Webinar | Adding Value to Ordnance Survey Data: How MGISS Turns National Datasets into Operational Insight

Sarah Scott | 18 March 2026

Date: 23rd April 2026 | 11 am

Overview

Ordnance Survey data provides a powerful and authoritative view of Great Britain’s geography. However, for many organisations it remains under-utilised, often serving primarily as base mapping rather than a source of operational insight.

In this webinar, MGISS will demonstrate how organisations can unlock significantly more value from their Ordnance Survey data by integrating it with internal systems, applying structured spatial analysis and generating derived intelligence that supports real-world decisions.

Drawing on MGISS project experience across infrastructure, utilities and the public sector, we will show how national datasets such as OS NGD can be enriched with organisational data, analysed at scale and embedded into workflows that support planning, asset management and operational risk assessment.

Rather than focusing on simply accessing OS data, this session will explore how MGISS helps organisations transform it into meaningful information products — providing deeper context around assets, infrastructure and the built environment.

Through practical examples, we will illustrate how geospatial insight can move beyond mapping to become an integral part of business decision-making.

What You’ll Learn

  • How MGISS enhances and enriches Ordnance Survey data to generate operational insight
  • How OS datasets can be integrated with organisational asset and operational data
  • Practical examples of derived spatial analysis supporting planning, infrastructure and risk management
  • How organisations can move from static mapping to insight-driven geospatial workflows

Who Should Watch

GIS managers, analysts, asset managers, planners and decision-makers working in utilities, infrastructure, property and public sector organisations.


About

With over 26 years in marketing, and almost 20 years within the surveying, mapping and constructions sectors, Sarah is no stranger to the industry. Originally trained as a graphic designer, she has a passion for marketing, web, graphics and data.

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