We’ve recently published our latest Benchmark Research on Data Governance and it’s fair to say, “you’ve come a long way, baby.” Many of you reading this weren’t around when that phrase was introduced in 1968 to promote Virginia Slims cigarettes, but you may have heard the phrase because it went on to become a part of popular culture. We’ve learned a lot about cigarettes since then, and we’ve learned a lot about data governance, too.
Our research from 10 years ago shows the state of data governance at the time. Organizations struggled to unify their data in a consistent way that also enabled individuals to make use of the data. Approaches involved a patchwork of systems, often using spreadsheets. The top barrier to a single version of the truth was incompatible tools (59% of participants). The use of spreadsheets was a data governance concern for most (73%). This approach to data governance created a house of cards that was inflexible and unreliable due to the many manual processes involved. At the time, only 38% of participants had implemented data governance policies, but most others planned to implement them in the future.
But it’s not all a bed of roses. The barriers reported ten years ago remain. More than one-half of organizations (54%) reported that incompatible tools are a barrier to achieving a single version of the truth, making it the second most common barrier cited. And, unfortunately, spreadsheets continue to be an important technology for data governance, used by more than nine in 10 organizations (92%). Indeed, spreadsheets are the most popular tool for data governance, ahead of database tools and BI tools. Our research also indicates that organizations are using spreadsheets for data governance on a regular basis. More than one-third of organizations (38%) are using spreadsheets for data governance daily and more than one-quarter (28%) utilize them multiple times a day. The ongoing use of spreadsheets for data governance raises concerns, with more than two-thirds of participants (70%) reporting the use of spreadsheets is a data governance issue in their organization.
In addition, data governance technology shortcomings remain. More than two-fifths of organizations (42%) indicated they had inadequate reporting or dashboard capabilities in their existing data governance technologies. This is reflective of the evolution of the market. While data governance products and services have previously been targeted at data governance specialists, reporting and dashboard capabilities help serve the needs of business users and decision-makers, who are increasingly being involved in data governance processes.
Take a look at the research and consider what it might mean for your organization and its data governance efforts. If you are like the majority, you are well down the path toward good governance. Continue those efforts with more frequent use of data governance technologies and less dependence on spreadsheets. Broaden the appeal and deployment of those technologies to include more of the organization. And as I’ve indicated previously, your good governance efforts can lead to improved business processes.
Regards,
David Menninger