IMHO by Deidre Paknad
information governance
When It Comes to What to Keep and What to Dispose, The IT Team Has a Billion Choices.
Submitted by Deidre Paknad on Thu, May 20, 2010 - 12:35am GMTThat's the problem. They have a billion choices, but none of them are actionable.
- 40% or more of corporate data is not subject to a specific legal duty and has no business value
- Corporate data volume grew by about 50% last year, budgets grew by 0%
- IT spend averages 3.5% of revenues – data management is not cheap (Gartner)
- IDC predicts data will grow by a factor of 44 in the next 10 years
- 100 to 15,000 matters and legal holds
- 300 to 3,000 record classes
- 1,000 to 15,000 regulations that mandate specific record keeping
- 1,000 to 50,000 file shares, SharePoint sites, ECM systems and applications
- 2,000 to 40,000 departments of people working on specific business functions
- 10,000 to 1 million employees
- 3 to 130 countries in which they operate

- Systematically link the business processes in legal, RIM and IT to provide structural collaboration and transparency (workflow and automated collaboration rather than conference room collaboration).
- Modernize the RIM program and conduct a systematic information inventory that captures value, local terminology, and points to the many disparate locations where information is stored in a structured application shared with legal and IT (rather than the spreadsheets or access databases typically used in schedule refresh work).
- Treat legal holds as an enterprise function where people, records, information categories and sources are properly identified and the hold is transparent to stakeholders (rather than as legal department issue myopically focused on notices going out but leaving IT is on its own).
- Ensure that IT can determine in their terms and with little or no interpretation who and what is on hold, what is of value and what is subject to regulatory obligation (rather than guessing or assuming that all information has the same value or is subject to the same obligations).
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What Does "Information Governance" Mean and Why Do We Need It Now?
Submitted by Deidre Paknad on Fri, Apr 16, 2010 - 9:26pm GMTThere is a lot of talk about information governance these days by vendors, customers and analysts. It is definitely the right discussion but there seems to be a lot of confusion about what it means. Here’s my definition: managing the data you need as you need to as efficiently as possible. [Read: managing only the data you need to and no more while complying with applicable legal duties at the lowest total cost to the company.]
Welcome ...
Submitted by Deidre Paknad on Sat, Apr 10, 2010 - 6:22am GMTI often joke that few people spend as much time focused on legal holds, retention, privacy and data governance (and the intersection of these) than I do and if you don't believe me, just ask my husband!
Fortunately, I love the topics because they do intersect and sometimes even collide -- there are real challenges and very real opportunities to work on. I get to work on these topics daily with leaders in these functions in the world's largest companies which fuels my passion for the problem. As we rolled out the information governance process maturity model with its built-in cost and risk analyses, this collaboration has gotten deeper and more productive.
The contents of my blog are perspectives garnered from these engagements and the application of the information governance process maturity model ... expressed in my humble opinion. I hope you find IMHO constructive and interesting.
--Deidre

