Shaku Atre


Shakuntala (Shaku) Atre (born 1940) is an Indian data scientist and an American business woman. After a fourteen-year career with IBM, she began her own firm and became widely regarded as an expert on business technology and database use. Atre is best known for her books Database: Structured Techniques for Design, Performance and Management: With Case Studies (1980), one of the first books written on managing databases, and her co-authored book Business Intelligence Roadmap, written with Larissa Moss. She has served as an adjunct professor of data science at University of Pune and at several institutions in the United States. Her works have been used as university textbooks.[1][2][3][4][5][6]

Atre was born in 1940 in India and grew up in Panvel, a village near Mumbai.[7][8] She earned a Master of Science from the University of Poona, studying mathematics and statistics.[9][10] During her education, she also studied languages, gaining proficiency in speaking five different languages.[1] Atre went on to begin her graduate studies in mathematics and physics at the University of Heidelberg, writing her thesis on astronomy.[9][10][11] Because she needed to make large scale calculations to develop her thesis, she began studying computer programming, which led to an interest in the field of computer technology.[10][12] During her studies, she was hired by IBM in 1967. When her student visa expired three and a half years later, Atre and her husband immigrated to the United States.[1][10]

When they arrived in New York City in 1971, IBM had implemented a hiring freeze, but Atre was able to convince them she was not a new hire because she had worked for the company in Germany.[1][12] They put her on staff as a systems programmer[1] and she worked for the company for the next ten years, moving up the ladder from installation and technical support, to trainer in IBM's Systems Institute, to branch office systems engineer and finally, as a program manager for international product releases.[1][10][Notes 1] During her tenure at IBM, from 1977 to 1981, she served as one of the referees for the company’s Systems Journal, selecting which articles would be peer-reviewed for the publication.[14] In 1980, she published Data Base: Structured Techniques for Design, Performance, and Management with Case Studies, which would be used as a university textbook. It was translated into several different languages and had sold more than 150,000 copies within its first two decades of publication.[1] During this period, she also began teaching as an adjunct professor at various universities, including the Polytechnic Institute of New York.[9][15]

In the last quarter of 1981, Atre left IBM and began operating her own business consulting firm and working part-time managing long-distance telephone databases for AT&T.[1][10][11][12] The following year, she began writing articles for Computerworld, which in 2003 would become a regular column for the magazine.[1][16] Her book Data Base Management Systems for the Eighties was published in 1983, and provided a discussion of eight different data systems, comparing features and business applications to assist readers in analyzing which systems best met their needs.[17][18] From 1984, her expert opinion of various data systems was regularly sought by trade magazines, such as Infosystems,[19] MIS Week,[20] Network World,[21] and Software News, among others.[15][22]