Data Integration - ETL evolves into Data Integration

Card Puncher Data Processing

Introduction

Data integration suffers from an image problem.

It has become synonymous with extract, transform and load. Likewise, ETL has been regarded as a data warehousing technology.

Both of these viewpoints fail to reflect current data integration capabilities, and they greatly inhibit enterprises in their attempt to integrate data to provide the information their business needs.

More than Simply ETL Tasks

ETL basic functionality

The basic tasks required in data integration are to:

  • gather data,
  • transform it
  • and put it into its target location.

Etl Basic Functionnality

If that sounds like ETL, that’s because that’s exactly what it is.

ETL tools have automated these tasks and empowered developers with a toolkit beyond what they could have easily hand coded themselves. ETL tools, for example, include:

These prebuilt module greatly enhance developer productivity and improve the consistency of results.

Data integration Basic Extent functionalities

Data integration tools offer many significant processes and technologies that extend beyond the basic ETL tasks.

These extensions are necessary to turn data into comprehensive, consistent, clean and current information.

The extended processes include:

This creates the ability to determine the state of the source systems, perform cleansing, ensure consistency and manage all the processing, including error handling and performance monitoring.

More than Batch Processes

Data Integration Suite

Data integration suites have expanded to incorporate enterprise application integration, enterprise information integration and service-oriented architecture coupled with ETL to offer data integration:

  • in batch,
  • interoperating with applications,
  • or in real time from business intelligence applications.

There are many integration initiatives in an enterprise:

  • with data integration being associated with batch-driven ETL processes that load a data warehouse (DW),
  • integration initiatives that did not involve a DW sought out other technologies.

These technologies included:

  • EAI,
  • EII
  • and SOA.

Although each of these technologies has fundamental applications, the reality is that organizations had to reinvent the wheel for every data integration task. The results have been integration silos built with different technologies, producing inconsistent business information and generally with data integration built as an afterthought.

The good news is that data integration vendors that now combine all of the above technologies into data integration suites have emerged from the ETL ranks. These suites enable an enterprise to integrate data in one consistent manner, yet deploy using whatever transport technology (i.e., ETL, EAI, EII or SOA) is appropriate.

More than Data Warehousing applications

With the emergence of the more powerful suites, data integration has moved beyond data warehousing to include other integration initiatives in an enterprise, such as:

  • Data migration,
  • Application consolidation,
  • Operational and real-time BI and
  • Master data management, customer data integration and product information management.

Companies often undertake data migration or application consolidation projects because of mergers and acquisition or because they need to streamline applications. In the past, these projects were seen as one-offs and typically hand coded.

As systems integrators became proficient in ETL tools from DW projects, they realized that they would be much more productive at data migrations and application consolidation projects if they used these same data integration tools. Even though they are one-offs, data integration tools enabled the SIs to:

  • reuse code,
  • leverage prebuilt transformations,
  • better manage processes
  • and produce documentation without a laborious manual effort.

In addition, they did not have to deploy a cadre of coding gurus but could leverage the data integration developers they already employed.

Several market forces have converged to produce the perfect storm, enabling operational or real-time BI with the same data integration and BI tools as used in DW projects. In addition, the major enterprise application vendors offering data integration and BI tools, are bundling this convergence is more consistent, comprehensive and current information (business benefit) with the same data integration and BI infrastructure (IT benefit).

MDM, CDI and PIM all deal with conforming and maintaining master data or reference data for data subjects, such as customers and products. The initial wave of technology solutions bundled a set of tools and applications that were business process or industry specific. What got lost in many of the initial implementations was that these applications relied heavily on data integration and that it made sense to leverage a company’s existing data integration platform to create MDM, CDI and PIM solutions.

Moving to Pervasive Data Integration

Data integration tools aren’t pervasive yet, despite the fact that their use is a best practice. The primary inhibitors have been cost and resources, lack of understanding of the tool capabilities and a market unawareness of tool offerings.

Although Fortune 1000-size corporations tend to use these tools to build their data warehouses, they still hand code their data marts, online analytical processing cubes and other reporting databases. The barriers to pervasive use in these enterprises include:

  • Expense. The licensing costs of these tools often inhibit more widespread use.
  • Resources. Often, the data integration developers are tied up in DW development and are not available for other database loading.
  • Fit. The data integration tool selected as the corporate standard may not be the best match for creating the data marts, cubes and reporting databases required by individual groups.

The issue of expense is best addressed when selecting a tool or negotiating pricing with the tool vendor. Licensing cost should not be the barrier it once was with many vendors offering more scalable pricing options.

Companies can address the issue of resources by forming a data integration competency center. Identifying and elevating the visibility of the extent of the data integration tasks occurring throughout an enterprise will enable IT to justify either more resources or a prioritization of all integration projects so that the enterprise DW does not consume all available resources.

The issue of fit is political for large enterprises because the solution is to go against the grain of selecting one corporate standard. The pragmatic solution would be to create two corporate standards: one for enterprise-class data integration and the other for “downstream” databases such as data marts or cubes. The downstream databases do not require the many sources, data cleansing or data conforming that data warehousing requires. Most of these downstream databases could be loaded by more cost- and resource-effective ETL solutions than required for the enterprise.

Not only do corporate IT departments balk at this solution, but tool vendors often think they should “own” the account and can do everything that every other tool can do. The pragmatic answer I give both groups is that without the two-tier standard approach, the downstream databases will continue to be hand coded with all the business and IT costs and risks associated with those applications. In addition, more data shadow systems will arise to plug the information gap because hand coded applications will take longer and incur more maintenance costs as they age.

For firms smaller than the Fortune 1000, such as those with annual revenue between 250 million and 1.5 billion, the inhibitors to using data integration tools are costs, resources and being unaware of the breadth of the data integration market. These firms do not have the IT budget or resources of the Fortune 1000 to dedicate to data integration solutions. Although this means they would spend less on solutions, it should not mean they are forced to hand code.

However, they might not be aware of the tools – at least those that are in their budget. If they are aware of any data integration tools at all, it is most likely that the high-end tools are expensive and require highly skilled resources. They are aware of these tools because industry analysts and publications seem to only mention the expensive ones. They also hear about them from employees who used to be employed by Fortune 1000 firms. From their perspective, you either have to pay for high-end tools or you hand code, and hand coding usually wins out.

The data integration tool market includes products supporting a wide range of capabilities, skills and costs. As discussed, there may be multiple products available that would be an excellent fit for a midmarket firm’s needs, skills and budget.

Reference







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