Building the data warehouse
Why decision support fails and how to fix it
Datamation
Decisions, decisions: users take stock of data warehouse shelves
Software Magazine
The New Organizational Wealth: Managing and Measuring Knowledge-Based Assets
The New Organizational Wealth: Managing and Measuring Knowledge-Based Assets
Management Information Systems for the Information Age
Management Information Systems for the Information Age
Database Systems: Design, Implementation, and Management
Database Systems: Design, Implementation, and Management
Journal of Management Information Systems - Special section: Navigation in information-intensive environments
Database Processing (11th Edition)
Database Processing (11th Edition)
A knowledge architecture for IT security
Communications of the ACM - Creating a science of games
Revisiting knowledge warehousing: theoretical foundations
International Journal of Business Information Systems
Formalizing information security knowledge
Proceedings of the 4th International Symposium on Information, Computer, and Communications Security
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Data warehousing is believed to be a competitive necessity. The management of knowledge supports the competitive advantage of organisations. Therefore, the effective use of data warehousing to store knowledge can be instrumental in supporting the competitive advantage of companies. "Ongoing management of the data warehouse with minimal adjustments to the data architecture and business users excited about their data are true indicators of project success". Data warehousing can be used as a repository, which is considered a gateway to managerial information or the expert's knowledge, i.e. the Knowledge Management (KM) concept. Corporations can enhance their ability to share information by utilising data warehousing and KM. This study examines how companies are extracting valuable information by utilising a data warehouse. This article presents an exploratory study of three industries that have effectively implemented and utilised data warehousing and knowledge management. These case studies examine the corporate expectations of data warehousing and its support for storing and retrieving the expert's knowledge.