Waterford, Ireland, native Keith has been working with data since long before it was fashionable. He studied Applied Computing at Waterford Institute of Technology (now SETU), where he quickly got hooked on the logic and creativity of code. During summers in college, he built Access databases for a Waterford Crystal Environment Department — and proudly served as the stats man for his dad’s basketball team, tracking every point, rebound, and assist by hand before Excel made things easier. The seed was planted early: data was everywhere, and Keith was already figuring out how to make sense of it.
What started with COBOL and green screens became a lifelong journey through the world of data — from SQL developer to BI specialist, from data modeler to architect. Over the years, he has worked across a wide range of industries — healthcare, insurance, finance, energy, and more — helping teams turn messy, complex data into something clear, usable, and often transformative. While his current title is “Data Architect,” he still loves rolling up his sleeves and getting into the engineering details, building strong systems and solving real-world problems.
For Keith, data isn’t just a business asset — it’s fundamental to how the world runs. Whether he’s designing a Snowflake architecture, building modern data models, or migrating legacy systems to the cloud, he brings a steady hand, a curious mind, and a practical sense of purpose to every project.
These days, he’s part of the team at Right Triangle Consulting, helping clients untangle their data challenges and turn insight into action. He thrives on working with all sorts of people — especially when there’s a complex problem to solve and something new to learn.
When he’s not in the data world, you’ll find Keith listening to music and podcasts, going for a (very) slow run, or hanging out with his dog. He’s also a lifelong sports fan, proudly cheering on all Waterford teams and the Boston Celtics. A true data nerd — and proud of it.
Bringing the same passion to data that the Déise bring to the hurling pitch.
“In a world rushing toward AI, I guide my clients back to the basics — because good data fundamentals are still the foundation. Even bad data has a story to tell, and I help organizations hear it, understand it, and act on it.” Keith Evans