Over 2 million + professionals use CFI to learn accounting, financial analysis, modeling and more. Unlock the essentials of corporate finance with our free resources and get an exclusive sneak peek at the first module of each course.
Start Free
What is a Data Warehouse?
A data warehouse (often abbreviated as DW or DWH) is a central data repository used for reporting and data analysis. It can connect to and integrate multiple data sources to provide a common area to generate business insights.
Summary
A data warehouse (often abbreviated as DW or DWH) is a system used for reporting and data analysis from various sources to provide business insights. It operates as a central repository where information arrives from various sources.
Once in the data warehouse, the data is ingested, transformed, processed, and made accessible for use in decision-making.
The three main types of data warehouses are enterprise data warehouse (EDW), operational data store (ODS), and data mart.
History of Data Warehouses
The concept of data warehouses first came into use in the 1980s when IBM researchers Paul Murphy and Barry Devlin developed the business data warehouse. American computer scientist Bill Inmon is considered the “father” of the data warehouse due to his authorship of several works, such as the Corporate Information Factory and other topics on the building, usage, and maintenance of the data warehouse.
Inmon wrote the first book, held the first conference, and offered the first classes on data warehouses and is known for his creation of the definition of a data warehouse – “a subject-oriented, nonvolatile, integrated, time-variant collection of data in support of management’s decisions.”
Types of Data Warehouses
The three main types of data warehouses are enterprise data warehouse (EDW), operational data store (ODS), and data mart.
Enterprise Data Warehouse (EDW)
An enterprise data warehouse (EDW) is a centralized warehouse that provides decision support services across the enterprise. EDWs are usually a collection of databases that offer a unified approach for organizing data and classifying data according to subject.
Operational Data Store (ODS)
An operational data store (ODS) is a central database used for operational reporting as a data source for the enterprise data warehouse described above. An ODS is a complementary element to an EDW and is used for operational reporting, controls, and decision making.
An ODS is refreshed in real-time, making it preferable for routine activities such as storing employee records. An EDW, on the other hand, is used for tactical and strategic decision support.
Data Mart
A data mart is considered a subset of a data warehouse and is usually oriented to a specific team or business line, such as finance or sales. It is subject-oriented, making specific data available to a defined group of users more quickly, providing them with critical insights. The availability of specific data ensures that they do not need to waste time searching through an entire data warehouse.
How Do Data Warehouses Work?
A data warehouse operates as a central repository where information arrives from various sources. The data that flows in may be structured, semi-structured, or unstructured and may come from internal applications, customer-facing applications, and external systems.
Once in the data warehouse, the data is ingested, transformed, and processed to allow users to access the processed data in decision-making. By merging large quantities of information in the data warehouse, an organization can form a more holistic analysis to ensure that it already considered all the available information before making a decision.
Benefits of Data Warehouses
The primary benefit of a data warehouse is storing and analyzing large amounts of variant data and extract value from them while keeping historical data for record-keeping.
Bill Inmon, the father of data warehousing, gave four unique characteristics of data warehouses, such as:
Being subject-oriented to focus on a particular area;
Ability to integrate different data types from various sources;
Non-volatile (stable); and
Time-variant, which analyzes changes over time.
Well-designed data warehouses perform queries quickly and deliver high-quality data. It allows end-users to reduce the volume of data in order to examine a certain area closely. Achieving faster decisions is a critical aspect of data warehouses since it provides data in consistent formats ready to be analyzed.
Also, data warehouses provide the analytical power and a complete dataset to enable data-driven decision-making based on high-quality data from all business areas.
Additional Resources
In order to help you become a world-class financial analyst and advance your career to your fullest potential, these additional resources will be beneficial:
Take your learning and productivity to the next level with our Premium Templates.
Upgrading to a paid membership gives you access to our extensive collection of plug-and-play Templates designed to power your performance—as well as CFI's full course catalog and accredited Certification Programs.
Gain unlimited access to more than 250 productivity Templates, CFI's full course catalog and accredited Certification Programs, hundreds of resources, expert reviews and support, the chance to work with real-world finance and research tools, and more.