This year I’m planning to attend the MIT IQ symposium again. I’m also one of the vice chairs of the event. The symposium is a July event in Boston that is a discussion and exchange of ideas about data quality between practitioners and academicians.
I return to this conference and participate in the planning every year because I think it’s one of the most important data quality events. The people here really do change the course of information management. On these hot summer days in Boston, government, healthcare and general business professionals collaborate on the latest updates about data quality. This event has the potential to dramatically change the world – the people, organizations, and governments who manage data. I’ve grown to really enjoy the combination of ground-breaking presentations, high ranking government officials, sharp consultants and MIT hallway chat that you find here.
If you have some travel budget, please consider joining me for this event.
Monday, May 9, 2011
MIT Information Quality Symposium
Tuesday, June 9, 2009
MIT's Information Quality Industry Symposium
This year, I am honored to be part of MIT's Information Quality Industry Symposium in Cambridge, MA. In past years I have attended this conference and have been pleased with the quality of the speakers and how informed the industry is getting about data quality. This year, my company is sponsoring the event and I will be co-presenting with my colleague Nelson Ruiz.
The speaker's list is impressive! Some of the featured speakers include very experienced practitioners like Larry English, Bill Inmon, Danette McGilvray and Gwen Thomas. Attendees will be sure to gain some insight on information quality with such a full line-up of experts.
In true MIT form, this forum has a lot of theoretical content in addition to the practical sessions. This is one of the more academic venues for researching data quality, and therefore less commercial. The presentations are interesting in that they often gave you another perspective on the problem of data quality. Some of them are clearly cutting edge.
My session entitled Using Data Quality Scorecards to Sell IQ Value will be more practical. When it comes to convincing your boss that you need to invest in DQ, how can you create metrics that will ignite their imagination? How do you get the funding... and how do you take information quality enterprise-wide.
If you have some travel budget open, please come to Boston this summer and check out this small and friendly event. As a reader of this blog, feel free to use the Harte-Hanks Trillium Software $100 discount pass when registering.
Wednesday, June 25, 2008
Data Quality Events – Powerful and Cozy
For those of you who enjoy hobnobbing with the information quality community, I have a couple of recommendations for you. These events are your chance to rub elbows with different factions of the community. In the case of these events, the crowds are small but the information is powerful.
MIT Information Quality Symposium
We’re a couple of weeks away from the MIT Information Quality Symposium in Boston. I’ll be sharing the podium with a couple of other data quality vendors in delivering a presentation this year. I’m really looking forward to it.
Dr. Wang and his cohorts from MIT fill a certain niche in information quality with these gatherings. Rather than a heavily-sponsored, high pressure selling event, this one really focuses on concepts and the study of information quality. There are presenters from all over the globe, some who have developed thought-provoking theories on information quality, and others who just want to share the results of a completed information quality project. The majority of the presentations offer smart ways of dissecting and tackling data quality problems that aren’t so much tied to vendor solutions as they are processes and people.
My presentation this year will discuss the connections between the rate at which a company grows and the degree of poor information in the organization. While a company may have a strong desire to own their market, they may wind up owning chaos and disorder instead, in the form of disparate data. It’s up to data quality vendors to provide solutions to help high-growth companies defeat chaos and regain ownership of their companies.
If you decide to come to the MIT event, please come by the vendor session and introduce yourself.
Information and Data Quality Conference
One event that I’m regrettably going to miss this year is Larry English’s Information and Data Quality Conference (IDQ) taking place September 22-25, in San Antonio, Texas. I’ve been to Larry’s conferences in past years and have always had a great time. What struck me, at least in past years, was the fact that most of the people who went to the IDQ conference really “got it” in terms of the data quality issue. Most of the people I’ve talked with were looking for sharing advice on taking what they knew as the truth – that information quality is an important business asset – and making believers out of the rest of their organizations. Larry and the speakers at that conference will definitely make a believer out of you and send you out into the world to proclaim the information quality gospel. Hallelujah!
Thanks
On another topic, I’d like to thank Vince McBurney for the kind words in his blog last week. Vince runs a blog covering IBM Information Server. In his latest installment, Vince has a very good analysis of the new Gartner Magic Quadrant on data quality. Thanks for the mention, Vince.

