About a-team Marketing Services
The knowledge platform for the financial technology industry
The knowledge platform for the financial technology industry

A-Team Insight Blogs

Data Management Summit Keynote: The Builders and The Architects

Subscribe to our newsletter

Data management veteran and SmartStream senior vice president, Tom Dalglish, led this week’s A-Team Group Data Management Summit in London with a thought provoking keynote covering ‘all things data’. He started with a review of what he called a tumultuous year in which people, including himself, moved jobs, data management solution vendors changed hands, and the market arrived at the threshold of the data utility.

Moving on, Dalglish addressed the topic ‘Data Utilities in the Market Place: The Builders and The Architects’. He noted that builders and architects often need to be good at both jobs, but warned that architects sometimes create designs that can’t be built and builders sometimes build without architectural plans.

By way of example, he described a terminal built at Charles de Gaulle airport that collapsed soon after it was built in 2002. The collapse, he proposed, was most likely caused by the same problems that are encountered when building systems for use in capital markets, perhaps process failure, lack of design checking, design flaws that are not caught during building and the wrong materials.

These problems, Dalglish said, describing himself as a builder who hangs out with architects, often occur at the interface of architects, builders and engineers. Problems can also arise if changes are made to a project and the initial plan doesn’t survive, or if architects and builders fail to consider how long systems should last for when they start designing and building.

Turning to the building of data utilities, Dalglish described the need for data accuracy, a change in data sourcing, and a shift in vendor strategies. He said: “Data accuracy is a double-edged sword because everyone’s data sucks, yet everyone wants to hold on to it, even though they know they need accurate data. Data vendors are beginning to come to terms with new market dynamics and software vendors that look like competitors are not, while vendors that we thought wouldn’t collaborate are collaborating.”

Taking into account the changes and developments that have marked the past year, Dalglish concluded: “We stand at the threshold of the data utility, but how do we build it and what commercial models do we use?”

You can listen to a full recording of the session here.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Recorded Webinar: Navigating a Complex World: Best Data Practices in Sanctions Screening

As rising geopolitical uncertainty prompts an intensification in the complexity and volume of global economic and financial sanctions, banks and financial institutions are faced with a daunting set of new compliance challenges. The risk of inadvertently engaging with sanctioned securities has never been higher and the penalties for doing so are harsh. Traditional sanctions screening...

BLOG

New Data Partnership Approach Urged for Investors in SimCorp Report

Investment managers must take a fresh approach to data management, stressing trusted partnerships with outside expertise over traditional outsourcing models, as they seek to adapt to a rapidly changing economic landscape, a report has urged. The binary build-versus-buy strategy that has been the basis of innovation adoption for decades has been upended by advances in...

EVENT

RegTech Summit London

Now in its 9th year, the RegTech Summit in London will bring together the RegTech ecosystem to explore how the European capital markets financial industry can leverage technology to drive innovation, cut costs and support regulatory change.

GUIDE

The DORA Implementation Playbook: A Practitioner’s Guide to Demonstrating Resilience Beyond the Deadline

The Digital Operational Resilience Act (DORA) has fundamentally reshaped the European Union’s financial regulatory landscape, with its full application beginning on January 17, 2025. This regulation goes beyond traditional risk management, explicitly acknowledging that digital incidents can threaten the stability of the entire financial system. As the deadline has passed, the focus is now shifting...