The Data Warrior

Changing the world, one data model at a time. How can I help you?

Archive for the category “Data Warehouse”

What’s in your war chest?

When you gear up to do battle with your next data warehouse or data modeling problem, what are your weapons of choice?

ERwin?

Oracle Designer?

SQL Developer?

Or do you go “old school” with the traditional pen and paper (or marker and white board)?

Whatever your approach, everyone has a favorite. Tell me what yours are in the comments.

Take care out there.

Kent

P.S. Want to know what my weapons of choice are? Check out my War Chest page and the Blogroll and Useful Sites in the right column on this page.

Want to be a Data Vault implementation Black Belt?

Are you tired of seeing failed data warehouse projects?

Tired of being part of the problem or having to clean up after someone else messed it up?

Well, now you can be part of the solution and kick implementation failures in the <you know what>.

I am pleased to tell you that my good friend, Dan Linstedt, creator of the Data Vault, has just launched a new, online, Data Vault training portal.

And it is now open to the public!

The first class you can get is on Data Vault implementation.

It is way cool!

The quality is excellent and the material is even better (including material I have never seen in a class). Dan provides tons of information about not only the right way to implement the Data Vault but gives examples of how he has done it and gives you code templates (for multiple databases) you can implement on a real project.

Why would you want to sign up for this training? Well lots of reasons:

  1. You read the Data Vault modeling book, but can’t quite see how to load the model after it is built.
  2. It’s less expensive than face to face training. No time off or travel required!
  3. You can rewind and watch the training at your own pace (no need to feel behind or ahead of the rest of the class).
  4. You get access to the course for an entire year instead of 1 to 3 days in a lecture format. So you can watch it over and over again.
  5. You get to ask Dan questions directly (and you can even engage and interact with other students).
  6. Dan is going to host tele-seminars for members only where you can ask him any question (without having to pay his normal consulting fees).
  7. It is currently on sale at a huge discount.

This is really a great deal.

So, what are you waiting for?

Head on over to the site now and get started! (If you are ready to buy and want to skip the sales stuff, just scroll to the bottom and hit “add to cart”. So why are you still here?)

You can’t get this material anywhere else and get direct access to the guy that invented it.

Doesn’t get much better than that.

Later.

Kent

More free stuff!

Hey gang,

I have been working hard over the past few weeks to find some of my old white papers so I could make them available to everyone on my blog site. Well, I finally found a few of them on some flash drives and figured out how to upload them to here to WordPress.

If you look above you should now see a new menu item called “White papers”. Click that link to get access to the papers I have found so far.

They are FREE for you to download. I am not even asking you to “opt in” or anything.

I just ask that you respect the copyrights and tell folks where you found them (share on Facebook, LinkedIn, Tweet it, etc).

I know there are more but have to figure out which ones are still useful (or at least moderately so). So be sure to check back often to see what I have added.

If you remember any I did in the past you might want a copy of, tell me in the comments (below) and I will see if I can find it.

Oh and as a bonus, I have also included a copy of my recent “Introduction to Data Vault Data Modeling” article just in case you have not read it yet.

Hope you find some of these useful. Have a great week!

Kent

P.S. I am thinking about publishing some of these, with minor revisions, to Kindle. Do you think that would be useful to any of you?

Is the Data Vault too complex?

This was a very interesting topic that came up on LinkedIn the other day, so I wanted to address it here to.

There seems to be quite a few people who think that Data Vault models are harder to build and manage than what we do today in most shops. So let me explain how I came to learn Data Vault Data Modeling.

Before learning Data Vault, I had successfully built several 3NF OLTP, 3NF DW, and Kimball-style Dimensional data warehouses (and wrote about it with Bill Inmon and Len Silverston in the original Data Model Resource Book).

In other words, I had a reasonable amount of experience in the subject area (data modeling and data warehousing).

I personally found Data Vault extremely easy to learn as a modeling technique (once I took the time to study it a bit). At the time that meant reading the old white papers, attending some lunch & learns with Dan Linstedt and then building a few sample models.

I was definitely skeptical at first (and asked lots of questions at the public lunch & learns). I did not care about MPP, scalability, or many of the other benefits Dan mentioned. I just knew from experience there were a few issues I had seen with the other approaches when it came to building a historical enterprise data store and was hoping Data Vault might be a solution.

In comparison to trying to learn how to design and load a Type 2 slowly changing dimension, Data Vault was a piece of cake (for me anyway).

Once I was convinced, I then introduced the technique to my team in Denver – who had virtually no data warehouse experience.

It was universal – everyone from the modelers to the dbas to the ETL programmers found the technique very easy to learn.

Our investment: One week of training from Dan for 7 people and 3 or 4 days of follow-on consulting where Dan came in once a month (for a day) to do a QA review on our models and load routines and mentor us on any issues we were having.

Dan did not make much $$ off of us. 😦

Since then, I have found that experienced 3NF modelers pick up the technique in no-time flat.

Why is that?

Because Data Vault relies on solid relational principles, experienced 3NF modelers seem to grasp it pretty fast.

Modelers who only have experience with star schemas, on the other hand, seem to have a bit of a hard time with the approach. For some of them it is a paradigm shift in modeling technique (i.e., feels very unfamiliar – “too many tables and joins”),  for others it is almost a dogmatic objection as they were (sadly) taught that dimensional/star was the only “right” way to do data warehousing.

They are just not open to a new approach for any reason (sad but true). 😦

The biggest issue I have seen with clients is a reluctance to try the approach for fear of failure because they don’t personally know anyone (other than me) who has used the approach and because they think it is easier (and cheaper?) to find dimensional modelers.

This happens, even if they agree in concept that Data Vault sounds like a very valid and flexible modeling approach.

As we all know, it takes $$ to train people on star schema design too, so my advice is that if you have a team of people who know 3NF but don’t know dimensional, train them on Data Vault to build your EDW, then hire one or two dimensional modelers to build your end user reporting layer (i.e., data marts) off the Data Vault.

So that’s my 25 cent testimonial. (You get if for free!)

If you want to learn more about Data Vault, check out my presentations on SlideShare or click on the Super Charge book cover (below my picture in the sidebar) to buy the Data Vault modeling book..

Check it out and let me know what you think in the comments. How do we get people over the fear of trying Data Vault?

Talk to you later.

Kent

Ready for a Rocky Mountain High?

Got the mid winter blues?

Ready for some bright sunshine and fresh mountain air? Maybe some snow?

The wait is almost over! RMOUG Training Days 2012, February 14 – 16, is only 14 days away! That’s right, only a few days until the biggest, and the best regional Oracle users group conference kicks off! But why wait until the last minute?

You still have a few days to take advantage of the lower Standard Registration rates. Register by February 9 to receive the lower rate.

And don’t forget to sign up for a University session. I am participating in this one:

Data Warehouse Performance

Jerry Ireland, Rightsizing Inc., Mark W. Farnham, Rightsizing, Inc., Tim Gorman, Evergreen Database Technologies, Inc, & Kent Graziano, TrueBridge Resources

This session brings together four experts in performance and data warehousing. All are Oracle ACEs, two are members of the OakTable, and together they represent over ninety years of experience with Oracle. All of the ideas and techniques presented can be implemented with minimal additional hardware and most with a manageable effort. The session will start with some hints and tips that can be used on existing data warehouses and progress to a method of getting performance when the CBO does not recognize a star schema. The session will present partitioning strategies to increase scaling, and finally take a glimpse at some of the benefits of relatively new, but growing, database architecture. The day will be wrapped up with a Q & A with all symposium presenters.

So don’t delay, make your plans today!

And maybe get some skiing in?

See ya!

Kent

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