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Content Management: The Puzzle, The Challenge, and The Opportunity

Content Management: The Puzzle, The Challenge, and The Opportunity. Shu-Shang Sam Wei, Ph.D. Software Architect EMC Documentum Content Management Offerings. Google as an example. Yahoo! as another example.

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Content Management: The Puzzle, The Challenge, and The Opportunity

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  1. Content Management: The Puzzle, The Challenge, and The Opportunity Shu-Shang Sam Wei, Ph.D. Software Architect EMC Documentum Content Management Offerings

  2. Google as an example Enterprise Content Management

  3. Yahoo! as another example Enterprise Content Management

  4. Baidu for another Example Enterprise Content Management

  5. What Does it Tell Us • There is a strong desire/demand to search on the Web • We are in an Information Explosion Age • Number of emails (SPAM excluded) sent every day in North America tripled to 11.9 billion since 1999 (Wall Street Journal, 8/26/2004) • Google is doing 2 billion searches a month • Yahoo! generates 10 terabyte data a day (The Library of Congress) • eBay hosts 1.4 billion auctions and 16 million active auctions at any moment of time • Internet has made the search significantly easy/efficient • Scott McNearly (CEO, Sun Microsystems) joked: “Google has become one of the most important tools IT has ever deployed on the corporate system” Enterprise Content Management

  6. What Does it Tell Us (Cont.) • Information exists in many different forms (and places): email/IM, video, audio, database, Blog, Web pages etc. • Unstructured data (content based) is becoming more important than structured data (number based) • 70 ~ 90% of corporation data are unstructured • Unstructured data impose more challenge on management • Enterprise content management (ECM) • not confined in organizing data, • involves exploiting business know-how • to avoid critical failures, • to operate more efficiently and • to become more productive and profitable Enterprise Content Management

  7. The Puzzle of ECM • Search • Knowledge Management • Document Management • Lifecycle Management • Web Content Management • Collaboration • Portals • Digital Asset Management • Email Management • …. • The list is still growing Enterprise Content Management

  8. Search • More than half of professional people spend more than 2 hours/day searching for info for their jobs • Software created in late 1970s and early 1980s could search millions of documents, primarily for education, medical research, and large legal cases • In late 1980s, search extends to Web. Internet becomes a popular place for sharing info • Search tool can be confusing if it returns tons of pages for you to choose • Basic search features: full text search, Boolean expression, wildcarding, proximity, parametric search, thesauri, synonyms, relevant order Enterprise Content Management

  9. Search (cont) • Advance searches • Adjustable ranking • Hyperlink ranking (Google’s engine) • Hit highlighting • Auto summary • User behavior learning • Natural language queries • Dynamic clustering of results • Concept mining and extraction • Federated search • Auto classification based on taxonomies • Taxonomy navigation Enterprise Content Management

  10. Knowledge Management • Poorly managed knowledge costs Fortune 500 about $12 billion/year (IDC, Business 2.0, February 2002) • Knowledge is applying information to resolve a problem • Information must be organized and filtered • Layer of intelligence gathering info about info • Knowledge is context aware • Authoritative, hierarchical taxonomies and thesauri greatly improve info access for decision making and innovation • Knowledge management is about the application of knowledge • An effective KM system should reduce the impact on established routines and extend existing enterprise applications Enterprise Content Management

  11. Knowledge Management (cont) • Knowledge management system provides a community of practice for people to share their knowledge • The cycle of knowledge management Find/Create Reuse Organize Share Enterprise Content Management

  12. Document Management • Emerged in 1980s to help airline, pharmaceutical and financial industries handle paper-based processes that drive their business • To comply with stringent government regulations (FDA in pharmaceutical, FAA in Airlines) • Document capturing/imaging, dissemination, and annotation • Version control • Compound document • Document renditions • COLD (Computer Output to Laser Disk) and Archiving • Security and permissions control • Audit trails • Library services Enterprise Content Management

  13. Lifecycle Management • Information carry different meaning to content over time • Typical cycle • Creation • Processing • Retention and archiving • Disposition • Active processing • Redaction, review and markup • Electronic (password based) and digital (PKI + encryption) signing • Classification and taxonomies • Compound document assembly • Publication Enterprise Content Management

  14. Lifecycle Management (cont) • Retention, archiving and disposition • Storage management • Migrating inactive contents to low cost system • Archiving • Indexed and accessible manner, or • Secured and easily restored upon request • Record management • Based on U.S. DOD 5015.2 certification standard • E-mail included • Manage retention policies • Create “holds” on content • Keep audit trail on all actions Enterprise Content Management

  15. Web Content Management • Internet becomes an important place for business • Information posted on web needs to be current up to minute • Automation is essential due to the complexity • Web content: static or dynamic, structured or unstructured • Web content editing • Use templates and style sheets to separate content from layout • Support distributed team-based collaboration • Internationalization support Enterprise Content Management

  16. Collaboration • Link processes and people to create a combined work environment where ideas and knowledge are shared to accomplish a project • Tools used • E-mail/IM • Application sharing • Web conferencing (meeting, whiteboard, poll, chat) • Intranets/extranets • Groupware (eRoom) • Repositories • Future tool will seamlessly connect content, people and processes between back/front office Enterprise Content Management

  17. Portals • Provide Web browser a single point access to corporate info • Portlets (widgets, gadgets) are connector programs to present info from another application or information source • Allow personalization • Support customizable search, navigation and access to contents • Hosting services • ASP rent the software and charged by use • Backup and maintenance done by ASP Enterprise Content Management

  18. Digital Asset Management • Rich media is defined as images, audio, video and other visually oriented unstructured content (like animation and presentations) • Managing rich media becomes crucial due to broadband support and technology enhancement • It’s a challenge moving large digital media files • Need to consider the rights and licensing permissions • Meta-data is extensively used for managing the content • Online education is a good example Enterprise Content Management

  19. Email Management • Email has become a pervasive communication tool in corporate • An employee receives around 70 emails a day in average • Messaging technology includes fax, voice, IM and virtual meeting services • Messaging system is the largest content repository • It can store up to terabytes of data which is a challenge to manage • Support audit trail • Integrated with Records Management • Provide legal compliance Enterprise Content Management

  20. Business Process Management • A shorter business process cycle can reduce operational cost, increase profits and meet customer demands • BPM describes how people interact with technology added to automate processes, information and each other to get jobs done • BPM enables organizations to leverage and extend their existing technologies to support the processes driving the success of business • Workflow is the combination of tasks that define a process • Web-based open standards (XML, SOAP, or WSDL into process management) allow new standard of application integration and sharing real-time info that drives the daily operations • Organizations can use BMP to build processes that adapt to new market conditions • BPM allows processes to be modeled, refined and modified as needed Enterprise Content Management

  21. How They Work Together Document Management BPM Structured DAM Imaging Archive Workflow Web Content Management Records Management Portals Projects Knowledge Management Classifications Groupware Web Conferencing Unstructured IM Search Email People to People People to Information Enterprise Content Management

  22. Collaboration and Content • Link processes and individuals across the enterprise • Create a work environment where teams can share and circulate ideas, experience and knowledge • All the information created as a by-product of collaborative work are securely captured, managed, and transformed into invaluable corporate knowledge • These knowledge assets are preserved in a repository as contents for shared and reused through an organization • Collaboration and content are interconnected by process Enterprise Content Management

  23. The Role of Collaboration Collaboration Document Management Structured DAM Imaging Archive Web Content Management Records Management Portals Knowledge Management Classifications Unstructured Search People to People People to Information Enterprise Content Management

  24. Collaboration, Content and Process Collaboration Content Structured Process Unstructured People to People People to Information Enterprise Content Management

  25. ECM Services Architecture Users Exec Solutions Sales Research Admin Services Production Web Dedicated Embedded Intranet Mobile Desktop Portal ERP Email Service-Oriented Architecture Client Server Collaboration Content Repositories Web Content Storage Device ECM ERP Email Enterprise Content Management

  26. A Loan Management Example Enterprise Content Management

  27. The Challenge • Additional Enterprise Requirements • Close to constant respond time regardless of info amount • Ingestion rate 25M files per day • Classification with content analysis 0.25M files per day • Classification without content analysis 2.5M files per day  • System requires being available 99.999% of the time • Less than 5.256 minutes down time in a regular year • Automatic crash/disaster recovery • Real-time info even for decision support system • Allow easy customization • Easy administration • Provide a unified client interface Enterprise Content Management

  28. Response from Software Vendors • Database and Content Management Companies • Data Partition • Real Application Clusters (Oracle) • Cache Fusion (Oracle) • Grid Computing (Oracle) • Pluggable Components • Self-tuning/healing • Data warehouse • Traditional offline database doesn’t work well • Materialized views, In-memory database, Bitmap Indexes, Bitmap Join Indexes, clustering, multi-table inserts • Online Backup and Recovery • Distributed databases and (hot) replication Enterprise Content Management

  29. Response from Software Vendors (cont) • Fulltext Companies • Collections Partition • Better indexing mechanism for meta-data and content • Better taxonomy support • Language Support • Object-Oriented Programming (C++, Java, C#) • Agile/Aspect Programming • Dynamic Class Loaders • Service Oriented Architecture Enterprise Content Management

  30. Response from Hardware Vendors • AMD, Intel and Apple • Dual processor • 64-bit PC • Dual-core (Athlon 64 x 2, Pentium 4D, Power PC G5) • Quad-core (Opteron 2006, Power Mac G5 Quad) • Sun offers 8-core chip, UltraSPARC T1, end of 2005 • Each core runs up to four instruction threads • Address energy consumption issue by using only 70 watts • Cheaper and faster than IBM mainframe Enterprise Content Management

  31. The Opportunity BY 2009, worldwide new ECM software license revenue will reach $2.0B up from $1.2B in 2004 with a 10.6% CAGR Enterprise Content Management

  32. Big Players Attracted to the Market • Oracle • 10g advertising completely aimed at EMC/Documentum • Large developer community established • Could turn into RSI strategy • Focusing on search Enterprise Content Management

  33. Yet Another Big Player • Microsoft • Strategically, still thinking about mindshare for applications • Office 12 aimed at EMC, but will lack infrastructure support services (ala CSS) • Integrated interface and server offerings will mean increased ubiquity of deployment (land grab) • Still missing the ILM aspects, however Enterprise Content Management

  34. Competition from Open Source • Somewhere, someone is developing an open source CMS • Analysts telling VC’s, customers to: • “… demand that even proprietary vendors have strategies to compete with open source” • Documentum should have a field response to open source • Options: • prepare standard response for sales reps • Acquire a standalone CMS system and open it up; sell service / support • Migrate parts of Content Server to open source Enterprise Content Management

  35. Where Is EMC Positioned? • Acquired Documentum in 2003 • The leader in ECM • Q3 revenue was $2.37 billion ($1 billion in software) • Up 17% from a year ago • 9th consecutive quarter of double-digit growth • 12th quarter in a row met or exceeded own targets • Net income was up • 93% on a year-to-year basis including a tax-related benefit • 45% without including that benefit. • The best performance among any IT company in the world. Enterprise Content Management

  36. Gartner 2005 Report on ECM American Cherokee Strip Land Run, September 16, 1893 Enterprise Content Management

  37. The Trend of Computing Users/Clients Networks Servers Databases Storage Devices Enterprise Content Management

  38. The Trend on Storage Device • Storage Area Network (SAN) • High-speed special-purpose network • Interconnects different kinds of data storage devices • Associated data servers on behalf of a larger network of users. • Support • Disk mirroring, backup and restore, archival and retrieval of archived data • Data migration from one storage device to another • Sharing of data among different servers in a network. Enterprise Content Management

  39. The Trend on Storage Device (cont) • Network Attached Storage (NAS) • Hard disk storage that is set up with its own network address • Not attached to the department computer that is serving applications to a network's workstation users. • By removing storage access and its management from the department server, both application programming and files can be served faster because they are not competing for the same processor resources. Enterprise Content Management

  40. Researches on (NAS and SAN) • Active Storage • Provide a mechanism for service migration • focus on limited application such as image processing, data mining and other database related tasks • Exploit the processing power in storage device • Acharya etc. proposed a stream-based programming model (1998) • Xiaonan etc. proposed a Multi-View Storage System (MVSS) with a flexible interface (2001 ~ 2003) • Evan etc. proposed a parallel file systems (2005) • Sivathanu etc. introduced an RPC-based framework (2002) • Amiri etc. dynamically partitions application and change function placement within a cluster due to the load characteristics (2000) • Object-based Storage • Object-based Storage Device (OSD) T10 protocol • Make use of an intelligent object interface Enterprise Content Management

  41. Conclusion • Lots of opportunities are still there for academy and industry • Better Algorithms • Performance • Scalability • Reliability • Automatic Failover • Better Programming Models • Better Problem Modeling Mechanism • Parallelism Needs Finer Granularity • Changes are a must for survival and success • Big players have a better chance to win Enterprise Content Management

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