In parallel to surveying the stakeholders for business requirements; the team examined a wide range of potential sources of information; assessing the varying quantity and quality, purpose of each information set/tool/system, where the information set/tool/system resides, and the primary purpose/use of the information set.
The team detailed each information set, its source(s), a brief description and a “relevance rating”. Within the context of assessing Potential Sources of Information for PBIM – Place Based Information Management – the team analyzed and ranked 435 Information Sets.
In summary, the team concluded:
A. Place Based Information Management has the potential to cut through mountains of process specific Information; filtering, interrelating and highlighting Information independent of Process...
B. Place Based Information Management can pinpoint key facts and figures about places, communities, areas and regions that would otherwise be buried, overlooked, ignored or taken for granted...
C. The means by which place based information is presented to the viewer also provides incremental benefits by providing linkages between people, actions and events pertinent to the place, community, area or region…
These conclusions were supported by the following Key deliverables:
· Definition of the different types of information sought on communities and geographic areas that would support strategic decision making
· Prioritization of hot buttons and pain points as an assessment of value for each ministry
· Evaluation of best practices in information management and data classification
· Presentation of innovative examples of information displayed on geospatial maps
· A wide, fast scan that asks questions of the key players, assesses their views (i.e. disciple, agnostic, atheist) awareness and understanding
· Capture imagination and envisioned innovation from stakeholders of what works and what is possible
· Overview of the current extent of data use in comparison to what is being anticipated and is relevant to GIS applications and what is required
· Unified place based information management strategy for a spatial presentation layer with interfaces to underlying data warehouse(s)
· Business requirements and opportunities therein expressed as a range of unified, place based information management possibilities.
· Comprehensive research examples where spatial features are combined with tabular data e.g. (what, how, why, and cost) in both external environments and across the Government of Ontario.
· Detailed Feasibility Report listing what is, what could be and what has to happen in order to move forward; presented as a range of options and alternatives.
· Supporting these materials would be management discussion documents and presentation aids such as PowerPoint format overviews of business value and research findings.
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