Enterprise Big Data Framework Book

Most organisations know they should be doing more with their data. They have accumulated enormous volumes of it, invested in cloud infrastructure, hired data scientists, and stood up dashboards. Yet for many, the promised competitive advantage from Big Data remains elusive — results are inconsistent, projects stall, and leadership loses confidence.

The problem is rarely the data itself. It is almost always the absence of a structured approach to managing it.

That is precisely what the Enterprise Big Data Framework was created to solve.

What is the Enterprise Big Data Framework?

The Enterprise Big Data Framework (EBDF) is a comprehensive, vendor-neutral best practice framework that defines the organisational capabilities required for an enterprise to successfully leverage Big Data. Developed and maintained by DASCIN, the framework provides a structured blueprint that applies regardless of which technologies, tools, or cloud platforms an organisation uses.

Unlike vendor-specific training programmes (such as AWS certifications or Google Cloud credentials) that teach you how to use particular products, the Enterprise Big Data Framework is concerned with how organisations should think, structure themselves, and operate to turn raw data into sustained business value. This distinction matters enormously. Tools change; frameworks endure.

The EBDF was created because — while the business case for Big Data is well understood — the practical challenge of embedding a successful Big Data practice inside a large, complex enterprise is anything but straightforward. Technology is only one piece of the puzzle. Without the right strategy, architecture thinking, analytical capabilities, governance processes, organisational design, and AI readiness, even the most sophisticated data platforms will underdeliver.

The framework is now the basis for a globally recognised certification programme, accredited by APMG-International, with credentialled professionals across 37 countries and six continents.

Enterprise big data framework

Why Enterprises Need a Framework — Not Just Tools

Before exploring the six capabilities in detail, it is worth understanding why a framework-based approach is superior to an ad-hoc, technology-first approach.

Fragmentation is the default.

Without a unifying framework, Big Data initiatives tend to emerge from multiple parts of the organisation simultaneously – the analytics team, the data engineering squad, the AI lab, the cloud migration programme. Each group builds in isolation, using different tools, different terminology, and different governance standards. The result is a data landscape that is technically impressive in parts but incoherent as a whole.

People are the limiting factor.

Data platforms do not deliver insight – people do. The organisations that extract the most value from their data investments are those that have built genuine human capability across strategy, architecture, analytics, and governance. A framework provides the map for that capability development.

Vendor neutrality future-proofs the investment.

A framework that is tied to a specific vendor or technology stack becomes a liability as the landscape evolves. The EBDF is deliberately tool-agnostic. Whether an organisation uses Hadoop, Spark, Snowflake, Databricks, or any other platform, the framework applies equally. The underlying principles of good strategy, sound architecture, rigorous process, and effective organisational design do not change with the technology.

Measurement becomes possible.

Frameworks define what good looks like. Without a reference model, organisations have no reliable way to assess their current level of Big Data maturity or to chart a credible path to improvement. The EBDF provides measurable capability benchmarks at each of its six capability levels.

The Six Capabilities of the Enterprise Big Data Framework

The Enterprise Big Data Framework is structured around six core capabilities. These are not sequential steps — they are simultaneous, interdependent dimensions of organisational Big Data maturity. A weakness in any one area constrains progress across the others.

How the Six Capabilities Work Together

The power of the Enterprise Big Data Framework lies not in any individual capability but in the way they reinforce each other. The framework is deliberately designed as an integrated system rather than a checklist of independent components.

A useful way to think about this is through the lens of organisational maturity. An organisation at the earliest stage of Big Data development might have a nascent strategy, limited architectural capability, some analytical talent, ad-hoc processes, unclear roles, and no AI practice. As it invests in developing each of the six capabilities in a balanced way, it progresses through measurable maturity levels – from ad-hoc to managed to optimised — building compounding advantage over time.

Critically, attempting to advance in one capability while neglecting others creates bottlenecks. An organisation with world-class algorithms capability but poor data architecture will find that its brilliant data scientists spend most of their time fighting data quality and access problems. An organisation with sophisticated architecture but no governance processes will find that its data lake becomes a data swamp. The framework’s insistence on balanced, holistic development is one of its most important and most practically useful characteristics.

The Enterprise Big Data Framework and Professional Certification

The Enterprise Big Data Framework is not just a theoretical model — it is the foundation for a globally recognised programme of professional certifications, accredited by APMG-International and available through DASCIN’s network of 25+ Accredited Training Organisations (ATOs) worldwide.

The certification pathway is designed to develop professionals at every stage of their data career:

Complementary certificate programmes in Data Literacy, Data Governance, Data Management, and Data Privacy & Security support the development of broader data literacy across the organisation, including for non-technical professionals. APMG-International accreditation means that these credentials are independently quality-assured and globally portable – recognised by employers across North America, Europe, the Middle East, Asia-Pacific, and beyond.

Who Should Know the Enterprise Big Data Framework?

The short answer: anyone whose work is shaped by data — which, in 2026, means almost every professional in an enterprise environment.

More specifically, the framework is essential knowledge for:

  • Data professionals (analysts, scientists, engineers, architects) who want a structured, framework-based approach to their discipline rather than ad-hoc, tool-specific knowledge
  • IT managers and CIOs/CTOs/CDOs responsible for building or scaling a data capability – the framework provides the vocabulary, structure, and best practice reference they need to make sound investment and organisational design decisions
  • Business managers who need to commission, oversee, or collaborate effectively with data teams – understanding the framework helps them ask the right questions and interpret the answers
  • L&D and HR professionals responsible for developing data literacy and data capability across the workforce – the framework provides a clear, measurable development pathway
  • Consultants and training providers who advise or train organisations on their data journey – the EBDF provides a rigorous, globally recognised foundation for that advisory work

Getting Started with the Enterprise Big Data Framework

Understanding the framework conceptually is a valuable starting point. But the organisations and professionals who gain the most from the EBDF are those who move from understanding to application — developing and certifying their capability in a structured, measurable way.

  1. For individual professionals, the best starting point is the Enterprise Big Data Professional (EBDP) certification — the flagship credential that develops competence across all six framework capabilities. It is available as a self-study kit, an e-learning programme, or instructor-led training through an accredited partner.
  2. For organisations looking to assess where they currently stand across the six capabilities — and where to invest for the greatest impact – DASCIN’s Big Data Maturity Assessment provides a structured diagnostic that maps organisational capability against the framework and generates a prioritised improvement roadmap.
  3. For training providers and consultancies looking to build accredited Big Data capability development into their portfolio, the DASCIN ATO partnership programme provides the accreditation, curriculum, and co-marketing support to deliver EBDF-aligned training at scale.

Conclusion

The Enterprise Big Data Framework represents something rare in the world of data and technology: a genuinely comprehensive, vendor-neutral, and practice-tested blueprint for building enterprise Big Data capability that lasts.

In a landscape crowded with tool-specific courses, vendor-sponsored certifications, and self-declared frameworks, the EBDF stands apart. It was built not to sell a product, but to advance the profession — giving practitioners and organisations a shared language, a common standard, and a credible roadmap from wherever they are today to where they need to be.

If your organisation is serious about making Big Data work – not just in the lab, but in operations, at scale, with measurable business outcomes – the Enterprise Big Data Framework is the place to start.

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Explore the DASCIN Enterprise Big Data Professional (EBDP) certification - the globally recognised credential built on the Enterprise Big Data Framework, accredited by APMG-International.
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