Database Reference
In-Depth Information
OBJECTIVE
Data product discovery should mirror the capabilities of online content sub-
scription services. Podcasts, blogs, or Twitter, all have established features for
ensuring an audience can find and access the latest content. These include:
1. Searching of metadata about the content, including title, author, and
description
2. Browsing of content sorted into categories and ranked by popularity or
ratings
3. Surfacing of related content based on the consumer's expressed areas of
interest
4. Subscribing to allow consumers to sign up to receive updates to content
5. Automated pushing that allows consumers to receive updated content
automatically rather than having to remember to return to the source
6. using user permissions to control who has access to applications and
content
Organizations are starting to recognize the need to provide a centralized place
to find and access applications such as data products. Gartner expects that by
2017, 25 percent of enterprises will have an enterprise app store for managing
corporate-sanctioned apps on PCs and mobile devices.
An app store can be a natural way to share new applications within the enter-
prise, recognize great applications, provide feedback to development teams,
and even create a bit of competition between them—all to drive the develop-
ment of better solutions.” 6
—Gartner
WHERE TO BEGIN: A CENTRALIZED INVENTORY OF
DATA PRODuCTS
Before building an enterprise app store, there are easy, low-tech ways to
deliver discoverability to your audiences. For example, a centralized inventory
of all the data products in your organization is a start. The inventory should
catalog the product author, update schedule, content area, source data, and
directions for subscribing or accessing the data product. A shared drive and
common naming conventions will go a long way to making it easier for data
consumers to find what they need.
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