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Guerrilla Governance: Doing the Most with
the Least
When: Wednesday
May 27th, 2009
Time: 8:30
AM - 9:00 AM Check-In
9:00
AM - Noon Presentation
Where: Holiday Inn at the American Center
5109
West Terrace Drive
Madison,
WI 53718
(note:
the room will be identified as American Family)
Mike Meier has been a "data person" for
more than 20 years, beginning in the Defense marketplace where he
helped introduce the concept of the ER model to the US Air Force,
through the airline and railroad industries, manufacturing and healthcare.
A restructuring of the 1300-employee Mayo Department of Laboratory
Medicine was based on his enterprise model. He defined and implemented
a data warehouse at Olmsted Medical Center and began the task of
improving data quality through stewardship and governance. He initiated
database administration support and controls in order to enable
the quality initiatives and created a reporting environment to motivate
participation. He is currently building a consulting practice. He
has presented on "Guerrilla Governance: Governance on a Zero Budget"
at both the 2008 Data Governance conference (in partnership with
Gwen Thomas) and at the 2008 Data Quality Conference. http://www.m2dxtx.com/Mike.html
Guerrilla Governance: How You
Can Do More With What You Already Have Remember McGyver?
He always did exactly the right thing and always
using only what was at hand. Did he always do the same thing? Did
he always use the same resources? What principles enabled him to
escape death in so many different scenarios? You can put those principles
to work for you to help you escape career death and achieve credibility
to spend as you wish.
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