3 Responses

  1. Madhu

    March 16, 2010

    Brilliant post – I never thought of the Battle of Britain this way. Thanks for the lens ! I am a bit confused by the ‘four’ maxims; I see only three listed in the bullets – Metadata, Data Integration and Best in Class. Madhu

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  2. David Bremstaller

    March 17, 2010

    Hi Madhu. Thanks for the feedback and well spotted! The fourth maxim was implied and I ought to have bulleted it. The fourth maxim is the augmentation and networking of the first three maxims. An example I used was radio linking planes and people to radar, common language, actions, outcomes and, ultimately, command and control. This is what caused the resulting command and control advantage for Great Britain. For example, there is no point having a common business language but no means to apply it to action, there is no point integrating data if no-one understands it and the best gadgets with no clear use or alignment to measureable effects are ineffective. By bringing the maxims into balance, we can see the parallels to todays information management challenges. Thanks again and all the best, David Bremstaller.

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  3. Madhu

    March 19, 2010

    Thanks for the response, appreciate it !

    Reply

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