Why data centralization matters for retail
Retail businesses contend with data challenges unique to a fast-paced, high-volume industry.
Retail businesses contend with data challenges unique to a fast-paced, high-volume industry.
Whether your organization’s growth is led by product, marketing or sales, small proofs of concept can springboard you towards better data infrastructure.
Push notifications have steadily solidified their role as a pivotal element in business marketing strategies, offering an immediate, unfiltered line of communication with customers. However, there is a delicate balance to maintain between efficient push notifications and those that are merely intrusive. It is here where personalization and A/B testing, among other considerations, become instrumental in honing the effectiveness of these real-time messages.
Combine the flexibility of data lakes, governance of data warehouses and automated data movement.
Penguin Random House’s Pete Williams on riding the data maturity curve, people and data literacy and readiness to enable and exploit.
Each business (regardless of industry) and every software developer has latency on their radar. Yet, it's typically not at the top of the priority list, and generally, that's just fine. But when it comes to the world of realtime updates, this casual attitude can trip you up. When you're piecing together a system for realtime updates, low latency jumps from being an afterthought to a critical, front and center requirement.
If you’ve been researching API security, you’ve likely seen the term “Zero Trust.” And you may already know that organizations can use Zero Trust to help protect their APIs from attacks. What you may not know is that Zero Trust is one of the best models for API security. According to Microsoft, “96 percent of security decision-makers state that Zero Trust is critical to their organization’s success.” But what is Zero Trust exactly?