Mage is a tool that helps product developers use AI and their data to make predictions. Use cases might be predictions for churn prevention, product recommendations, customer lifetime value and forecasting sales.
$0
per user
SSIS
Score 7.9 out of 10
N/A
Microsoft's SQL Server Integration Services (SSIS) is a data integration solution.
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Pricing
Mage
SQL Server Integration Services
Editions & Modules
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$0
per user
Pro
$2,000
per month per user
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Mage
SSIS
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Premium Consulting/Integration Services
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Mage
SQL Server Integration Services
Features
Mage
SQL Server Integration Services
Data Source Connection
Comparison of Data Source Connection features of Product A and Product B
Mage
-
Ratings
SQL Server Integration Services
7.5
53 Ratings
11% below category average
Connect to traditional data sources
00 Ratings
8.853 Ratings
Connecto to Big Data and NoSQL
00 Ratings
6.240 Ratings
Data Transformations
Comparison of Data Transformations features of Product A and Product B
Mage
-
Ratings
SQL Server Integration Services
8.1
53 Ratings
1% below category average
Simple transformations
00 Ratings
8.553 Ratings
Complex transformations
00 Ratings
7.752 Ratings
Data Modeling
Comparison of Data Modeling features of Product A and Product B
Mage
-
Ratings
SQL Server Integration Services
7.4
51 Ratings
7% below category average
Data model creation
00 Ratings
8.627 Ratings
Metadata management
00 Ratings
7.133 Ratings
Business rules and workflow
00 Ratings
8.242 Ratings
Collaboration
00 Ratings
7.338 Ratings
Testing and debugging
00 Ratings
6.148 Ratings
Data Governance
Comparison of Data Governance features of Product A and Product B
Mage is well-suited for probability score for uptake of every product is calculated for customers using ML/ Regression models, choosing customers for a product/ Top products for a customer, based on the requirement and Identifying popular product combinations using association rules from Market Basket Analysis (or affinity Analysis)\Bundle these products as combos.
Ideal for daily standard ETL use cases whether the data is sourced from / transferred to the native connectors (like SQL Server) or FTP. Best if the company uses MS suite of tools. There are better options in the market for chaining tasks where you want a custom flow of executions depending on the outcome of each process or if you want advanced functionality like API connections, etc.
SSIS has been a bit neglected by Microsoft and new features are slow in coming.
When importing data from flat files and Excel workbooks, changes in the data structure will cause the extracts to fail. Workarounds do exist but are not easily implemented. If your source data structure does not change or rarely changes, this negative is relatively insignificant.
While add-on third-party SSIS tools exist, there are only a small number of vendors actively supporting SSIS and license fees for production server use can be significant especially in highly-scaled environments.
Some features should be revised or improved, some tools (using it with Visual Studio) of the toolbox should be less schematic and somewhat more flexible. Using for example, the CSV data import is still very old-fashioned and if the data format changes it requires a bit of manual labor to accept the new data structure
SQL Server Integration Services is a relatively nice tool but is simply not the ETL for a global, large-scale organization. With developing requirements such as NoSQL data, cloud-based tools, and extraordinarily large databases, SSIS is no longer our tool of choice.
Raw performance is great. At times, depending on the machine you are using for development, the IDE can have issues. Deploying projects is very easy and the tool set they give you to monitor jobs out of the box is decent. If you do very much with it you will have to write into your projects performance tracking though.
The support, when necessary, is excellent. But beyond that, it is very rarely necessary because the user community is so large, vibrant and knowledgable, a simple Google query or forum question can answer almost everything you want to know. You can also get prewritten script tasks with a variety of functionality that saves a lot of time.
The implementation may be different in each case, it is important to properly analyze all the existing infrastructure to understand the kind of work needed, the type of software used and the compatibility between these, the features that you want to exploit, to understand what is possible and which ones require integration with third-party tools
Mage was the easiest in terms of ease of implementation due to its no-code functionality. However, Mage doesn't have a whole ecosystem like AWS and slightly falls behind there.
I had nothing to do with the choice or install. I assume it was made because it's easy to integrate with our SQL Server environment and free. I'm not sure of any other enterprise level solution that would solve this problem, but I would likely have approached it with traditional scripting. Comparably free, but my own familiarity with trad scripts would be my final deciding factor. Perhaps with some further training on SSIS I would have a different answer.