Summary
- Enables cross-charging and sharing via enterprise data marketplaces.
- Supports discovery, promotion, and cataloging of data products.
- Requires clear descriptions and reviews to build credibility.
- Uses data contracts to govern usage, trust, and lifecycle.
Chapters
I wonder what you think about enterprise data marketplaces, because that's where we think there's an opportunity for us today, um, that cross charging for, for data assets or for data products. What do you think about data enterprise data marketplaces in, in particular internally From a marketplace, even if there's no real commerce component, there's, there's no money that's being exchanged. You still want to have everything that any e-commerce marketplace provides, which is you should be able to discover, you should be able to promote things, you should be able to catalog things.
You should be able to have description. Imagine you buying a product today on any e-commerce marketplace that does not have a description.
People don't even buy a product if they don't have reviews. A data product shouldn't exist in a data marketplace without a data contract that's going to describe it. Right?
Identify where it can and should be used. Um, how long is it going to be valid for, right? How, how, how much can you trust the data within it?
And you can keep this thing updated. The data contract will have a life cycle. The data product will have a life cycle.
Then you can have a new generation of the contract for new use cases. Maybe there's new data sources coming into the organization. Maybe there's new problems to solve for the business.
But, uh, but to me, to have a data marketplace that's governable and manageable, you've gotta have contracts.