New research conducted by HFS Research in conjunction with Syniti, a global leader in enterprise data management, showcases strength of data governance and management of organisations in Singapore and Australia, which exceeds its global counterparts. Overall, the study reveals that while data is a clear focus are for C-level executives, there are still organisational disconnects in terms of executionâsurvey respondents still struggle with usable data.
The study, Perception Isnât Always Reality: The Case for More Effective Data Management, surveyed more than 300 senior level executives at mid-to-large size enterprises across the globe. Asia Pacific respondents came from Singapore and Australia.
The report provides valuable insight into key data trends across the globe, and how Asia Pacific fares globally when it comes to data. Key findings include:
Asia Pacific Findings | Global Findings |
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For majority of the companies in Singapore and Australia, the chief executive officer is setting the data objectives (58%), but the chief digital and data officers are owning them (60%). |
The chief executive officer sets the data objectives for 46% of companies and owns the data objectives for 35% of the companies. The chief data and digital officers play a smaller role in the overall management of data objectives. |
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70% of respondents have fully implemented data management and 90% have a centralised company-wide data management strategy. | Globally, 73% of companies have implemented a centralised company-wide data management strategy. |
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60% of respondents in Singapore and Australia have a governance office or team that supports cross-functional data governance, and 46% have a proactive governance model. | 44% of companies globally have a governance office or team that supports cross-functional data governance, while 19% of companies are still in the process of defining their governance framework. |
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58% of respondents said that up to 50% of their data was bad or not consumable. | While 80% of respondents said they trust their data, the same group said only 60% of the data is actually usable. |
The findings of the report reveal that Singapore and Australia together are leading the charge when it comes to overall data management and governance, which are more centralised in comparison to global counterparts. This may be a function of the chief executive officer setting the data objectives and more involvement by the chief digital or data officers.
At the same time, however, challenges prevailâin particular, data quality and usable data. In Asia Pacific, one of the reasons cited for bad data includes inconsistent taxonomy in different operations. Globally, respondents cited a lack of governance and monitoring as the main factors to blame for bad data.
The good news is that nearly all respondents realise the value of data quality in driving business outcomes. Overall, 95% of executives believe that their companies would be more competitive, more innovative, and able to make faster decisions if their data quality were two times betterâand data management is crucial to getting to this point. We can therefore expect a greater focus on more effective data management to enable success.
Gary Chua, Managing Director, Asia Pacific & Japan, said, âRapid digitalisation has created a proliferation of data, and businesses still struggle to connect their data management to business outcomes. The good thing is that the C-suite is responding to calls to implement clear governance and data strategies. Organisations in Singapore and Australia are model examples, with stronger data governance and overall management globally. At Syniti, we are committed to helping companies realise the most value and maximise the opportunities of their greatest resource: data.â
Read the full study, Perception Isnât Always Reality: The Case for More Effective Data Management, here.Â