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Data Governance 2.0: The CIO’s Guide to Collaborative Data Governance

In the data-driven era, CIO’s need a solid understanding of data governance 2.0 …

Data governance (DG) is no longer about just compliance or relegated to the confines of IT. Today, data governance needs to be a ubiquitous part of your organization’s culture.

As the CIO, your stakeholders include both IT and business users in collaborative relationships, which means data governance is not only your business, it’s everyone’s business.

The ability to quickly collect vast amounts of data, analyze it and then use what you’ve learned to help foster better decision-making is the dream of business executives. But that vision is more difficult to execute than it might first appear.

While many organizations are aware of the need to implement a formal data governance initiative, many have faced obstacles getting started.

A lack of resources, difficulties in proving the business case, and challenges in getting senior management to see the importance of such an effort rank among the biggest obstacles facing DG initiatives, according to a recent survey by UBM.

Common Data Governance Challenges - Data Governance 2.0

Despite such hurdles, organizations are committed to trying to get data governance right. The same UBM study found that 98% of respondents considered data governance either important, or critically important to their organization.

And it’s unsurprising too. Considering that the unprecedented levels of digital transformation, with rapidly changing and evolving technology, mean data governance is not just an option, but rather a necessity.

Recognizing this, the IDC DX Awards recently resurfaced to give proper recognition and distinction to organizations who have successfully digitized their systems and business processes.

Creating a Culture of Data Governance

The right data of the right quality, regardless of where it is stored or what format it is stored in, must be available for use only by the right people for the right purpose. This is the promise of a formal data governance practice.

However, to create a culture of data governance requires buy-in from the top down, and the appropriate systems, tools and frameworks to ensure its continued success.

This take on data governance is often dubbed as Data Governance 2.0.

At erwin, we’ve identified what we believe to be the five pillars of data governance readiness:

  1. Initiative Sponsorship: Without executive sponsorship, you’ll have difficulty obtaining the funding, resources, support and alignment necessary for successful DG.
  2. Organizational Support: DG needs to be integrated into the data stewardship teams and wider culture. It also requires funding.
  3. Team Resources: Most successful organizations have established a formal data management group at the enterprise level. As a foundational component of enterprise data management, DG would reside in such a group.
  4. Enterprise Data Management Methodology: DG is foundational to enterprise data management. Without the other essential components (e.g., metadata management, enterprise data architecture, data quality management), DG will be a struggle.
  5. Delivery Capability: Successful and sustainable DG initiatives are supported by specialized tools, which are scoped as part of the DG initiative’s technical requirements.

Data Security

Data is becoming increasingly difficult to manage, control and secure as evidenced by the uptick in data breaches in almost every industry.

Therefore companies must work to secure intellectual property (IPs), client information and so much more.

So CIOs have to come up with appropriate plans to restrict certain people from accessing this information and allow only a small, relevant circle to view it when necessary.

However, this job isn’t as easy as you think it is. Organizations must walk the line between ease of access/data discoverability and security.

It’s the CIO’s responsibility to keep the balance, and data governance tools with role-based access can help maintain that balance.

Data Storage

The amount of data modern organizations have to manage means CIOs have to rethink data storage, as well as security.

This includes considerations as to what data should be stored and where, as well as understanding what data the organization – and the stakeholders within it – is responsible for.

This knowledge will enable better analysis, and the data used for such analysis more easily accessed when required and by approved parties. This is especially crucial for compliance with government regulations like the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), as well as other data regulations.

Defining the Right Audience

It’s a CIO’s responsibility to oversee the organization’s data governance systems. Of course, this means the implementation and upkeep of such systems, but it also includes creating the policies that will inform the data governance program itself.

Nowadays, lots of employees think they need access to all of an organization’s data to help them make better decisions for the company.

However, this can possibly expose company data to numerous threats and cyber attacks as well as intellectual property infringement.

So data governance that ensures only the right audience can access specific company information can come in handy, especially during a company’s brainstorming seasons, new products and services releases, and so much more.

Data governance is to be tailored by CIOs to meet their organizations’ specific needs (and wants). This is to ensure an efficient and effective way of utilizing data while also enabling employees to make better and wiser business decisions.

The Right Tools Help Solve the Enterprise Data Dilemma

What data do we have, where is it and what does it mean? This is the data dilemma that plagues most organizations.

The right tools can make or break your data governance initiatives. They encompass a number of different technologies, including data cataloging, data literacy, business process modeling, enterprise architecture and data modeling.

Each of these tools separately contribute to better data governance, however, increasingly, organizations are realizing the benefits of interconnectivity between them. This interconnectivity can be achieved through centralizing data-driven projects around metadata.

This means data professionals and their work benefits from a single source of truth, making analysis faster, more trustworthy and far easier to collaborate on.

With the erwin EDGE, an “enterprise data governance experience” is created to underpin Data Governance 2.0.

It unifies data and business architectures so all IT and business stakeholders can access relevant data in the context of their roles, supporting a culture committed to using data as a mission-critical asset and orchestrating the key mechanisms required to discover, fully understand, actively govern and effectively socialize and align data to the business.

You can learn more about data governance by reading our whitepaper: Examining the Data Trinity: Governance, Security and Privacy.

Examining the Data Trinity - Governance, Security and Privacy

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erwin Expert Blog

Five Pillars of Data Governance Readiness: Delivery Capability

The five pillars of data governance readiness should be the starting point for implementing or revamping any DG initiative.

In a recent CSO Magazine article, “Why data governance should be corporate policy,” the author states: “Data is like water, and water is a fundamental resource for life, so data is an essential resource for the business. Data governance ensures this resource is protected and managed correctly enabling us to meet our customer’s expectations.”

Over the past few weeks, we’ve been exploring the five pillars of data governance (DG) readiness, and this week we turn our attention to the fifth and final pillar, delivery capability.

Together, the five pillars of data governance readiness work as a step-by-step guide to a successful DG implementation and ongoing initiative.

As a refresher, the first four pillars are:

  1. The starting point is garnering initiative sponsorship from executives, before fostering support from the wider organization.

 

  1. Organizations should then appoint a dedicated team to oversee and manage the initiative. Although DG is an organization-wide strategic initiative, it needs experience and leadership to guide it.

 

  1. Once the above pillars are accounted for, the next step is to understand how data governance fits with the wider data management suite so that all components of a data strategy work together for maximum benefits.

 

  1. And then enterprise data management methodology as a plan of action to assemble the necessary tools.

Once you’ve completed these steps, how do you go about picking the right solution for enterprise-wide data governance?

Five Pillars of Data Governance: Delivery Capability – What’s the Right Solution?

Many organizations don’t think about enterprise data governance technologies when they begin a data governance initiative. They believe that using some general-purpose tool suite like those from Microsoft can support their DG initiative. That’s simply not the case.

Selecting the proper data governance solution should be part of developing the data governance initiative’s technical requirements. However, the first thing to understand is that the “right” solution is subjective.

Data stewards work with metadata rather than data 80 percent of the time. As a result, successful and sustainable data governance initiatives are supported by a full-scale, enterprise-grade metadata management tool.

Additionally, many organizations haven’t implemented data quality products when they begin a DG initiative. Product selections, including those for data quality management, should be based on the organization’s business goals, its current state of data quality and enterprise data management, and best practices as promoted by the data quality management team.

If your organization doesn’t have an existing data quality management product, a data governance initiative can support the need for data quality and the eventual evaluation and selection of the proper data quality management product.

Enterprise data modeling is also important. A component of enterprise data architecture, it’s an enabling force in the performance of data management and successful data governance. Having the capability to manage data architecture and data modeling with the optimal products can have a positive effect on DG by providing the initiative architectural support for the policies, practices, standards and processes that data governance creates.

Finally, and perhaps most important, the lack of a formal data governance team/unit has been cited as a leading cause of DG failure. Having the capability to manage all data governance and data stewardship activities has a positive effect.

Shopping for Data Governance Technology

DG is part of a larger data puzzle. Although it’s a key enabler of data-driven business, it’s only effective in the context of the data management suite in which it belongs.

Therefore when shopping for a data governance solution, organizations should look for DG tools that unify critical data governance domains, leverage role-appropriate interfaces to bring together stakeholders and processes to support a culture committed to acknowledging data as the mission-critical asset that it is, and orchestrate the key mechanisms required to discover, fully understand, actively govern and effectively socialize and align data to the business.

Data Governance Readiness: Delivery Capability

Here’s an initial checklist of questions to ask in your evaluation of a DG solution. Does it support:

  • Relational, unstructured, on-premise and cloud data?
  • Business-friendly environment to build business glossaries with taxonomies of data standards?
  • Unified capabilities to integrate business glossaries, data dictionaries and reference data, data quality metrics, business rules and data usage policies?
  • Regulating data and managing data collaboration through assigned roles, business rules and responsibilities, and defined governance processes and workflows?
  • Viewing data dashboards, KPIs and more via configurable role-based interfaces?
  • Providing key integrations with enterprise architecture, business process modeling/management and data modeling?
  • A SaaS model for rapid deployment and low TCO?

To assess your data governance readiness, especially with the General Data Protection Regulation about to take effect, click here.

You also can try erwin DG for free. Click here to start your free trial.

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