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3 Articles match "Business Objects","Products"
| Related DevelopMentor Courses | MORE | | Essential SQL Server 2012 for Developers Training Acquire the exceptional skills you need to be productive today and create more responsive databases with fewer vulnerabilities. Day 2 Architecture The world of the DBA is changing as they are pushed to manage more complex systems with incredible amounts of data, well into the Terabytes, while trying to keep cost low; DBAs are given more responsibilities of providing instant data access and creating applications that perform reliably to meet the heavy demands of the business. Find out about innovative programming techniques enabled by SQL Server 2012 and Visual Studio 2010. ?xml:namespace DevelopMentor Courses - Wednesday, February 22, 2012 Essential SQL Server 2012 for Developers Training Acquire the exceptional skills you need to be productive today and create more responsive databases with fewer vulnerabilities. Day 2 Architecture The world of the DBA is changing as they are pushed to manage more complex systems with incredible amounts of data, well into the Terabytes, while trying to keep cost low; DBAs are given more responsibilities of providing instant data access and creating applications that perform reliably to meet the heavy demands of the business. Find out about innovative programming techniques enabled by SQL Server 2012 and Visual Studio 2010. ?xml:namespace DevelopMentor Courses - Wednesday, February 15, 2012 Essential SQL Server for Developers Training Acquire skills you need to be productive today. Performance Tuning with Indexes In this module we look at things that can affect performance based on the objects in the database, and how to make sure we are architecting our databases in the best possible way. We will look at the more advanced topics, such as how the mapping between the database and the business objects work and how to execute stored procedures and user-defined functions. In SQL Server 2008, the enhancements for SSIS focus on performance and productivity for developers and end users. DevelopMentor Courses - Tuesday, March 1, 2011 |
3 Articles match "Business Objects","Products"
| The Latest from DevelopMentor | MORE | | More comments on ACCU conference That report said 7% of companies had effective IT departments which delivered on business objectives and another 8% who were effective but were not aligned with the business. Product Managers I have long claimed that UK business do not get Product Managers, this might now be changing. The term Product Manager was in wide use and more people seemed to have a Product Manager on their team. Still, there are too few Product Managers, too few of them are really good, their role is still misunderstood and there is not enough training for them. Allan Kelly's Blog - Sunday, April 6, 2008 Feeling sorry for EDS - business that don't know what they want don’t know the rights and wrong of the case, what I do know is that businesses frequently don’t know what they want. Companies with their own IT groups often get into this mess, the business can’t tell the IT people what they want. The business side needs to set the overall goals - ‘build a state of the art customer service system to produce competitive advantage’. Business needs to be able to articulate what it wants but it is wrong to think it can articulate everything up front. Business and IT need to make choices together. But this time maybe I do. Allan Kelly's Blog - Tuesday, October 23, 2007 Is it ever right to create barriers to competition? Ultimately any company is in business to satisfy some customer need. Sometimes we say we are in business to satisfy a customer want, this might be a game a semantics, “want” versus “need” – the same or different? Another way to phrase the ultimate business objective is: we are in business to solve some customer problem. Whether we are solving a problem for a customer, or providing them with something they need we are able to charge money for the product or service. improving the product say. But I digress. back to what I was saying. Allan Kelly's Blog - Thursday, August 25, 2005 | -
| The Best from DevelopMentor | MORE | - Is it ever right to create barriers to competition?
Ultimately any company is in business to satisfy some customer need. Sometimes we say we are in business to satisfy a customer want, this might be a game a semantics, “want” versus “need” – the same or different? Another way to phrase the ultimate business objective is: we are in business to solve some customer problem. Whether we are solving a problem for a customer, or providing them with something they need we are able to charge money for the product or service. improving the product say. But I digress. back to what I was saying. Allan Kelly's Blog - Thursday, August 25, 2005 - Feeling sorry for EDS - business that don't know what they want
don’t know the rights and wrong of the case, what I do know is that businesses frequently don’t know what they want. Companies with their own IT groups often get into this mess, the business can’t tell the IT people what they want. The business side needs to set the overall goals - ‘build a state of the art customer service system to produce competitive advantage’. Business needs to be able to articulate what it wants but it is wrong to think it can articulate everything up front. Business and IT need to make choices together. But this time maybe I do. Allan Kelly's Blog - Tuesday, October 23, 2007 - More comments on ACCU conference
That report said 7% of companies had effective IT departments which delivered on business objectives and another 8% who were effective but were not aligned with the business. Product Managers I have long claimed that UK business do not get Product Managers, this might now be changing. The term Product Manager was in wide use and more people seemed to have a Product Manager on their team. Still, there are too few Product Managers, too few of them are really good, their role is still misunderstood and there is not enough training for them. Allan Kelly's Blog - Sunday, April 6, 2008 %>
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