The Data Quality Tipping Point

8 Min Read

 

The data Quality Tipping PointWhatever your business sector, data is your most valuable asset. Along with the machinery and stock you hold, data and insights hold the key to profit and growth. But it has the unique ability to unite every department, and every function. It can reveal problems in processes, drive productivity among your staff and ensure everyone is ‘singing from the same hymn sheet’.

 

The data Quality Tipping PointWhatever your business sector, data is your most valuable asset. Along with the machinery and stock you hold, data and insights hold the key to profit and growth. But it has the unique ability to unite every department, and every function. It can reveal problems in processes, drive productivity among your staff and ensure everyone is ‘singing from the same hymn sheet’.

Like any asset, you need to invest in maintenance and management. Data that is not prioritised and nurtured will eventually cause more problems than it solves. But how much do you need to spend to achieve healthy ROI? And is there a chance your business could be spending too much?

How Much Do You Value Data?

Now, more than ever, data is the driving force that will propel your business forward. Businesses are increasingly automating processes and integrating different systems to increase efficiency and support staff more effectively.

Marketing is a great example of a function that is learning to use data. Campaigns rely on timely data to deliver personalised and timely messages, which is why analytics have become the cornerstone of every marketing campaign. As marketers hit their stride with data management, they are becoming more agile in their response to customer trends. In some cases, marketers are able to change course within a couple of hours, and those decisions can be partly automated to lighten the admin load.

It’s clear that data is no longer harvested and stored. Data isn’t left to rest any longer. It is the lifeblood that flows through every department in the business. It’s not just the result of a decision: it’s the driving force for your next move.

Old, inaccurate and messy data can’t support the marketing department. If the data is old, it cannot be used as a concrete and reliable resource. And if you aren’t continually cleaning new data that comes in, you can’t capitalise on trends, or make decisions on what is and isn’t working.

So we’re clear that data quality initiatives must run in parallel to business activities, rather than being carried out sporadically, and there needs to be a constant and attentive process to keep data clean. That means there’s a need for an ongoing investment in data governance, within the parameters of your budget.

Breaking Even

Few businesses have the budget to put extravagant data management processes in place. It would be wonderful to conduct data reviews every morning, or implement highly elaborate verification and enhancement programs.

It goes without saying that under-investment in data cleansing can be detrimental for businesses, and we’ve written several blogs that lay the case for data quality projects. Flawed decisions lead to poor ROI in marketing, support and sales, and an excessive amount of waste across the entire organisation. We also know that data naturally decays; the rate is around 2 per cent of the database, per month. So without action, the data becomes useless to everyone.

Spend and Save

Data quality processes involve a range of costs, from the cost of data quality software to the resource needed to integrate systems.

We recommend that every business carries out a review, prior to implementing new data quality measures. It needs to weigh up the points we looked at in the last section: negative effects of inaction, vs expense of throwing the entire budget at bad data.

Additionally, the business needs to look at the way it’s using data, and figure out how to improve management internally. That might mean reducing manual touchpoints, so there’s less human error. Or retraining staff so they don’t type garbage into fields.

Finally, let’s be realistic. The cost of the new data quality process needs to be factored into the business’ budget, like any other production cost. That includes the software, the training, the resource for manual data processing, the cost of implementing form verification, and – possibly – the cost of hiring a Chief Data Officer to steer a new course.

Finding the Balance

Implementing automated data quality tools can go a long way to managing costs. With automation, the data in your systems is constantly scanned and corrected. This does away with much of the manual effort that can cost the business money. Automatic data enhancement can also improve the value of the data assets the business already has.

In order to move towards automation, you may need to:

  • Digitally transform manual paperwork and cut back on box-ticking in the company
  • Bring legacy applications into the cloud so that they can be integrated with other systems
  • Invest in data quality software that acts as a filter to comb out data errors
  • Elevate the importance of data quality at boardroom level (through your CDO)
  • Bring about culture change so that data is given focus

Automation may be cost-effective, but all of these additional points are the groundwork. And this is where the expense is.

So let’s make a reasonable set of goals:

  • We will not aim for zero mistakes in our data, because this would be too expensive. Instead, we will achieve a state where our data is truly fit for purpose
  • The budget for the data quality project is fixed, not infinite
  • We will tackle the aspects that offer the biggest wins first. Correcting a few telephone numbers is great, but fixing a flaw in our character encoding is more worthy of our time
  • Data needs to be verified randomly to ensure we are heading in the right direction
  • Data quality software will form the cornerstone of our transformation and integration initiative
  • Our CDO is an investment in our future data health

All businesses have limited funds, and data is jostling for part of the budget like everything else. Hopefully this article has demonstrated that, while perfection is expensive, improvement is a perfectly worthwhile goal that’s certainly worthy of investment.

 
 
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