You are viewing a plain text version of this content. The canonical link for it is here.
Posted to mapreduce-user@hadoop.apache.org by John Lilley <jo...@redpoint.net> on 2013/07/02 20:53:47 UTC

RE: Business Analysts in Hadoop World

Hadoop is not yet an easy learning curve, so I'd recommend that you start with Amazon Elastic MapReduce as an experimental platform to start learning.
John


From: Vijaya Narayana Reddy Bhoomi Reddy [mailto:vijaya.bhoomi@huawei.com]
Sent: Friday, June 28, 2013 7:10 AM
To: user@hadoop.apache.org
Subject: RE: Business Analysts in Hadoop World

Michael,

Thanks for your advice. I am just confused because I could not see a clear career path for Business Analysts in the Hadoop world. May be because, it's an evolving field or maybe I am not yet aware of the same despite reading some primary content on the internet. However, I firmly believe the Big Data space is going to be very big in the next years and I would like to be part of it and contribute. I would like to know from you more on the role and responsibilities a BA can perform in this space and the possible areas / technologies which I need myself to be prepared for.

Thanks
Vijay

From: Michael Forage [mailto:Michael.Forage@livenation.co.uk]
Sent: Friday, June 28, 2013 5:23 PM
To: user@hadoop.apache.org<ma...@hadoop.apache.org>
Subject: RE: Business Analysts in Hadoop World

Hi Vijay

My advice is to carefully consider the scope of the role you're aiming for

As a BA I expect that you'd be able to add value by understanding your business data processing challenges and turning them into specifications for map/reduce jobs. This doesn't require you to have any Java coding skills as such, just a good handle of the map/reduce concepts. It also helps if you understand common use-cases associated with these technologies (as it's really an ecosystem of related toolsets) as well as what they're not so good for.

This would allow you to contribute to solution design on behalf of the business but assumes you're not concerned with the actual implementation/administration side of things. Definitely only bother re-learning Java if you're going to be the one writing the code. You do need to have had experience of working with data of some kind (this is a data processing environment at the end of the day) but simply reading a decent Hadoop book and googling a few websites should give you a decent enough background as a BA

Cheers
Mike

From: Lokesh Basu [mailto:lokesh.basu@gmail.com]
Sent: 28 June 2013 12:35
To: user@hadoop.apache.org<ma...@hadoop.apache.org>
Subject: Re: Business Analysts in Hadoop World

Dear Vijay,

If you are a beginner in the open source project then I would recommend you to first get familiar with Java and some version control system and then go to this (http://wiki.apache.org/hadoop/HowToContribute) page.

If you are not aware of the Hadoop project then you should go through some online text/videos to get the insight.

Best of luck


Lokesh Chandra Basu
B. Tech
Computer Science and Engineering
Indian Institute of Technology, Roorkee
India(GMT +5hr 30min)



On Fri, Jun 28, 2013 at 4:50 PM, Vijaya Narayana Reddy Bhoomi Reddy <vi...@huawei.com>> wrote:
Hi,

I am just trying to get myself acquainted with Hadoop and other related technologies. I am very much fascinated with the potential of the Big Data world and hence would like to be part of it!!
However, it has been a while I have done any coding. Earlier for a brief period of time during early days of my career, I have done some work in Java. All these days, I am working as a Business Analyst in the CRM space.


*         Before I start exploring Hadoop world, I would like to hear your thoughts on the following queries:


*         Being a business analyst, what would be the possible career opportunities in the Hadoop space?


*         Is it necessary to have a strong technical background before jumping into Hadoop? If so, which technologies need to be learnt primarily? Java, SQL etc?


*         What are the various certifications available in the Hadoop world? Are there any certifications for Business Analysts?

Please let me know your valuable thoughts.

Thanks
Vijay


[http://media.livenationinternational.com/corpimages/livenation2.jpg]

Michael Forage | Solutions Architect - Insight Services
Email: Michael.Forage@livenation.co.uk<ma...@livenation.co.uk> | Tel: +44 207 980 4362 | Mob: +44 7808 174404
Address: 4 Pentonville Road | London | N1 9HF | United Kingdom

Live Nation Limited, Registered Office: 2nd Floor, Regent Arcade House 19-25 Argyll Street, London, W1F 7TS. Company Number 03805556. Registered in England and Wales.

This message is confidential and may be legally privileged or otherwise protected from disclosure. If you are not the intended recipient, please telephone or email the sender and delete this message and any attachment from your system; you must not copy or disclose the contents of this message or any attachment to any other person.