Site icon Brent Ozar

Big Data is Hoarding 2.0

It’s time for an intervention. Here’s 3 signs you might be a data hoarder – see if you recognize your databases in Wikipedia’s list of compulsive hoarding symptoms:

1. You tend to hold onto items that most people would consider not useful:

2. There’s so much clutter that servers and drives can no longer be used for their intended purpose, and some of your data is inaccessible. Examples include:

Bob knew that the secret to his company’s profitability was hidden in correlations between these boxes.

3. The clutter is so bad it causes illness, distress, and impairment.

How to Get Help with Your Data Hoarding Problem

If you believe the above heading refers to a new way to process your “big data”, think again.

When you hire another “data scientist” to tell you how incredibly valuable your data can be, think about that person’s motivations. You’re paying them to tell you if your junk is worth something, and then you’re paying them again to take their time sifting through your junk.

Sooner or later, you have to wise up about the data you keep. Maybe there’s not a lot of value in the web site clicks your users made two years ago – back when your web site looked totally different, and you can’t even recreate that web site anyway because you don’t have a working version of it compiled, so you don’t even know what the links mean, and then you have to spend even more time getting valuable business people involved to try to remember what /sites/purchase/preorder/item45.aspx?special=1 was all about. I’m just saying.

Because if your office looked like your database, you’d be on television.

And I don’t mean America’s Next Top Data Model, either.

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