These are exciting, high-stakes times for people working in enterprise IT infrastructure and operations. With so much of business relying on cost-effectively protecting data throughout its lifecycle, making data easily accessible to users and applications, and leveraging data to drive new value through AI and analytics, strategic about their choice of data storage tools and strategies and how they manage unstructured data.
Solving the Puzzle of Non-Invasive Data Guidance
21.02.2024
Non-invasive data governance ( DG ) means slovenia mobile database as non-intrusive as possible to users when regulating technology. InformationWeek asks Mary Shacklett, president of consulting firm Transworld Data, whether IT can handle this task.
The term “non-invasive data governance” is associated with Robert S. Seiner, who introduced it in his book “Non-Invasive Data Governance: The Path of Least Resistance and Greatest Success.” Non-invasive DG advocates minimal intervention while effectively managing and ensuring the quality, privacy, and security of data within an organization. It has come to the forefront of discussions of corporate DG because so much of it relies on the practices of internal users.
To put this into perspective, in mid-2021, 94% of organizations surveyed by Egress reported having suffered an insider data breach. A year later, 67% of employees surveyed in another study admitted they had failed to comply with corporate cybersecurity policies, according to Harvard Business Review.
Employees’ failure to comply with (or in some cases, ignorance of) security and governance policies is one reason why more and more companies are using social engineering audits to examine user department practices. Another reason for non-compliance is employee stress, which Gallup found to be experienced by 44% of all workers in 2023.