Tim Mitchell

Tim Mitchell is a business intelligence consultant, author, and trainer. He has been building data solutions for over 20 years, and is a 13-time recipient of the Microsoft Data Platform MVP award (2010-2022). He is the founder and principal data architect at Tyleris Data Solutions.

Tim has spoken at international and local events including the SQL PASS Summit, SQLBits, SQL Connections, along with dozens of tech fests, code camps, and SQL Saturday events. He is the author of the book The SSIS Catalog: Install, Manage, Secure, and Monitor your Enterprise ETL Infrastructure, coauthor of the book SSIS Design Patterns, and is a contributing author on the charity book project MVP Deep Dives Vol 2.

You can visit his website and blog at TimMitchell.net or follow him on Bluesky at https://bsky.app/profile/tmitch.net.
  • Interests: SQL Server, Data Warehousing, ETL, Data Architecture, Python, Dbt

Blog Post

Goals for 2009

I don’t do resolutions - they’re cliché, overdone, and rarely stick.  However, I’m a believer in setting goals and periodic progress...

2009-01-09

1,043 reads

Blogs

Funny Money: #SQLNewBlogger

By

While wandering around the documentation looking for some Question of the Day topics, I...

Why Database AI Agents need Layers?

By

Third part in my Ai series with databases. When building AI solutions within the...

Un-Migrating From the Cloud: T-SQL Tuesday #199

By

This month we have a very interesting invitation from Koen Verbeeck. He has hosted...

Read the latest Blogs

Forums

How Do the Experts Become Experts?

By Kathi Kellenberger

Comments posted to this topic are about the item How Do the Experts Become...

Stairway to Reliable Database Deployments Level 4 – Preparing for Production Deployment

By Massimo Preitano

Comments posted to this topic are about the item Stairway to Reliable Database Deployments...

Secure Communications

By Steve Jones - SSC Editor

Comments posted to this topic are about the item Secure Communications

Visit the forum

Question of the Day

Secure Communications

As of June 2026, what is the best version of TLS to use with SQL Server?

See possible answers