Data Accessibility

Enabling authorized, usable access to organizational data for all stakeholders

Data Accessibility
Idea In Short

The concept of data accessibility refers to removing barriers that prevent leveraging the data stored in an organization's data stores. Data accessibility determines the extent to which data consumers in an organization can access and utilize data to achieve the organizational goals, increase productivity and efficiency without requiring advanced know-how and experience in working with data.

What is data accessibility?

Data accessibility is the degree to which people in an organization can not only access but also meaningfully use data, regardless of their technical experience.

How does data accessibility differ from data availability?

Data availability means data exists and can be retrieved. Data accessibility goes further, ensuring data is understandable and usable by stakeholders with varying levels of technical skill.

What are common barriers to data accessibility?

Common barriers include data silos, compliance and regulatory requirements (such as GDPR and HIPAA), lack of data literacy, outdated processes, and budget constraints.

What role does data governance play in data accessibility?

Data governance establishes structured approaches, permissions, and security levels based on roles and responsibilities, helping organizations grant appropriate data access to internal and external stakeholders.

How do data silos affect organizations?

Data silos restrict data to individual departments, limiting broader organizational use. This reduces productivity, hinders informed decision-making, and can negatively impact overall business performance.

Data Accessibility pertains to removing the barriers to enable data users to fully leverage data contained in the organization's systems and applications. Enhanced data access can empower anyone in any role or business unit to rely on their data as a single source of truth, enabling them to derive critical insights and make informed decisions in their work.

Data accessibility is the degree to which people in an organization can use data. In other words, data is not just available, but also usable, even for stakeholders with little to no experience working with data.

Data Access

Ensuring data availability and secure data accessibility is more relevant to organizations today than it was in the past. Hence, it is critical for businesses to understand the different dimensions of data access, data protection and the various regulatory compliance requirements.

Data accessibility is the on-demand, authorized capability to retrieve, modify, copy, or move data from IT systems. With data access, users can perform these activities from any location, both with data in motion) or data at rest. Data access is the means by which users can access this data in an authenticated manner approved by the organization that owns the data.

Data accessibility is one of the main outputs of an effective data governance program. Ideally, organizations should think through structured approaches to grant data access to various stakeholders, both internal and external to the organization. These approaches are reinforced by permissions and security levels based on roles or responsibilities documented in data governance policies.

Constraints

The proliferation of data sources (both, internal and external to an organization), tools and technologies, compounded by the growing sophistication of markets, customers and business users, the potential to unlock value in data and drive innovation is higher than ever. Yet only a few organizations could connect data investments to business insights and outcomes, largely due to outdated processes, lack of data literacy, budget constraints, etc.

Significant time and effort

Several surveys have revealed that data users and data professionals (such as Data Engineers and Data Scientists) spend over 45% of their time searching for and cleaning data. By structuring, organizing and curating data, companies can boost efficiency and enhance productivity through data accessibility.

Compliance and regulatory requirements

Users' efforts to access specific data are often constrained by security and compliance issues. Regulations, such as GDPR, CCPA, HIPAA, and other privacy and security regulations require anonymization, security policy setting, and several controls when organizations process sensitive data. These regulations limit who can access which data and under which conditions, thereby limiting data accessibility. Furthermore, organizations should implement these regulatory requirements on different data platforms and adapt their data processing pipelines, resulting in additional costs and organizational overhead. Tackling regulatory issues re-directs organizational resources from initiating transformational data programs to ensuring compliance with the various regulations, sometime across borders in global organizations.

Data silos

Data inaccessibility wastes a lot of employees' time and productivity. Their performance and productivity suffers because they lack quick access to quality information that could deliver positive business outcomes. Data silos is the phenomenon where organizational units horde data assets. Such data are accessible only by the department that owns that data, but are opaque to the rest of the organization, even if that data could also benefit the other departments. Often, organizational politics, turf protection and culture promote data silos, much to the detriment of organizational performance. Governance policies that promote data sharing across the organization, while enforcing access, quality checks and controls across all data stores could help remediate data accessibility issues.

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Summary

Organizations that want to evolve into data-driven entities should not only actively source good data, but also organize it, manage it, and ensure that the data is discoverable, explorable, and useful. Once they solve these challenges, they can make data-driven decisions and take strategic action based on insights that present an accurate and holistic view of business performance. Data is essential for front-line employees, fresh interns, mid-level managers, and busy C-suite executives to succeed. Data accessibility initiatives should remove the barriers to key insights and information and empower everyone in the organization to act upon the insights emerging from data. Giving every user the appropriate tools for the job involves providing exceptional data accessibility. In an ideal world, these already-powerful technologies would offer easier data access features to a wider range of users at near-zero learning curve.

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    Author
    I'm Mithun A. Sridharan, Founder of this website - Think Insights - on Strategy, Management Consulting, Leadership, Digital Transformation, and Data Literacy. Follow me on social media or connect with me on LinkedIn for updates.