Data management problems widespread: organizations
should regard data as their greatest asset--and invest in data
management accordingly.
by Swartz, Nikki
A recently published Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU)
study--the first comprehensive look at how data management is practiced
worldwide--reveals that most organizations do not manage information
well.
And there's more: despite organizations recognizing that data
is the lifeblood of their businesses, "Measuring Data Management
Practice Maturity: A Community's Self-Assessment" also
concludes that businesses face significant data management challenges.
The study, published in the April issue of Computer, the
publication of the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers
Computer Society, assessed the data management practices of 175 public-
and private-sector organizations between 2000 and 2006. A vast majority
scored far too low for their own good.
According to lead study author Peter Aiken, associate professor in
VCU's Department of Information Systems and the founding director
and owner of data management consulting firm Data Blueprint, fewer than
10 percent of the organizations studied are using documented processes
to manage data, which means that more than 90 percent are ineffective in
this area.
Data Management Often Neglected
All organizations depend on data, and good data management
practices are critical to many technology-based organizational
initiatives, including business intelligence, customer relationship
management, and data warehousing. Bad, incomplete, or inaccurate
information has been the downfall of projects, departments, and even
entire organizations.
To wit, the 2006 InformationWeek article "Hamstrung by
Defective Data" cited a 2005 Gartner estimate that more than 25
percent of critical data within large businesses is somehow inaccurate
or incomplete. In late 2005, the Data Warehousing Institute surveyed 750
IT professionals and business executives, and 53 percent of them said
their companies had experienced problems and suffered losses or
increased costs because of poor-quality data, up from 44 percent in a
similar 2001 survey. (Alarmingly, 36 percent admitted they had not even
studied the issue.)
Although data is a critical asset for organizations, the VCU study
is an indication that organizations don't fully appreciate its
value.
Aiken and other VCU researchers found that many businesses do not
invest adequately in data management, treating data as a maintenance
cost rather than as an asset. According to the study, that is a mistake
that "is costly in terms of market share, profit, strategic
opportunity, stock price, and so on."
The study's results are based on self-reporting by the
organizations involved; approximately 15 percent of the organizations
also participated in an in-person investigation by researchers to
validate the self-assessments. Researchers tried to measure not only
whether a data process was performed in an organization, but also the
maturity with which the process was performed.
This is important because, as increasing amounts of data flow
within and between organizations, the problems that can result from poor
data management practices are becoming more common--and more serious.
Studies cited by VCU research have shown that such poor practices are
widespread. For example:
* PricewaterhouseCoopers reported that in 2004, only one in three
organizations was highly confident in its own data, and only 18 percent
were confident in data received from other organizations. Further, just
two in five companies have a documented board-approved data strategy.
* According to Aiken, approximately two-thirds of organizational
data managers have had formal data management training; slightly more
than two-thirds of organizations use or plan to use formal metadata
management techniques; and slightly less than one-half manage their
metadata with computer-aided software engineering tools and repository
technologies.
This is not good news, especially considering that information is
only getting more difficult to manage. For example, according to the
2006 InformationWeek article, the amount of data created and maintained
by organizations doubles every 12 to 18 months. Managing all that
information is certainly not something that can be done half-heartedly
or on the fly.
Data Management Guidelines
The VCU study aimed to investigate why so many organizational data
management practices fall below expectations. Its findings suggest that
organizations need a more formalized feedback loop they can use to
improve their data management practices. According to the survey,
organizations can use this data as a baseline from which to look for,
describe, and measure data management improvements.
The study's authors provide a type of "checklist"
for good data management practices. According to them, data management
* Must be viewed as a means to an end, not the end itself.
Organizations must stop treating and practicing data management as an
abstract discipline and start seeing it as a process that supports
specific organizational objectives--specifically, one that provides a
shared-resource basis on which to build additional services.
* Involves both process and policy. Data management tasks range
from strategic data planning to the creation of data dement standards to
database design, implementation, and maintenance.
* Has a technical component: interfacing with and facilitating
interaction between software and hardware
* Has a specific focus: creating and maintaining data to provide
useful information
* Includes management of metadata artifacts that addresses the
data's form as well as its content
In addition, everyone in an organization--especially executives,
but including every last employee--should understand the importance of
effective data management to their organization. Without that
understanding, there is little chance data management strategies can be
successfully implemented.
Managing Data Better
According to the Virginia Commonwealth University study lead
author, Peter Aiken, there are several things organizations can do to
better manage their vast amounts of data or improve their current data
management practices, including:
* Understand that data is an asset that someone in the organization
must be a steward of.
* Realize the significant difference between data duplication
(involuntary) and data replication (controlled).
* Realize data-related problems are huge, hidden sources of various
forms of systems and IT failures.
* Manage metadata--if an organization doesn't understand and
control its metadata (semantics as well as syntax), it has no hope of
enterprise-wide data management. That requires an enterprise-wide
metadata vetting data management process committee (enterprise-wide data
stewardship). As a corollary, establish and maintain an ISO 11179
standard-based data registry (it's really about metadata
registration).
* Establish an enterprise-wide data management program ... although
Aiken said this is "politically and financially speaking, extremely
difficult to accomplish."
* Enlist the support of at least the CIO, or better, the CEO--or
best, both the CIO and CEO--one of whom is going to be around for at
LEAST five years; without this support, Aiken said, "Forget any
successful accomplishment of any enterprise-wide data management success
in the long term."
Aiken stressed that the prerequisite to any serious data management
steps is a "very serious and very long-term corporate
commitment."
References
Aiken, Peter, M. David Allen, Burt Parker, and Angela Mattia.
"Measuring Data Management Practice Maturity: A Community's
Self-Assessment." Computer, April 2007. Available at
/www.computer.org/portal/site/computer/menuitem.5d61cld
591162e4b0ef1bd108bcd45f3/index.jsp?&pName=computer_level1_article&TheCat= 1005&path=computer/homepage/April07&file=cover.xml&xsl=article.xsl& (accessed 31 July 2007).
VCU News Services. "Study Reveals Widespread Data Management
Problems." Press Release, 5 April 2007. Available at
www.news.vcu.edu/news.aspx?v=detail&nid=2015 (accessed 31 My 2007).
Whiting, Rick. "Hamstrung by Defective Data"'
InformationWeek, 8 May 2006. Available at
www.informationweek.com/showArticle.jhtml;jsessionid=DVG2W21TD
SW5OQSNDBOCKICCJUMEKJVN?articleID=187200771&queryText=Hamstrung
+By+Defective+Data (accessed 31 July 2007).
Nikki Swartz is a freelance writer based in Kansas City, Missouri,
and former Associate Editor of The Information Management Journal. She
may be contacted at nikkiswartz@hotmail.com.
COPYRIGHT 2007 Association of Records Managers &
Administrators (ARMA) Reproduced with permission of the copyright holder. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without permission.
Copyright 2007 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights
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