data Governance challenges concerning data products and establishing data contracts to align expectations and responsibilities across teams.
Topics and discussion points:
Whether you call it a conceptual data model, a domain model, a business object model, or even a “thing model,” the concept model is seeing a worldwide resurgence of interest. Why? Because a concept model is a fundamental technique for improving communication among stakeholders in any sort of initiative. Sadly, that communication often gets lost – in the clouds, in the weeds, or in chasing the latest bright and shiny object. Having experienced this, Business Analysts everywhere are realizing Concept Modelling is a powerful addition to their BA toolkit. This session will even show how a concept model can be used to easily identify use cases, user stories, services, and other functional requirements.
Realizing the value of concept modelling is also, surprisingly, taking hold in the data community. “Surprisingly” because many data practitioners had seen concept modelling as an “old school” technique. Not anymore! In the past few years, data professionals who have seen their big data, data science/AI, data lake, data mesh, data fabric, data lakehouse, etc. efforts fail to deliver expected benefits realise it is because they are not based on a shared view of the enterprise and the things it cares about. That’s where concept modelling helps. Data management/governance teams are (or should be!) taking advantage of the current support for Concept Modelling. After all, we can’t manage what hasn’t been modelled!
The Agile community is especially seeing the need for concept modelling. Because Agile is now the default approach, even on enterprise-scale initiatives, Agile teams need more than some user stories on Post-its in their backlog. Concept modelling is being embraced as an essential foundation on which to envision and develop solutions. In all these cases, the key is to see a concept model as a description of a business, not a technical description of a database schema.
This workshop introduces concept modelling from a non-technical perspective, provides tips and guidelines for the analyst, and explores entity-relationship modelling at conceptual and logical levels using techniques that maximise client engagement and understanding. We’ll also look at techniques for facilitating concept modelling sessions (virtually and in-person), applying concept modelling within other disciplines (e.g., process change or business analysis,) and moving into more complex modelling situations.
Drawing on over forty years of successful consulting and modelling, on projects of every size and type, this session provides proven techniques backed up with current, real-life examples.
Topics include:
Learning Objectives:
In today’s distributed and dynamic data landscapes, traditional approaches to governance and team organization can no longer keep pace. To unlock the full potential of data as a strategic asset, organizations must rethink how they manage, govern, and structure their data functions. This course, rooted in the principles of Federated Computational Data Governance, explores how to balance centralized oversight with distributed autonomy while ensuring accountability and alignment across teams.
Why We Need a New Approach
In many organizations, data governance is struggling to find its place, providing static policies focused on compliance rather than enablers of innovation. However, modern organizations need governance frameworks that are flexible, computational, and adaptive to distributed ecosystems. Federated data governance provides the balance needed to:
By introducing computational models and distributed governance principles, this course shows how to create a scalable, adaptable data team and framework.
The Three-Dimensional Approach to Structuring Data Teams
Data teams today must operate across three key dimensions to meet the demands of strategic alignment, operational execution, and distributed autonomy. Participants will learn how to organize their teams to:
This multi-layered approach ensures that data teams can balance innovation with foundational stability, creating a system that supports agility without sacrificing control.
Ensuring Data Accountability in Distributed Landscapes
As data becomes more distributed, accountability is critical to maintaining trust, quality, and compliance. The course will cover:
Key Topics Covered
This course closely aligns with the workshop outline and includes practical, actionable insights into:
Learning Objectives
Who is it for?
This course is designed for data leaders, managers, and governance professionals who want to create scalable and effective data organizations. Whether you’re responsible for strategy, compliance, or operations, you’ll gain tools and insights to navigate the evolving data landscape with confidence.
Detailed Workshop Outline
1. Introduction
Overview of Workshop Goals: Explain the importance of data as an asset and why organizations must move beyond treating data as just a service.
Solar System Metaphor: Introduce the concept of the data organization as a solar system, with data teams, governance, and accountability as key planetary bodies that need alignment for optimal performance.Key Points:
2. Data Accountability: Creating a Culture of Ownership and Responsibility
Why Data Accountability Matters: Without clear accountability, data quality, security, and data availability suffer.
Practical Steps to Ensure Accountability:
Activity: Scenario-based discussion where participants identify where accountability is lacking in a fictional data-driven organization, and propose solutions for creating accountability.
Key Learning: Participants will gain insights into what data accountability entails, ensuring each team member knows their role in maintaining data quality and governance.
3. Data Governance Models: Federated Governance and Distributed Authority
Introduction to Data Governance: Why data governance is essential to manage risk, ensure compliance, and drive effective data use.
Federated Data Governance: What it is and how it works – balancing centralized oversight with distributed ownership across data hubs.
Key Components of a Data Governance Framework:
Activity: In groups, participants will design a federated governance model for a hypothetical organization, ensuring alignment between distributed teams and central governance.
Key Learning: Participants will learn how to implement a federated data governance model that balances control with autonomy, ensuring alignment across the organization.
4. Structuring Data Teams: Balancing Centralized and Distributed Needs
Discussion: Challenges in organizing data teams.
Activity: Group exercise where participants design an ideal data team structure that addresses both distributed and centralized organizational needs.
Key Learning: Participants will learn how to create a data team structure that is flexible enough to meet both innovation-driven and operational demands.
5. Navigating Long-Term Sustainability: Lessons from NASA’s Mars Global Surveyor
Reflection: Insights from NASA’s Mars Global Surveyor and NASA’s Mars Climate Orbiter.
Key Learning: Participants will leave with strategies for ensuring long-term sustainability and scalability in their data governance and team structures.
6. Wrap-Up and Key Takeaways
Summarizing the Journey: Recap of the solar system metaphor and how the workshop’s concepts apply to real-world data challenges.
Key Takeaways:
Q&A and Next Steps: Open the floor for final questions and discussions about how participants can implement the lessons in their own organizations.
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“Longer sessions created room for more depth and dialogue. That is what I appreciate about this summit.”
“Inspiring summit with excellent speakers, covering the topics well and from different angles. Organization and venue: very good!”
“Inspiring and well-organized conference. Present-day topics with many practical guidelines, best practices and do's and don'ts regarding information architecture such as big data, data lakes, data virtualisation and a logical data warehouse.”
“A fun event and you learn a lot!”
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“Very good, as usual!”