Finding ROI – Tales from the Field
A “tale from the field” on finding return on investment and building your MDM business case. Read more
Wrestling with Getting Executive Buy-In
Getting executive buy-in for your initiative is critical – here are some ideas on how to do it. Read more
A New Editor for Hub Designs Magazine
Big news for Hub Designs Magazine readers – we have a new editor! Read more 
Data Governance Roundtable
Late breaking news: Dan Power from Hub Designs will be appearing in a “Data Governance Roundtable” tomorrow (Thursday, December 1st at 11:00 am EST / 10:00 am CST / 8:00 am PST). Read more 
MDM’s Blind Spot: Social Networks by Peter Perera
The convergence of Master Data Management (MDM) and social networking is inevitable. Read more 
Oracle OpenWorld 2011: Oracle Hyperion DRM Customer Panel
Dan Power, attending Oracle OpenWorld 2011, live blogged this session led by Rahul Kamath, Director of Product Strategy at Oracle. Read more 
MDM: Why Good Business Practice Insight is Hard to Find
Another article that’s right on the money by Mark Allen, the co-author of Master Data Management in Practice – Achieving True Customer MDM. Read more 
Connecting Data Governance to Business Outcomes That Matter
Here’s another great and timely article by Julie Hunt, a software industry strategist and analyst. Read more 
Gaming Master Data Management, by Peter Perera
Want to improve the quality of business data while increasing enterprise system adoption? Turn MDM into a game. Read more 
Information, Intelligence and Process by Julie Hunt
Here’s a great article by Julie Hunt, an accomplished software industry analyst. When we first ran it, we broke it up into four installments. We’re running it again as one continuous article (which is how Julie intended it to be read). Read more 
Are You Taking Charge of Your Information? by Ramon Sistermans
Research analysts like Gartner and thought leaders all around the world agree that information should be reliable, as it underpins many operational and strategic business decisions. Read more 
Data Management: Reaching into the Cloud, by Julie Hunt
In a new form of “shadow IT”, Line-of-Business (LOB) groups have been turning to cloud-based services to quickly set up technology solutions that support their business needs and objectives. Read more 
Oracle Customer MDM Webinar on August 17th
Once again, Hub Designs is joining with Oracle in a webinar, this time on Wednesday, August 17, 2011 at 11:00 am Pacific (2:00 pm Eastern). Read more 
Oracle Product MDM Webinar on August 11th
Hub Designs is pleased to be joining with Oracle in a new webinar on Thursday, August 11, 2011 at 9:30 am Pacific (12:30 pm Eastern). Read more 
MDM Multi-Domain Planning And Challenges, by Mark Allen
Our latest article is by Mark Allen, the co-author of a Master Data Management in Practice – Achieving True Customer MDM. Read more 
Recapping the 2011 Gartner MDM Summit
This is the fourth article in an ongoing series sponsored by SAP. Read more 
Gaming Master Data Management, by Peter Perera
Want to improve the quality of business data while increasing enterprise system adoption? Turn MDM into a game. Read more 
Africom’s PROTEA Program
Our 300th article. After this year’s Gartner MDM Summit conference (May 4-6 in Los Angeles), Hub Designs sent a small team to a new client in South Africa called Africom. Read more 
Information, Intelligence and Process (Part 4) by Julie Hunt
Here’s the final article in this great series by Julie Hunt, an accomplished software industry analyst. Read more 
Information, Intelligence and Process (Part 3) by Julie Hunt
Here’s the next article in the series by Julie Hunt, an accomplished software industry analyst. Read more 
Information, Intelligence and Process (Part 2) by Julie Hunt
Here’s the next article in the series by Julie Hunt, an accomplished software industry analyst. Read more 
Information, Intelligence and Process (Part 1) by Julie Hunt
We’ve been on site at a new client in South Africa since the Gartner MDM Summit. Here’s a great series of new articles by Julie Hunt, an accomplished software industry analyst. Read more 
Faster is Better!
In the real estate industry, they have a saying: “location, location, location!” In the technology business, and particularly in the master data management (MDM) field, it’s all about time to value.
A shorter, more targeted project (vs. the “ultimate” whiz-bang project with all the technology bells and whistles) pays off better in two important ways:
- Generally, the costs are lower, because you’re incurring them for a shorter time. That’s obviously not always strictly true (some crash projects can end up being very expensive) but a 6-9 month project usually tends to be less expensive than a 12-24 month project.
- You’re delivering the expected benefits that much sooner. So whatever value the business is going to gain from your MDM initiative, it will get that value roughly twice as fast if you can go with the targeted 6-9 month project instead of the 12-24 month “mega project”.
If you think back to our recent article on MDM Best Practice #1 – Start with the Need, Pain or Problem (Not “The Solution”), what the business really wants is for their problem to be solved. They don’t want the most elegant solution with the latest ‘whiz bang’ technology.
They’d like to be able to recognize their customer at all touch points; to be able to add new customers easily without accidentally creating a lot of duplicates; to be able to manage customer creditworthiness and risk in an efficient manner; to roll up sales by the customers’ corporate hierarchy; to be able to efficiently identify the untapped prospects in a corporate family, geography or vertical market; to be able to tie all interactions with a customer back to a single view of that customer; and so on.
Not a lot to ask, they’d probably tell you. They’ll probably ask, why can’t we do that now? After all the investments in all the ERP and CRM systems, in all the data warehouses, data marts and business intelligence solutions, we come along with MDM platforms and (gulp) data governance.
We tell the business users that with MDM, on the one hand, we can help them with their burning problems that never seem to get solved any other way. But on the other hand, it’s going to take their direct involvement in a way they’ve probably never had to do before: data governance.
So it’s matter of “to whom much is given, much is expected”. The business will have a new capability that will solve some important business problems, but the business owners and users will have to step up in a way they may not have had to before, by taking ownership of the data, setting policies around data quality, accuracy, completeness, timeliness and consistency, and then agreeing to enforcement of those policies.
Data government is primarily a political endeavor, and as a result, MDM projects have an explicitly political side to them. Be prepared for that, and remember, faster is better.
Contact Hub Designs for advice on your MDM or data governance initiative.
The Need for MDM Evangelism
For a long time now, I’ve admired Guy Kawasaki, one of the early Apple employees responsible for marketing the Macintosh computer in 1984. He’s credited with being one of the people to bring the concept of evangelism, in his case focused on creating passionate users and developers to become advocates for Apple, to the high tech business.
I’ve tried to emulate him by being an evangelist for customer and product MDM. From 2001 to 2004, I was a consultant working with the precursor to Oracle’s Customer Data Hub platform. At D&B from 2004 to 2007, I managed its strategic alliance with Oracle while Oracle launched and refined Customer Data Hub. I left D&B to start Hub Designs in 2007 because I wanted to work more directly in developing and executing MDM strategy at corporate clients. All this time, I’ve tried to get people excited about using the evolving technology to solve business problems.
In the past nine years, in all of the different industries and companies I’ve worked with, most have quickly “gotten” MDM:
- They understand the value of the Single View of the Customer (or Product, as the case may be).
- They see the revenue increases from being able to up-sell and cross-sell customers by knowing more about them, and by knowing their own products better.
- They understand the dollar value of having a streamlined, coordinated New Product Introduction process.
- They see the short payback period and millions in savings from a strategic sourcing program that consolidates vendors and products, and renegotiates agreements.
- They understand the contribution MDM makes to credit risk management (know your customer, and whether they can pay their bills on time).
- And they see how MDM (done properly, which includes data quality improvement and a data governance program) makes it much easier and more efficient to have accurate, complete, timely and consistent information available for compliance with governance regulations.
But all of those organizations, where I’ve been the “external champion” or evangelist, have needed a corresponding “internal champion” or evangelist.
Someone to lead the charge internally, to have the hallway conversations, to fight the good fight politically, to scrap for every budget dollar, to convince the powers that be, the type of person who digs in and doesn’t let go. Someone who’s convinced that master data management and data governance is important to his or her company. That it’s so important that it’s worth going out on a bit of a career limb. Or who perhaps was brought in specifically to head up an initiative like this.
My friend Tom Carlock wrote a great article called “So You Want to be a Data Champion?”, where he discusses how to be prepared to be your organization’s “data champion”. Tom knows whereof he speaks, because he’s been in roles like that at The CIT Group and AIG, and is now a leader of product strategy at D&B. He mentions attributes like being able to have a consistent vision that you can “sell” to others, the ability to develop and maintain relationships, being able to listen, ask for input and deal with objections, and being optimistic, hopeful and patient.
To that I would add, being persistent. My father introduced me to a quote by Calvin Coolidge, the 30th U.S. President:
“Nothing in this world can take the place of persistence. Talent will not; nothing is more common than unsuccessful people with talent. Genius will not; unrewarded genius is almost a proverb. Education will not; the world is full of educated derelicts. Persistence and determination alone are omnipotent.”
If you decide to become an MDM evangelist at your company, and you’re persistent in that role, you can help your company manage master data as an enterprise-wide asset – and transform itself in the process. I think our corporations today – ten years into the twenty-first century – desperately need that type of innovation and change.
Master Data Management Best Practice #10 – Use a Balanced, Holistic Approach
This may be the most important best practice of all: use a balanced, holistic approach – addressing people, process, technology and information.
Start with the people, politics and culture, and then move on to the data governance and stewardship processes, then the technology.
The recent Gartner “Magic Quadrant for MDM of Customer Data” by John Radcliffe had a great statement: “To succeed, you should put together a balanced MDM program that creates a shared vision and strategy, addresses governance and organizational issues, leverages the appropriate technology and architecture, and creates the necessary processes and metrics.”
Another illustration of the need to balance the technology with the people and process is a quote by the inventor and entrepreneur, Dean Kamen: “The technology is the easy part. Understanding what drives people – individuals, societies, what makes cultures clash – all of those questions are way, way harder to answer than how to solve any particular technical problem.”
This Best Practices series is based on a talk that I’ve given at the Oracle Applications Users Group COLLABORATE and Oracle OpenWorld conferences a few times. The talk has evolved each time I’ve given it, but one consistent theme has been “being an MDM evangelist”. I believe in the nature of master data management and data governance to fundamentally change the IT architectures, business processes and organizational cultures (how we think of the core data that we use to run our businesses). And I think corporate America is overdue for these changes.
We’re all consumers who’ve had frustrating experiences with companies trying to do simple things like changing our addresses, stop receiving extra copies of catalogs, fixing errors on credit reports, etc. And we’ve all had the opposite experience, when a quick phone call or self service Web portal took care of everything. What a difference in the customer service experience!
And in the business-to-business world, there are a lot of companies out there that would like to make decisions more quickly, based on reliable data, that would like to reduce their supply chain spend, consolidate their enterprise applications, increase their revenue by up-selling customers, get paid more quickly by making sure invoices go to the right address every time, manage credit risk for new customers, understand customers’ corporate hierarchies, cut their new product introduction life cycle in half, and so on.
These are the types of innovations that our companies desperately need to be competitive in the next decade. The economy is improving – but slowly. As an MDM evangelist, what improvements and innovations can you bring to your company? And can you use the balanced, holistic approach to make sure that the shiny, new technology doesn’t outweigh the people, process and information sides of the picture?
You’ll succeed if you recruit the right executive sponsors; invest in creating a data governance team; design your data governance processes, and communicate how the MDM initiative is helping the company to achieve its strategic objectives. And above all, be persistent. Don’t take no for an answer. The company didn’t get into its current situation overnight, and fixing it won’t happen overnight either.
Please let us know – in the comments here or in the forums on the MDM Community – whether you’ve taken on the role of MDM evangelist in your organization, and if you need any help with it, please let us know.
Master Data Management Best Practice #9 – Don’t Underestimate the Complexity
One of my favorite quotes is from Albert Einstein, who said “Everything should be made as simple as possible, but not simpler.”
This is very true in master data management (MDM) – where you’ll inevitably come under pressure to oversimplify. It’s not uncommon to have 20-30 source systems (or more) that have to be integrated with the MDM hub. And tackling other initiatives in the enterprise at the same time (like service-oriented architecture or major ERP or CRM upgrades) can increase the pressure. MDM can help with those other initiatives but doing several things at once may increase the overall degree of difficulty.
Remember, if you oversimplify or underestimate, you’ll be under pressure to cut functionality later. Satisfying important requirements will be postponed to later phases, and the business will be disappointed.
So watch out for the temptation to oversimplify. I had a client once who was setting up a customer hub with about five very complex mainframe-based source systems. They were oversimplifying by making the integration from the source systems to the hub one-way only. So new customer records would flow to the hub, but any updates or data quality improvements made in the hub would not flow back to the source systems.
I asked them what the plan was for those updates, and their answer was “manual integration” (which, of course, is no integration at all – just data stewards manually entering the changes a second time back into the source systems). We all know how that turns out – a great opportunity to synchronize updates and data quality improvements from the hub back to the source systems goes untapped.
Another thing I’ve noticed is that data governance can be disruptive to the business unless the business itself is driving the data governance program and it has been well-planned. Then, any disruption seems to be overlooked, much as you’d be willing to overlook a bit of mess from a home renovation when you were living in the house, as long as you got your dream house at the end of the process. But if someone else (IT, for example) tries to impose governance on the business, that’s a different story. Then, any disruption tends to be bitterly resented, since it’s being imposed from the outside.
Please let us know – in the comments here or in the forums on the MDM Community – what you think of this tendency to underestimate the complexity of MDM projects. And I mean it this time – let’s have your comments and “war stories”!
The next article in the series is: MDM Best Practice #10 – Use a Balanced, Holistic Approach
Master Data Management Best Practice #8 – Resist the Urge to Customize
Breaking news: As I was writing the article below on MDM Best Practice #8, I realized I should discuss the acquisition of Data Foundations, Inc. by Software AG. I was surprised by how long it took for the announcement to come out, because I first heard about this transaction in June. It seems to be a good acquisition for Software AG, which had previously acquired webMethods for its B2B integration technology. I’ve been talking and writing for a while now about the need to meld SOA, business process management and MDM. Some other analysts have said that this acquisition is no big deal, that the mega-vendors are probably not worried about it. But I think it’s a great sign for the MDM market that a larger player like Software AG, with revenues of $1.17 billion, which already has strong integration, SOA and BPM products, sees MDM as a compelling market to enter through acquiring a best-of-breed player like Data Foundations.
MDM Best Practice #8 – Resist the Urge to Customize
As the various MDM hubs mature, it’s getting easier to resist the temptation to customize. When I first started working with Customer Data Integration (CDI) hubs in 2004, they were a little “rough around the edges”, and sometimes customization was unavoidable.
But we’re six years further into this now, and the major vendors’ platforms are light years ahead of where they were in 2004. At this point, working with the vendor to improve their product in future releases is a better strategy than customization.
And most products allow you to modify the underlying data model – and the various flavors of the user interface – without touching the source code. This is a big improvement, because most of the times, the changes needed by the business are relatively minor – a few new fields here and there, some new reports of course.
One important thing to include in your evaluation of vendors’ platforms is how easy it is to “settle into” the platform – to make those minor changes and to adapt the platform to the way your organization does business. If the platform seems like it would difficult to adapt in this way, consider that a warning sign.
If you do have to customize, do it carefully; make sure your changes will survive an upgrade gracefully and are well documented.
One of the biggest risks is getting “rev locked”. The MDM vendors are still revving their products once or twice a year, so you don’t want to get stuck on an older version. I had one client that was told by their vendor that their technical problems were fixed in the latest release. Unfortunately, they were told by their internal team that the earliest they’d be able to upgrade to that release would be in about 18 months!
One way to avoid this is to build what I call “upgrade competency” into your project and your team during your initial implementation – so you already have one upgrade under your belt during your implementation life cycle. That way, the upgrade process isn’t quite so daunting.
Please let us know – in the comments here or in the forums on the MDM Community – how your organization is dealing with the issue of customizing your MDM platform.
The next article in the series is: MDM Best Practice #9 – Don’t Underestimate the Complexity
Master Data Management Best Practice #7 – Create a Data Governance Organization and Processes
If there’s no dedicated data governance function, then no one lives & dies with the accuracy, completeness, timeliness and consistency of the critical information that drives the business.
There’s not much point in doing master data management if you’re not going to govern the data.
I remember attending an MDM Summit conference a few years ago, and hearing a pharmaceutical company admitting that they had spent 6 months implementing their MDM technology before they realized that they needed to have a data governance component – an organization with the accompanying processes to manage the quality and accuracy of the company’s critical master data. They essentially had to start their project over again after putting that data governance program in place.
The ironic part was that their system integrator partner ended up sponsoring the Data Governance track at the next conference.
Make sure you convince management of the need for a data governance team as part of your MDM implementation, because trying to do master data management without data governance is like trying to fly a plane with only one wing.
Please let us know – in the comments here or in the forums on the MDM Community – how your organization is handing the intertwined nature of MDM and data governance.
The next article in the series is: MDM Best Practice #8 – Resist the Urge to Customize
Master Data Management Best Practice #6 – A Long Term Program, Not a Short Term Project
Today, we’re going to resume our series on Master Data Management Best Practices. Here are the earlier articles in the series:
- Start with the Need, Pain or Problem (Not “The Solution”)
- Active, Involved Executive Sponsorship
- Emphasize the Organizational Change Management Aspects
- The Business Has To Own MDM and Data Governance
- Use Your Best Project Managers and People
MDM Best Practice #6 is to think of MDM and data governance as long term programs, not a short term projects.
Start by understanding and describing your current state – where you’re starting from. Then define your “to be” or future state, and analyze the gaps between the current and future states, and how to close them.
Work with the business owners to break the project to close those gaps up into a series of discrete, manageable phases, much as a software company will have a series of releases of functionality in their successive versions of their software over a period of years.
Spend some quality time planning – the time you invest will be repaid many times over. I recommend spending up to 15% – 25% of the total initiative in planning. Don’t forget, you’ll be breaking down silos and coordinating across multiple lines of business, functional areas, channels, geographies, and so on – and sometimes, these areas you’ll be coordinating won’t like one another very much. So you’ll want to allow for plenty of time to plan what will probably end up being a complex, multi-year effort involving a balanced initiative composed of both data governance organization and process and MDM technology implementation.
The other thing to keep in mind is that MDM is never truly “over” – you may reach a plateau or “steady state”, but there will always be master data coming into the company that will have to be cleansed, matched, merged, synchronized, published, analyzed and utilized. And there will always be more you can do – higher levels on the MDM maturity model scale that you can help your organization achieve.
So plan for an MDM “way of life” that continues on, much like Finance or Sales continue on, not a project that “goes live” and then is over.
Please let us know – in the comments here or in the forums on the MDM Community – how your organization deals with the long term nature of MDM and data governance.
The next article in the series is: MDM Best Practice #7 – Create a Data Governance Organization and Processes
Master Data Management Best Practice #5 – Use Your Best Project Managers and People
This one may sound obvious, but as you staff your MDM and data governance initiatives, make sure you use your best project managers and people.
Make sure you can’t be derailed by opponents pointing to avoidable project management or organizational issues. You cannot afford to have this type of project fail, so focus on controlling scope, getting the requirements right, managing risks, and communicating effectively and often.
I’ve seen situations where clients have had simultaneous projects going on: MDM, data governance, CRM and ERP. Even though the MDM and data governance projects were the most crucial, foundational efforts, upon which both the CRM and ERP projects depended, the MDM and DG projects seemed to suffer from “brain drain” – where the stronger resources were getting reallocated to the ERP project.
This “brain drain” syndrome is a mistake – the technical complexity of MDM, breaking down the organizational silos, the cultural changes and other “soft stuff”, putting data governance processes in place across the enterprise, all of these factors argue for putting your best people on these transformational programs.
It may be “project management 101″ but don’t put your “B” and “C” players on your most important programs.
Please let us know – in the comments here or in the forums on the MDM Community – what you think of prioritizing your MDM and data governance programs and putting your best people on them.
The next article in the series is: MDM Best Practice #6 – A Long Term Program, Not a Short Term Project
Master Data Management Best Practice #4 – The Business Has To Own MDM and Data Governance
As tempting as it is to start and finish with the technology, it doesn’t work.
One model that I’ve seen work very well is for the business to lead the data governance initiative, with senior management being involved through a Data Governance Council (which makes policy for enterprise data), with Global Process Owners handling day to day activities in their own functional areas such as marketing, sales, channels, customer support, and finance, and with tactical aspects handled by business data stewards and IT stewards, under the direction of the Global Process Owners and the IT Global Solution Owner.
This three level model (Data Governance Council, Global Process Owners, Data / IT Stewardship) allows the business to set direction at the highest level and coordinate across the enterprise, while still letting the process owners manage activities within their own functional areas. It’s important to break down the silos which are so common in most of today’s corporations, because silos breed the “islands of data” problem. Reuniting and reconciling those “islands of data” is one of the major reasons companies are doing master data management initiatives in the first place.
When MDM is driven solely by IT, the business may not understand it or buy in. In some cases, the business may not even realize MDM is there, if it’s buried too deeply in the “infrastructure”.
The hard truth is that MDM’s nature as an ongoing program means that even if the initial project is funded by IT, the business may not pick it up in Year 2 & beyond – unless the business owns it.
I’ve seen many instances of MDM programs whose first iteration (driven solely by IT) failed, until they started over, recruited sponsors in the business, transferred ownership of the program to them, and took a more business-oriented approach to the initiative.
Please let us know – in the comments here, in the forums on the MDM Community or using the #MDM hashtag on Twitter – what you think of the need for business to own the MDM and data governance initiative.
The next article in the series is: MDM Best Practice #5 – Use Your Best Project Managers and People
Master Data Management Best Practice #3 – Emphasize the Organizational Change Management Aspects
Addressing the organizational change aspects of master data management (MDM) and data governance initiatives is critical to their success.
Outside perspective can be very helpful here. As I discussed in a recent article, “Org. Change and Data Governance”, organizational change management – as an applied discipline – is used far too rarely on MDM projects. They’re big enough to justify it, and they certainly involve enough corporate politics and cultural change to benefit from a structured approach to organizational change management. My firm, Hub Designs, applies org. change and communications strategy techniques to every project we do.
Most of what I know about organizational change management I learned from my friend, Dr. Burt Reynolds, who is now an Assistant Professor at Southern NH University. We first worked together on an Oracle ERP project at a software company in Massachusetts. One of the reasons that project was successful was the project leadership included a strong org. change component.
In MDM projects, a clear communications strategy that addresses all of the various stakeholders of the initiative, and communicates your messages to them using their preferred methods of communication, over the right time frame, will have a huge impact – particularly if you can tell those stakeholders how MDM and data governance are making a difference and helping the organization realize its strategic goals. Find every occurrence of increased revenue, reduced costs, and easier compliance and risk management, and pass those success stories on to the organization at large.
Please let us know – in the comments here, in the forums on the MDM Community or using the #MDM hashtag on Twitter – what you think of the need for organizational change management in MDM and data governance initiatives.
The next article in the series is: MDM Best Practice #4 – The Business Has To Own MDM and Data Governance
Master Data Management Best Practice #2 – Active, Involved Executive Sponsorship
MDM and data governance projects need strong executive sponsorship, more so than most projects involving technology.
To champion a change (towards managing master data as a true corporate asset) is going to mean significant cultural disruption. In most companies, that type of change is best driven “top down”.
Don’t try to start until this is in place. Work on your elevator pitch, reach out to senior management and educate them on master data management, and work on recruiting your executive sponsors.
MDM and data governance programs are typically not very successful from the “bottom up”. They may start that way, and even show a few small wins, but you’ve got to get the “C suite” interested and engaged at some point in order to get the budget money and the political “juice” you’ll need.
Don’t forget that data governance is largely a political function. I’ve always liked Jill Dyche’s definition of data governance: “Data governance is the decision-rights and policymaking for corporate data, while data management is the tactical execution of those policies.”
When you see the word “decision rights” and “policymaking” next to the words “corporate data”, you know that you’re dealing with an area that is more political than technological. But we need to embrace that, for that is the reality of data governance (or as my friends at Evaxyx in the UK like to call it, “data government”).
And if you think that anything in the enterprise can succeed that is so strongly political without the explicit and continuing support of senior management, I’ve got a bridge in Brooklyn that I’m dying to sell you.
Please let us know – in the comments here or in the forums on the MDM Community – what you think of the political nature of data governance and the need for active, involved executive sponsorship of MDM projects.
The next article in the series is: MDM Best Practice #3 – Emphasize the Organizational Change Management Aspects











