Royal Bank blends old with the new

COMPANY: Royal Bank of Canada
PURPOSE: Improve data warehouse capabilities by bank personnel with critical information stored in DB2 databases in an MVS mainframe environment.

APPLICATION: Repository Implementation -- To better serve its 10 million customers, Royal Bank of Canada, Toronto, Ontario, needed to build a data warehouse system with all the latest information management technologies without converting its legacy DB2 databases running under MVS on IBM mainframes. Management wanted to make use of existing hardware and software and yet have a companywide data repository.

A team led by Mike Velshi, senior vice president and CTO, Kevin Butcher, manager information resource management, and Mohammed Rafaie, manager of data management, selected Repository/MVS from Platinum Technology Inc., Oakbrook Terrace, Ill., to meet this goal. Platinum's Information Management Consulting Group developed a methodology for the metadata management process including management planning, data warehouse development, end-user metadata management, data dictionary conversion, applications component documentation for impact analysis, reference data management and data rationalization.

The developers needed a solution for getting the information to the users' PC desktops. They created a Web interface so users with Pentium and 486 Windows 95 PC desktops could gain access via Netscape Navigator.

The bank selected Tango Enterprise, the visual Web application development tool from EveryWare Development Inc., Mississauga, Ontario, according to Rifaie. The Web side was built by developers from EveryWare Consulting Services.

The completed data warehousing system now provides the bank's executives, managers and staff with access to data needed to make business decisions and serve customers.

- Rich Seeley


TEAM

MIKE VELSHI, senior vice president, CTO

KEVIN BUTCHER, manager information resource management

MOHAMMED RAFAIE, manager of data management



BENEFITS:
Benefits the application brought to the company: Improved "time-to-market" and reduced application support and maintenance costs. It saved "time and money by eliminating the need to make a time-consuming and disruptive conversion to a new infrastructure in order to implement the repository."

TOOLS:
Repository/MVS, Platinum Technologies Inc.

Tango Enterprise, EveryWare Development Inc.

PLATFORMS:
IBM 390 mainframes running under MVS with DB2 databases

Pentium and 486 PCs running under Windows 95 with Netscape Navigator Web browser

About the Author

Rich Seeley is Web Editor for Campus Technology.