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Why do Data Quality Programs Fail?

Why do Data Quality Programs Fail?Photo from Unsplash

Originally Posted On: https://firsteigen.com/blog/why-do-data-quality-programs-fail/

 

Fortune 1000 organizations spend approximately $5 billion each year to improve the trustworthiness of data. Yet only 42 percent of the executives trust their data. According to multiple surveys, executives across industries do not completely trust the data in their organization for accurate, timely business critical decision-making. In addition, organizations routinely incur operational losses, regulatory fines, and reputational damages because of data quality errors.

Per Gartner, companies lose on an average $14 million per year because of poor data quality.

These are startling facts – given that most Fortune 500 organizations have been investing heavily in people, processes, best practices, and software to improve the quality of the data.

Despite heroic efforts by data quality teams – data quality programs simply failed to deliver a meaningful return on investments.

This failure can be attributed to primarily following two factors:

  1. Iceberg Syndrome:  In our experience, data quality programs in most organizations focus on what they can easily see as data risk based on past experiences which is only the tip of the iceberg. Completeness, integrity, duplicate, and range checks are the most common types of checks implemented. While these checks help in detecting data errors – they represent only 20% of the data risk universe.

 

  • Data Deluge: The number of data sources, data processes, and applications have increased exponentially in recent times due to the rapid adoption of cloud technology, big data application, and analytics. Each of these data assets and process requires adequate data quality control to prevent data errors in the downstream processes.

While the data engineering teams can onboard hundreds of data assets in weeks, Data Quality teams usually take between one to two weeks to establish a data quality check for a data asset. As a result, data quality teams prioritize data assets for data quality rule implementation leaving many data assets without any type of data quality controls.

DataBuck from FirstEigen addresses these issues for the modern data stack (e.g. AWS S3, GCP, Azure Data Lake) and data warehouse (Snowflake) environment.

Addressing Invisible Risks

DataBuck establishes a data fingerprint and an objective data trust score for each data asset (Schema, Tables, Columns) presents in Data Lake and Data Warehouse.

More specifically, it leverages machine learning to identify data risks through the lens of standardized data quality dimensions as shown below:

  • Freshness — determine if the data has arrived before the next step of the process
  • Completeness — determine the completeness of contextually important fields. Various mathematical and machine learning techniques should identify Contextually important fields.
  • Conformity — determine conformity to a pattern, length, and format of contextually important fields.
  • Uniqueness — determine the uniqueness of the individual records.
  • Relationship – determine conformity to the intercolumn relationship within micro-segments of data
  • Drift — determine the drift of the key categorical and continuous fields from the historical information
  • Anomaly — determine volume and value anomaly of critical columns

Addressing Productivity Issues

With DataBuck, data owners do not need to write data validation rules or engage the data engineers to perform any tasks. DataBuck uses machine learning algorithms to generate an 11-vector data fingerprint to identify records with issues.

Summary

Data is the most valuable asset for modern organizations. Current approaches for validating data, in particular Data Lake and Data Warehouses, are full of operational challenges leading to trust deficiency, time-consuming, and costly methods for fixing data errors. There is an urgent need to adopt a standardized ML-based approach for validating the data to prevent data warehouses from becoming a data swamp.

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