TranslateProject/sources/talk/20190507 Some IT pros say they have too much data.md
darksun 03bf22863e 选题: 20190507 Some IT pros say they have too much data
sources/talk/20190507 Some IT pros say they have too much data.md
2019-05-13 13:08:48 +08:00

4.8 KiB
Raw Blame History

Some IT pros say they have too much data

IT professionals have too many data sources to count, and they spend a huge amount of time wrestling that data into usable condition, a survey from Ivanti finds. Getty Images

A new survey has found that a growing number of IT professionals have too many data sources to even count, and they are spending more and more time just wrestling that data into usable condition.

Ivanti, an IT asset management firm, surveyed 400 IT professionals on their data situation and found IT faces numerous challenges when it comes to siloes, data, and implementation. The key takeaway is data overload is starting to overwhelm IT managers and data lakes are turning into data oceans.

[ Read also:Understanding mass data fragmentation | Get daily insights Sign up for Network World newsletters ]

Among the findings from Ivanti's survey:

  • Fifteen percent of IT professionals say they have too many data sources to count, and 37% of professionals said they have about 11-25 different sources for data.
  • More than half of IT professionals (51%) report they have to work with their data for days, weeks or more before it's actionable.
  • Only 10% of respondents said the data they receive is actionable within minutes.
  • One in three respondents said they have the resources to act on their data, but more than half (52%) said they only sometimes have the resources.

“Its clear from the results of this survey that IT professionals are in need of a more unified approach when working across organizational departments and resulting silos,” said Duane Newman, vice president of product management at Ivanti, in a statement.

The problem with siloed data

The survey found siloed data represents a number of problems and challenges. Three key priorities suffer the most: automation (46%), user productivity and troubleshooting (42%), and customer experience (41%). The survey also found onboarding/offboarding suffers the least (20%) due to siloes, so apparently HR and IT are getting things right.

In terms of what they want from real-time insight, about 70% of IT professionals said their security status was the top priority over other issues. Respondents were least interested in real-time insights around warranty data.

Data lake method a recipe for disaster

Ive been immersed in this subject for other publications for some time now. Too many companies are hoovering up data for the sake of collecting it with little clue as to what they will do with it later. One thing you have to say about data warehouses, the schema on write at least forces you to think about what you are collecting and how you might use it because you have to store it away in a usable form.

The new data lake method is schema on read, meaning you filter/clean it when you read it into an application, and thats just a recipe for disaster. If you are looking at data collected a month or a year ago, do you even know what it all is? Now you have to apply schema to data and may not even remember collecting it.

Too many people think more data is good when it isnt. You just drown in it. When you reach a point of having too many data sources to count, youve gone too far and are not going to get insight. Youre going to get overwhelmed. Collect data you know you can use. Otherwise you are wasting petabytes of disk space.

Join the Network World communities on Facebook and LinkedIn to comment on topics that are top of mind.


via: https://www.networkworld.com/article/3393205/some-it-pros-say-they-have-too-much-data.html#tk.rss_all

作者:Andy Patrizio 选题:lujun9972 译者:译者ID 校对:校对者ID

本文由 LCTT 原创编译,Linux中国 荣誉推出