Data and Analytics - eBook (EN)

IDG CIO Guide: Modernizing Your Data Infrastructure

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MODERNIZING YOUR DATA INFRASTRUCTURE Business imperatives for modernizing data infrastructure Michael Gabriel Partner, Fortium Partners Data has become a strategic asset and a catalyst for launching new business models, revenue opportuni- ties, and other innovations. Nasdaq, for example, built out its portfolio of financial data and analytics services over the past decade to meet changing customer de- mands. That wouldn't have been possible without mov- ing much of its existing data infrastructure to the cloud. In particular, customer demand for real-time data has helped drive the organization's digital transformation. "Being able to get financial updates in real time is becoming table stakes," says Michael O'Rourke, Senior Vice President and Head of AI/Technology, Investment Intelligence at Nasdaq. "For trading applications, being able to visualize the analytics and assess the risk re- quires that you have real-time data in many cases." Innovation takes many forms, including reducing risk for organizations and their customers. NuData Security, a Mastercard company, offers fraud-detection solutions to help banks, insurance companies, e-commerce sites and other businesses thwart unauthorized access and account-takeover attempts. Its NuDetect service analyzes and correlates petabytes of data each day, mitigating what amounts to millions of attacks daily. Built in 2008 in a private data center, NuDetect migrated gradually to the public cloud to support its growing data and performance needs. Today, NuDetect runs exclusively on AWS cloud infrastructure, using a combination of machine learning and sophisticated rules engines to filter out malicious behaviors with minimal impact on legitimate users. "Data is in an Amazon S3 data lake and everything just flows from one place to another," says Justine Fox, Director of Software Engineering at NuData. The environment frees NuData teams to focus on feature additions, cost optimizations, and other value-added activities, Fox says. Becoming more data-driven is at the heart of digital trans- formation and business reinvention, and CIOs need to view it as a continuous exercise, not a point-in-time project. "First and foremost, you need to be business-driven before you're data-driven," says Michael Gabriel, a Partner at Fortium Partners who has held CIO and IT executive positions at HBO, the National Basketball Association, and EMI Records. "Digital transformation isn't a goal, it's a process through which you can better achieve a goal. Technology doesn't stand still—and neither does business—so digital transformation is always ongoing and dynamic." 3 "Technology doesn't stand still—and neither does business— so digital transformation is always ongoing and dynamic."

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