Skip to main content
BI4ALL BI4ALL
  • Expertise
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Data Strategy & Governance
    • Data Visualisation
    • Low Code & Automation
    • Modern BI & Big Data
    • R&D Software Engineering
    • PMO, BA & UX/ UI Design
  • Knowledge Centre
    • Blog
    • Industry
    • Customer Success
    • Tech Talks
  • About Us
    • Board
    • History
    • Partners
    • Awards
    • Media Centre
  • Careers
  • Contacts
English
GermanPortuguês
Last Page:
    Knowledge Center
  • How Data Governance Became the Hot Topic of the Decade

How Data Governance Became the Hot Topic of the Decade

Página Anterior: Blog
  • Knowledge Center
  • Blog
  • Fabric: nova plataforma de análise de dados
1 Junho 2023

Fabric: nova plataforma de análise de dados

Placeholder Image Alt
  • Knowledge Centre
  • How Data Governance Became the Hot Topic of the Decade
22 February 2024

How Data Governance Became the Hot Topic of the Decade

How Data Governance Became the Hot Topic of the Decade

Key takeways

Evolution of Data Strategies

Regulation, AI and Data Catalogues

Data Governance como Vantagem Competitiva na Era Digital

Over the last 40 years, Organisations have shifted their focus multiple times to continuously generate value from data while adapting to the rapid change of technologies. In the 1980s, the focus was on storing data in relational databases and data warehouses. In the 1990s, Organisations attempted to get insights from their data by leveraging OLAP and Business Intelligence systems. In the 2000s, it was acknowledged that it was necessary to deal with big data. In the 2010s, the buzzword was data science & AI. However, we had to wait until the 2020s to see the focus on Data Governance and Ethics.

YouTube Video Thumbnail

In fact, those Organisations that started working out their own data strategy soon realized that benefits were hard to achieve, and data were still treated inefficiently.

In more practical terms, data teams adopted and developed outputs based on new technologies such as Power BI dashboards and complex data science models, but the business continued to make decisions based only on day-to-day experience, and Excel remained the reference technology.  From this point, it became clear that a data strategy was needed to enable the business to utilize its own data and that the business needed to be in charge of it.

Another important factor that affected Data Governance’s popularity was the recent boom in data protection regulations. For example, in 2018, the General Data Protection Regulation affected Europe and the UK and the new Swiss Federal Act on Data Protection (nFADP) came into effect on September 1, 2023. Furthermore, sector-specific regulations require companies to stay in control of their own data.

Placeholder Image Alt

Other important factors that led CIOs to develop Data Governance also included enhancing customer experience and user trust in data, reducing costs, and improving operational efficiency.

In the last two years, instead, we have witnessed the boom of generative AI. This boom came as the icing on the cake of the international debate about AI & ethics. Furthermore, it has been a few years since legislators around the world discussed the topic and agreed that some sort of AI governance is needed. The European Commission decided to play a leading role in this by proposing the first-ever legal framework on AI, which aims to address the risks of AI. The regulatory proposal aims to provide AI developers, deployers and users with clear requirements and obligations regarding specific uses of AI. Following the Commission’s proposal in April 2021, the regulation could enter into force in a transitional period by the end of 2023. Standards would be required and formulated throughout this period, and the operational governance structures would be established. The regulation might be applicable to operators as early as the latter half of 2024, once the standards are in place and initial conformity assessments have been conducted.

To complete the scenario that explains why data governance became the hot topic of the 2020s, we also need to consider how Data Catalogs evolved. Data Catalogs have become increasingly popular since 2015 when Alation introduced the first technology that enabled end-users to curate business metadata and find data assets (such as business definitions or SQL tables) as easily as internet users search for items on Amazon.com.

With the additional push of technology vendors, organisations also realised the value of Data Catalogs as tools that facilitate data democratization and ultimately generate efficiency. To explain it more clearly with an example, IBM stated that Organisations can spend up to 80% of their time searching and preparing for data. It means that Organisations pay a very high salary to Data Scientists mainly to find out where the data is, and only 20% of the time is to generate the actual insight. Furthermore, Data Catalogs bring to the table a new opportunity for lower maturity Organisations to reshape the IT’s role, which historically was believed the owner of the Organisation’s data.

Data Catalogs are technologies that are continuously being developed to meet corporate governance requirements as well as data governance requirements. It’s believed that Generative AI will remove some significant barriers to a company’s adoption by taking on a good part of the heavy lifting that businesses normally reject due to a lack of time. Furthermore, multiple vendors are adjusting the prices of Data Catalogs to market conditions, which will support the proliferation of this technology along with good data governance practices.

Although data governance is not new, it has gained more attention and importance in the 2020s due to various factors. These factors include the rapid evolution of data technologies, an increasing demand for data-driven insights, a growing awareness of data ethics and regulations, and the emergence of generative AI and data catalogs. Data governance can help organisations manage their data assets effectively, ensure data quality and security, foster data culture and literacy, and leverage data for innovation and value creation. Therefore, data governance is necessary and an opportunity for organisations to gain a competitive edge in this digital era.

Opinion Article published in:

  • IT Insight – October, 2023

Author

Sandro Scordo

Sandro Scordo

Head of Data Strategy & Governance Center of Excellence

Share

Suggested Content

Data-Driven Economy: How Data Redefines Decisions and Strategy Blog

Data-Driven Economy: How Data Redefines Decisions and Strategy

The data-driven economy is redefining how businesses, governments, and citizens create value — turning data into knowledge, efficiency, and sustainable innovation.

Data sovereignty: the strategic asset for businesses Blog

Data sovereignty: the strategic asset for businesses

In 2025, data sovereignty has become the new engine of competitiveness — turning massive volumes of information into innovation, efficiency, and strategic advantage.

Modern Anomaly Detection: Techniques, Challenges, and Ethical Considerations Blog

Modern Anomaly Detection: Techniques, Challenges, and Ethical Considerations

Anomaly Detection identifies unusual data patterns to prevent risks, using machine learning techniques

Optimising Performance in Microsoft Fabric Without Exceeding Capacity Limits Blog

Optimising Performance in Microsoft Fabric Without Exceeding Capacity Limits

Microsoft Fabric performance can be optimised through parallelism limits, scaling, workload scheduling, and monitoring without breaching capacity limits.

Metadata Frameworks in Microsoft Fabric: YAML Deployments (Part 3) Blog

Metadata Frameworks in Microsoft Fabric: YAML Deployments (Part 3)

YAML deployments in Microsoft Fabric use Azure DevOps for validation, environment structure, and pipelines with approvals, ensuring consistency.

Metadata Frameworks in Microsoft Fabric: Logging with Eventhouse (Part 2) Blog

Metadata Frameworks in Microsoft Fabric: Logging with Eventhouse (Part 2)

Logging in Microsoft Fabric with Eventhouse ensures centralised visibility and real-time analysis of pipelines, using KQL for scalable ingestion.

video title

Lets Start

Got a question? Want to start a new project?
Contact us

Menu

  • Expertise
  • Knowledge Centre
  • About Us
  • Careers
  • Contacts

Newsletter

Keep up to date and drive success with innovation
Newsletter

2025 All rights reserved

Privacy and Data Protection Policy Information Security Policy
URS - ISO 27001
URS - ISO 27701
Cookies Settings

BI4ALL may use cookies to memorise your login data, collect statistics to optimise the functionality of the website and to carry out marketing actions based on your interests.
You can customise the cookies used in .

Cookies options

These cookies are essential to provide services available on our website and to enable you to use certain features on our website. Without these cookies, we cannot provide certain services on our website.

These cookies are used to provide a more personalised experience on our website and to remember the choices you make when using our website.

These cookies are used to recognise visitors when they return to our website. This enables us to personalise the content of the website for you, greet you by name and remember your preferences (for example, your choice of language or region).

These cookies are used to protect the security of our website and your data. This includes cookies that are used to enable you to log into secure areas of our website.

These cookies are used to collect information to analyse traffic on our website and understand how visitors are using our website. For example, these cookies can measure factors such as time spent on the website or pages visited, which will allow us to understand how we can improve our website for users. The information collected through these measurement and performance cookies does not identify any individual visitor.

These cookies are used to deliver advertisements that are more relevant to you and your interests. They are also used to limit the number of times you see an advertisement and to help measure the effectiveness of an advertising campaign. They may be placed by us or by third parties with our permission. They remember that you have visited a website and this information is shared with other organisations, such as advertisers.

Política de Privacidade