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The Data Governance Test
Let's Be Honest!
Published: April 1, 2009 In this test, statements of data discipline and self-evaluation answers will guide you to build a message that you can convey to your boss, or your boss's boss, or even their boss to let them know
that there is an inexpensive, practical and pragmatic approach, a “Non-Invasive Data Governance”™ Approach, to governing your organizational data resources.
KIK Consulting & Robert S. Seiner (Publisher/TDAN.com) provide Consultative Mentoring (consulting services emphasizing knowledge transfer) & Educational Services (2-day public & on-site facilitated workshops) that focus on implementing “Non-Invasive Data Governance”™ and Meta-Data Management solutions. Visit http://www.KIKconsulting.com for more information. - - - - - - - - - Introduction to "The Data Governance Test" The only way my Data Governance Test will be of use to you is if you answer the questions with an honest evaluation of the present situation at your organization. When you take this test you will quickly discover that the questions asked are really just statements of discipline and that the answers that you will asked to match are unlike any answers you have seen before. This is a multiple choice test but the catch is that you are just matching the answers I give you to the discipline statements I make – again given your circumstances. The answers for matching were written in such a way that it is very important that you stay honest with your assessment. The goal of this exercise is to have the ability to look inward as to where there are positive aspects of your environment that can be leveraged and where there are opportunities to improve when it comes to governing data as a valued enterprise resource. Background: Defining Data Governance and “Governing Data” Data Governance is the Execution and Enforcement of Authority over the Management of Data and Data-Related Resources. That is the definition that I have been using for several years. The definition is worded strongly and that is the intent. When it comes to governing data resources, this requirement is not really optional anymore. The government, our external clients, our internal clients, the regulators, the auditors, the legal department, the stock-buying public, anybody are not all just sitting around thinking that the management of data will take care of itself. Governance Must Be a No-Brainer. People in everyday life are being A LOT more careful about how they govern and manage their personal data. Companies and organizations do not have the choice anymore about whether or not they want to govern their data. Again, this is a No-Brainer. The questions are – how far we need to go and what is the best approach? Before we can answer those questions we must first understand what it mean to “govern data” – I found that FreeDictionary.com does a great job is defining ‘govern’. I will, for the sake of this article, insert the word ‘data’ into the definitions below to further emphasize what it means to “govern data”. gov·ern v. gov·erned, gov·ern·ing, gov·erns v.tr.
v.intr.
Given this dictionary definition (with ‘data’ inserted), do you still think “Governing Data” is a good idea? Or is it a necessity? Now that we have you in the right state of mind to enter the test, read on for how the test will work. Hopefully the statements of discipline and the self-evaluation answers will guide you toward the message that you can convey to your boss, or your bosses boss, or even their boss to let them know that there is an inexpensive, practical and pragmatic approach, a “Non-Invasive Data Governance”™ Approach, to governing your organizational data resources. There will be more on the approach after the test questions. Ready: Things to Keep in Mind While Taking the Test Before we get started, you should to keep these two questions in mind while you are matching the answers I provide to the statements of discipline based on the scale I provide below:
Set: The Scale/The Answers If you keep these two questions and mind, and you honestly assess where you are on the 1 to 5 point continuum below for each of the data discipline statements, you can formulate a strategy that will help you to convince your Senior-most management that you should consider putting a “Non-Invasive Data Governance”™ program in place. Here is the scale to match the answers against each of the data discipline statements listed below:
Action: The Test Here are the statements of data discipline to match with the scale/answers above. Be honest when you evaluate your present situation in terms of these discipline statements. And for a twist, if you absolutely believe that your company falls between two of these categories, feel free to give yourself (or take away) partial points. For example --- if you are somewhere between “room for improvement” and “significant room for improvement” feel free to score yourself with a 4.3 or a 4.7 or whatever. I want this to be an easy test. Give yourself the benefit of a doubt. Hint! More points are not always better. I can almost assure you that somebody in your organization has responsibilities around each of these data discipline areas. And it may not always be the same people. I can also assure you, just because somebody somewhere has responsibility for these things, that alone does not automatically reduce your score. Is that person or group effective? Are they really trying with conviction? Do they have a well-thought out plan? The Data Discipline Statements: 1. Risk Management – We manage the risks associated with our data. My organization understands the need to quickly adjust to the risks associated with data and many of those rules are coming from outside of the organization. We have a person, staff of people and/or council that focuses on understanding all levels of risk around the management data. The person/staff/council regularly communicates information about data risk to the point that everybody understands risky behavior versus safe behavior in how we handle our data. Which of the 5 point categories honestly matches this statement? ____ 2. Data Compliance & Regulatory Control – As an organization, we pay a great deal of attention to compliance and regulatory concerns around the data we collect, use and share as part of making decisions and doing business. Somebody has the responsibility for documenting and communicating the rules to all of the individuals in the organization that handle that data. When we are audited, we can clearly demonstrate to the Feds that the rules around the data are being followed. Which of the 5 point categories honestly matches this statement? ____ Running Total? _____ 3. Information Security & Data Classification – As an organization, we pay a great deal of attention to Information Security, for all structure and unstructured. We have Information Security Policy and/or something similar (Guidelines, Mandates). At the end of the day, we feel comfortable with our ability to communicate, differentiate and manage to the rules associated with highly confidential data, confidential data, internal use data and public data. People that share data in our organization also share the documented rules about that data to the point that we do not believe that Information Security is a concern. Which of the 5 point categories honestly matches this statement? ____ Running Total? _____ 4. Meta-Data Management - We have meta-data for the most important data we manage. My organization knows what data we have, where that data resides, how that data is defined, produced and used, in shared databases and on people’s desktops. The information we have about our most important data is available to anybody that needs it. And just as important, we have identified and engaged people that have formal responsibility for the definition, production and usage of meta-data. Which of the 5 point categories honestly matches this statement? ____ Running Total? _____ 5. Data Quality Management – Our organization always focuses on Data Quality. We have formal means for recording data quality issues, we have proactive and reactive methods to find issues and address them when we find them, we have people that have the responsibility for managing the issue logs, putting values to the issues and prioritizing the issues. Most important, we have clear understanding as to the business standards for core pieces of data that makes it a lot easier to be able to differentiate high from low quality. Which of the 5 point categories honestly matches this statement? ____ Running Total? _____ 6. Business Intelligence & Data Integration – We have a data warehousing environment that is taking full advantage of the date therein, being used to its fullest capability meaning the people have easy access to the data, they understand the data, and they help us to continuously improve the quality of the data. We recognize that data governance plays an important role in the success or failure of our data warehousing initiative on all sides of the data integration equation. We understand that data integration is a difficult discipline but since we govern the data well on both sides, we feel very comfortable with the effective nature of our business intelligence program. Which of the 5 point categories honestly matches this statement? ____ Running Total? _____ 7. Master Data Management – Our organization recognizes that Master Data Management is one of the most effective and most important data disciplines being talked about today. We have identified people to manage our MDM initiative(s) and have started to identify the enabling technologies that will help us to manage and share our master and reference data. When we populate our MDM environment, the discipline is there to manage the decision making around the master data resource, the meta-data component and the communications and accessibility to the master data. We are positioned well to complete the Master Data initiative within budget and on schedule. Which of the 5 point categories honestly matches this statement? ____ Running Total? _____ 8. Data Governance & Data Stewardship – Last but not least, … We have a Data Governance Program that clearly defines roles and responsibilities at the operational, tactical, strategic and support levels. Our program focuses on leveraging the existing knowledge of the data that lies within our Data Stewards. The approach that we have taken has been embraced by our leadership, stewards, business and the technology individuals and addresses the governance of data in a proactive and reactive sense. Our Data Governance Program is a primary contributor to our success in all of the disciplines listed in this test. Which of the 5 point categories honestly matches this statement? ____ Running Total? _____ Take your Total (the Last Running Total) & divide that amount by 8 giving you your Final Score. Enter your Final Score here:
Cut: Evaluating Your Final Score It would be smart for you to analyze your own scores and how you matched the 5 point scale/answers to each of the discipline statements made above. Each of the eight areas of data management discipline can stand to be evaluated on their own right. You may want to consider evaluating your organization the same way with these additional disciplines: data modeling, data mining, service oriented architecture, cloud computing, software as a service, data mash-ups, whatever the next big thing is in data management, … they all could be included as a discipline in this test and be evaluated in the same manner. The following four result break-downs are my professional opinion, given what can be gleamed from this short test as to potential next steps in Data Governance (or any single discipline) that you want to take for your organization.
Roll It: What Do We Do With This Information There is a wide gap between the scale/answer that yields 1 point and the scale/answer that yields 5 points. At the lower end of the scale there is very little or no work that needs to be done around data governance and the data disciplines listed in this test. Some of you may get results that vary widely across the 8 data disciplines and if that is the case, focus your attention on improving those numbers that had high scores with a focus on bringing down your overall average. If you are at a company that yields 3 or higher for all categories, and you probably don't need for me to tell you this, ... you have significant work to do. For these organizations, and for any organization with the itent to address problem areas, I have a bunch of suggestions:
You may have found that attempting to sell the need for an over-arching, end-to-end, global, world-wide, enterprise Data Governance Program is a large pill to swallow for you as the seller or the sellee of a Data Governance program. My suggestion is that you start by putting a “Non-Invasive Data Governance”™ program in place that specifically and consistently addresses the data discipline areas that are most needing and of most interest to your organization. While building this focused program, keep in mind the overall needs of the enterprise and partner with other existing Data Governance (or similar) initiatives along the way. At some point there may be a convergence of good ideas and the overall needs of the organization will be easier to reach. It’s a Wrap: Conclusion OK so you may look at this as just another self-help test or as a waste of time. I hope not. What I set out to accomplish here was a simple means of self-evaluation that can provide you with a message that connects the specific data disciplines identified in the test with your present state of ability to achieve value or avoid the risks associated with that discipline. As I stated before, there is most likely someone in your organization that has a specific interest in one or more of the data disciplines listed here. They may have more than interest. They may have accountability. Help them to help your organization to proceed and succeed with Data Governance. Introduce them to the “Non-Invasive Data Governance”™ approach and the results of this test. Hopefully it will provide you with the message that you need to start down a path to success. - - - - - - - - - - 40% Off Registration or 2 for 1 for a Limited Time!!! Two Day Public Workshop / Seminar – How to Build & Implement “Non-Invasive Data Governance”™ Programs – Monday & Tuesday, May 11-12, 2009 at the Sheraton Station Square in Pittsburgh, PA – Now 40% off Single Registration or Two-for-One Registration (must specify code TDAN0401 and register all attendees at the same time). Visit http://www.KIKconsulting.com for more information. KIK Consulting & Robert S. Seiner (Publisher/TDAN.com) provide Consultative Mentoring (consulting services emphasizing knowledge transfer) & Educational Services (2-day public & on-site facilitated workshops) that focus on implementing “Non-Invasive Data Governance”™ and Meta-Data Management solutions. Visit http://www.KIKconsulting.com for more information. - - - - - - - - - - Go to Current Issue | Go to Issue Archive Recent articles by Robert S. Seiner
Robert S. Seiner - Robert (Bob) S. Seiner is recognized as the publisher of The Data Administration Newsletter, LLC – www.TDAN.com - an award winning electronic publication that
focuses on sharing information about data, information, content and knowledge management disciplines. TDAN.com celebrated its 12th anniversary in 2009. Mr. Seiner speaks often at major
data management and meta-data management, business intelligence and knowledge management related conferences and user group meetings across the U.S. He can be reached at the newsletter at rseiner@tdan.com or 412-220-9643.
Mr. Seiner is the President and Principal Consultant of KIK Consulting & Educational Services, LLC – www.KIKconsulting.com. KIK, celebrating its 7th anniversary, is a company that focuses on knowledge transfer and consultative mentoring in the fields of data governance and data stewardship implementations, metadata management, master data management and data architecture. Beyond knowledge-transfer-focused consulting, Mr. Seiner offers two-day in-house and public courses on how to build and implement data governance / stewardship programs and metadata programs. Contact Mr. Seiner at KIK at rseiner@kikconsulting.com. |