Precisely, in collaboration with Business Application Research Centre (BARC), has published the results of new global research. The Future of Data Architecture study revealed major discrepancies in how data architecture and management is viewed across organizations – with central data and analytics teams generally satisfied with the future viability of their data landscapes, but business users unconvinced that existing architecture is modern enough to meet constantly evolving business needs.
The report found that while 70 percent of business users believe that implemented data and analytics applications do not cover their current or future requirements, only 32 percent of central data and analytics teams share the same sentiment. Furthermore, 52 percent of business users agree that existing data is not suitable for necessary business analysis, compared to only 36 percent of central data and analytics teams. The results show a clear disconnect between data and analytics teams and their key stakeholders – with business users unable to rely on trusted data for confident decision-making.
“As businesses increasingly focus on becoming more data-driven, they are being faced with huge volumes of data being generated at accelerated rates,” said Emily Washington, Senior Vice President – Product Management at Precisely. “The report clearly indicates a growing need for organisations to ensure that existing data management and architecture can meet, and adapt to, the fast-changing needs of the modern business. If organisations are lacking a clear strategy for data integrity, they will quickly find that the data fuelling their most important decisions is inaccurate, inconsistent, and lacking vital context.”
The research further revealed the key challenges highlighted by business managers, including extensibility of real or near-time requirements (41 percent), comprehensibility of the data landscape or architecture as a whole (39 percent), and flexibility of extended data requirements (32 percent). The main drivers for modernisation are the optimisation of existing data models and processes, migration to cloud platforms, and efforts to improve the quality of source data or data interfaces.
Despite facing challenges with rising volumes of disparate data sources, the research revealed that 50 percent of organisations are continuing to rely on data warehouses as a design paradigm when redesigning their data architectures. However, executives and business users criticise the fact that centralised approaches cannot prevent the emergence of further data silos. Therefore, companies are looking to improve their source data to streamline their data pipelines and build a better basis for data virtualisation.
“It’s encouraging to see that business leaders are increasingly focused on breaking down data silos, improving the quality of their data, and enriching it for maximum context. To achieve these goals, organisations must implement a robust strategy for data integrity - combining data integration, data governance and quality, location intelligence and data enrichment to provide a foundation of trusted data that can be shared across the business,” said Washington. “Whether the organisation needs to automate decision-making, move fast and reduce costs, or manage risk and comply with complex regulations -- a modern, and future-proof, data architecture is crucial to remaining agile in challenging times.”