Collibra has launched a Collibra Data Intelligence Cloud based on a microservices architecture that promises to alter the way data is managed in enterprise IT environments.
Jim Cushman, chief product officer for Collibra, said its approach sets the stage for leveraging microservices to create data workflows made up of reusable components. In fact, there may come a day soon when some data sets are accessed and managed as a reusable microservice, he said.
The Collibra Data Intelligence Cloud provides a catalog for managing metadata that, in addition to making it possible to build workflows, ensures the integrity and security of data being accessed and stored. End users can then analyze that data using a wide variety of third-party tools, said Cushman.
At the same time, Collibra enables metadata ingestion from data sources such as data lakes and data warehouses, which means IT teams don’t have to move all the data they need to manage into Collibra Data Intelligence Cloud to create a workflow.
Collibra is also making available a beta version of its Data Matching tool for qualified customers. That tool identifies duplication within a data source and how that data might overlap with other data sources.
Finally, Collibra has added a data scoring component to its catalog to identify the most relevant data sets; provide enhanced support for third-party business intelligence (BI) and extract, transform and load (ETL) tools; and strengthened rights management capabilities to make it easier to enforce compliance requirements.
Cushman said the goal is to provide organizations with an easier approach to storing and organizing trusted data. As the amount of data an organization collects grows, so, too, does the opportunity for conflicting data to be incorporated in applications. The Collibra Data Intelligence Cloud creates an opportunity to make data universally available to applications without requiring them to copy it, he said, noting that approach reduces not only the amount of data that might be in conflict as data sources are updated but also the amount of infrastructure that would have been required to process and store duplicate data.
Organizations have been struggling with data management since the dawn of IT. That’s become a more pressing issue as more organizations seek to turn data into a strategic asset that drives digital business transformation initiatives. However, those initiatives are often derailed because so much of the data is either conflicting or simply too stale to be relevant. Collibra is making the case for a single platform to bring order to what historically has been a chaotic process.
It’s not clear to what degree organizations will be focusing more on data quality and management in the months ahead. In the wake of the economic downturn brought on by the COVID-19 pandemic, it’s clear digital business transformation has become a necessity. The challenge is that unifying how data is managed in any enterprise requires a massive amount of political capital. Each business unit within an enterprise IT environment tends to guard its data privileges jealously.
However, as microservices make it possible to make the business a lot more agile, the day when organizations finally confront their longstanding data management issues may finally be at hand.