The AIIM Blog - Overcoming Information Chaos

8 Things about an Information-Driven Business

Written by John Mancini | Dec 10, 2010 9:18:19 AM

Adapted from Information-Driven Business: How to Manage Data and Information for Maximum Advantage, by Robert Hillard. John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Reprinted with permission.

Everyone recognizes the need to get more value from their information assets. The following are eight things for an Information-Driven Business to consider.

How to Become an Information-Driven Business

1. Develop an Information Governance Charter

Such a charter needs to be embraced by the board or its equivalent and have a set of principles that are aligned to the strategic goals of the organization and recognizing the structural tensions that exist in every business.

2. Establish Fact-Based Decision Making

An important information principle is that the information asset should be leveraged every day in every decision. Both strategic and operational decisions should be based on facts that can be sourced back to data that is held by the enterprise.

3. All Data Should be Integrated with Consistent Definitions

Accepting that an organization’s major asset is information, there is no value in each unit of the enterprise being part of the whole unless it is able to leverage that enterprise asset in an integrated and synergistic way (i.e., the whole is greater than the sum of parts).

4. Retain Appropriate Detailed Data

Information should be retained whenever physically possible within the constraints of government legislation, corporate ethics, and privacy commitments.

5. Measure the Quality of Data

Data quality is relative to the purpose to which it is to be applied. Decision-makers not only need access to data, but more importantly, they also need to understand the timing, reconciliation, completeness, and accuracy of that data. Data quality is neither abstract nor qualitative; rather, it should be measured in absolute terms.

6. Provide Appropriate Enterprise Access.

Staff are a valued and trusted resource to the company. By default, every member of staff can be trusted to handle information appropriately and sensitively. The default position is that a staff member can access information unless there is a specific commercial, legal, or ethical reason why the information should not be made available to this individual.

7. Every Data Item has one Person or Role as Ultimate Custodian

Every item of data requires unique and ultimate ownership by a single role and person. This does not imply that all customers, products, or other items of data maintain common ownership, rather it means that a matrix of responsibilities should be managed which ensures that issues or conflicts always have an ultimate point of escalation.

8. Establish Measures of Information Governance Success

The principles of information governance should become Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) with project budgets being structured to include an element expressed in terms of information goals.