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Gordon Strodel's avatar

Thank you for sharing, really interesting!

I am curious how you see this working out in a Fortune 500 or a top 20 Pharma company where the data sources are systems like SAP or Salesforce/Veeva held and managed centrally and often with lots of offshore ops? Or in instances where you purchase data (Experian, IQVIA, etc) which itself has defects in classification and quality? In both these scenarios, the “shift left” can only go so far as the Bronze layer of the Data Lake. Enterprise Teams and Commercial data vendors do not take responsibility for data quality nor do their own tools allow for this movement. So…Can we talk about a Federated Data Team (distinct from Enterprise IT) supporting a business function in which the analytics is suffering from data quality and losing trust? How do they shift left? Or are we just back to standard DQM and SDLC processes to stem the bleeding?

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Mikel Egaña Aranguren's avatar

Very interesting post, thanks.

I have a question for you: what is the role, if any, for Semantic technologies like (RDF) Knowledge Graphs in implementing Shift Left?

I'm asking because KGs are becoming important in Data Centric Architectures (https://datacentricmanifesto.org/,https://www.ekgf.org/), with companies like data.world (https://data.world/), Semantic Arts (https://www.semanticarts.com/), Eccenca GmbH (https://eccenca.com/) and many more helping other companies in applying KGs to become data centric (I also have anecdotal evidence from my consulting work for big companies). It seems to me that Shift Left and Data-Centric are two ways of describing the same solution.

I recommend two books by Dave McComb in this area:

- "Software Wasteland: How the Application-Centric Mindset is Hobbling our Enterprises"

- "The Data-Centric Revolution: Restoring Sanity to Enterprise Information Systems"

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