Organizations are discovering with increasing frequency that the vast majority of their information assets have a spatial component, for example, the location of customers, shipments, facilities, personnel, competitors, and so on. The ability to use this information properly is fundamental to reducing operational costs, optimizing production efficiency, and increasing the quality of service. Evidence of the benefits that can be achieved by exploiting spatial information is plentiful, and many organizations are looking at ways of harvesting these benefits.
We have been professionally involved in a variety of projects that introduced spatial information management into public and private organizations. The idea of writing this book came from these projects and from discussing spatial information management with the software developers and architects involved in them. We noticed a clear gap between the knowledge and skills necessary for successful spatial information management projects and the common background of the technical personnel usually involved in large IT and database developments.
The vast majority of these staff members had backgrounds in such diverse areas as database technology, Java, C++, PL/SQL, data models, security, availability, and scalability. However, only a small number had some experience with spatial data—for most, working with spatial data was completely new. It was easy to discover that spatial objects, geocoding, and map projections, for example, were foreign terms to most (and, of course, spatial information management is not about processing signals from space probes). Tools such as Google Maps and Google Earth have introduced few of these concepts to a large audience, but the majority of spatial technology still remains an esoteric subject.
It appears that this lack of knowledge of spatial technology is a common situation. Even within the extensive community of Oracle experts, Oracle Spatial skills are relatively new to many. For those of us who work at the interface between ICT, spatial informatics, management, and the traditional world of geography and mapping, the realization of this gap was especially revealing, and it presents a clear barrier to the diffusion of spatial information management through private and government organizations, where the demand for spatial applications is steadily growing. Furthermore, while Geographical Information Systems (GIS) are extensively used to manage spatial data, often as stand-alone systems, the vast majority of spatial data resides in corporate databases. It is by adding spatial intelligence to these databases that we probably disclose one of the largest untapped reservoirs of added value to organizations.