ASU's 2020 Data Conference attendees level up with new skills and tools to slay data monsters

Data Conference 2020

Aramil - Data MonsterAt a typical data conference, you might anticipate endless numbers, charts and graphs, but would you expect to slay data monsters? That’s exactly what more than 900 registrants signed up to do at the fourth annual ASU Data Conference, an internal conference exclusively for the ASU data community.

Yes, you read that correctly, data monsters – seven to be exact. Director of Analytics Brandi Falls and her conference planning team (composed of ASU UTO employees) came up with the idea during an early planning session. “We wanted to pick a theme that would be fun, relatable and engaging,” said Falls. “My hope is that even with the virtual format it was something everyone could latch on to and really feel like they were a part of the adventure.”

Brandi Falls

Kristen Kennedy, Business Intelligence Developer Principal, thought of the idea to create the conference four years ago. Fast forward to this year and her 13-year-old daughter also contributed to the experience by creating the Dungeons and Dragons-inspired monsters.

When Kennedy originally proposed the idea of the Data Conference, she thought it would be a chance to shape and plan for the next year as far as the community’s data responsibilities opportunities — including the retirement of legacy data tools like My Reports. “We were not able to complete the retirement that year, but we were astounded to see the demand as we sold out the conference in only four hours with one email sent,” said Kennedy. “Since that time, we continue to work to retire legacy tools, but the conference has evolved to be a great opportunity for those in the Data Community to come together to network and upskill.”

When it comes to data monsters, Mike Sharkey, Director, Data & Analysis, explained how ASU has slayed three core monsters this year:

  • Health Check Reporting: Since August 2020, more than 60,000 students and 15,000 staff members have continued to complete daily health checks, for which the secure data is used to inform ASU’s COVID-19 mitigation strategy. To date, more than four million health checks have been self-reported.

  • Data Warehouse Move: The university’s Oracle Data Warehouse is moving over to Amazon Redshift, which will bring added performance and cost benefits.

  • Using Tableau and Alteryx: Usage of these tools has grown significantly as users continue to look at data, analyze and present it. (Sharkey later announced on the last day of the conference that the Alteryx server was updated, and they doubled the size of the Tableau server and increased the storage!)

In years past, the Data Conference was an in-person event, for which reserved spots usually ran out quickly. Even though COVID-19 forced the event to be online, going virtual also meant that more than double the number of registrants were able to sign up.

While the digital format does limit one-on-one interactions, university colleagues still had opportunities to connect with fellow data enthusiasts (data monster slayers!), enrich the community through shared experiences, learn new tools and methods and inform data strategy and initiatives.

Inspiring words from expert monster slayers

ASU CIO Lev Gonick

The event kicked off with complimentary and inspiring words from ASU CIO Lev Gonick, who explained the value of data in the ASU community and beyond, and what a huge responsibility it is to educate people. “We are all humbled by the importance of using data in both intentional and ethical ways, and your contribution, as a community, is the bedrock of ASU. I thank you for all of the contributions that you make,” said Gonick. “I ask you to remain vigilant, as professionals to the consequences of the use of data to support ASU and its mission going forward.”

 Tim Lant

During his keynote, “Fighting Pandemics with Data: Operationalizing Data to Inform the Scientific Response to COVID-19”, Dr. Tim Lant, Director of Program Development, Knowledge Enterprise, treated attendees to an inside, data-rich look at the models, projections, and analysis that he and his small, but mighty team have created – both for local and national scales – in key phases of the pandemic response since March 2020.

Maximum learning, front end fun

Dr. Lant’s interesting, timely and relevant keynote set the bar high in terms of strong data sharing and storytelling, and the remaining four days of the conference did not disappoint. 

Each morning, Data Conference attendees came together for their Daily Data Inspiration, which were equal parts informative and fun, presented by:

Kate Giovacchini   John Rome

  • Kate Giovacchini, Director of Business, Quality and Data Analysis at EdPlus presented on Creative Cartography and Business Analytics (picture above on the left)

  • John Rome, Deputy CIO, Data Stewardship, Augmented Analytics & Business Intelligence treated conference attendees to a quick game of Jeopardy! in honor of Sharkey’s appearance on the show in 1999 (picture above on the right)

  • Hansa Magee, Associate Director, Knowledge Enterprise Analytics challenged colleagues to an ASU trivia game on some of the university’s key statistics

  • Mike Sharkey, Director, Data & Analysis made attendees laugh with his data-inspired memes

In addition to having guest emcees, Daily Data Inspiration was also time dedicated to celebrating colleagues in the data community, a tradition that has been important since the beginning of the Data Conference. While this positive recognition has come in different formats over the years — from Nancy Dickson receiving the Lifetime Achievement Award for 40 years of data support to the ASU community to annual awards that came from the community — this year attendees were encouraged to share Data Celebrations, via a Google form, for those who have gone above and beyond in service. Thirty-eight Data Celebrations were shared during the conference and also via the conference’s Slack channel over the five days, with more pouring in after the conference.

Data Hero BadgeFrom there, participants would divide, conquer and slay the data monsters, improving in areas like SQL, data visualization and more. Badges were earned for data monster slaying, and if three or more badges were collected, participants reached the ultimate and most coveted honor of being named the Data Hero.

From byte-sized sessions to hackathons and training sessions on topics ranging from human resources to health check compliance, there was truly something for all ASU data enthusiasts at the conference. Director of Data Solutions Elizabeth Reilly, who was part of the conference planning team and led multiple sessions during the conference, co-facilitated a hackathon that was centered around ASU data environment improvement.

And the survey says...

Lindel Data MonsterMore than 145 ASU colleagues took a survey prior to the conference, giving the hackers plenty to work with to identify and prioritize opportunities for improvement to some of the university’s data dilemmas. Of the colleagues who were surveyed, 34 percent identified as Data Apprentices, who run or modify existing reports, which correlates well with the top three attended sessions of the Data Conference: Analytics 101, Introduction to Alteryx and Power Query 101. While survey respondents enjoy the data community at ASU and the ease of access to analytics.asu.edu (ASU’s portal for information, published reports and dashboards), there are also some areas for improvement. The hackers determined simple, but effective ways to get colleagues to the resources that they need was a priority. 

I hope Hackathon attendees felt that their voices and ideas are just as important in designing solutions as they are in pointing out opportunities for improvement,” said Reilley. “Involving many diverse perspectives will always lead to better solutions than those crafted within a single group or department.”

In the end, it’s all about support 

During Sharkey’s comments during the State of the Union on the first day of the conference, he said, “We’re here to support ASU and support the data needs that you have. We want to do what we can to help support you all in that goal.” 

And that’s just what the Data Conference does, year after year, through programming like the hackathon and much more. Until next year, data slayers!

ASU Data Conference 2020 By the Numbers:
  • 900+ Registrants

  • 79 Badges Earned

  • 38 Data Celebrations Shared

  • 7 Data Monsters Slayed

  • Top 3 Attended Sessions: Analytics 101, Introduction to Alteryx, Power Query 101