Our company has many different entities, but a good chunk of those database entities are people. So we have customers, and employees, and potential clients, and contractors, and providers and all of them have certain attributes in common, namely names and contact phone numbers.
I may have gone overboard with object-oriented thinking but now I am looking at making one "Person" table that contains all of the people, with flags/subtables "extending" that model and adding role-based attributes to junction tables as necessary. If we grow to say 250.000 people (on MySQL and ISAM) will this so greatly impact performance that future DBAs will curse me forever? Our single most common search is on name/surname combinations.
For, e.g. a company like Salesforce, are Clients/Leads/Employees all in a centralised table with sub-views (for want of a better term) or are they separated into different tables?
Caveat: this question is to do with "we found it better to do this in the real world" as opposed to theoretical design. I like the above solution, and am confident that with views, proper sizing and accurate indexing, that performance won't suffer. I also feel that the above doesn't count as a MUCK, just a pretty big table.