Data Governance in Insurance Carriers
12 August 2014
Data initiatives abound in the insurance industry. Most carriers have some type of data initiative in place. They focus their efforts on implementing reporting tools, analytic tools, and repositories — with all the tools that go with them. Data governance, on the other hand, is an emerging discipline. The discipline includes a focus on data quality, data management, data policies, and a variety of other processes surrounding the handling of data in an organization. The purpose is to assure carriers have reliable and consistent data sets to assess performance and make decisions. As the insurance industry moves into a more data-centric world, data governance becomes more critical for assuring the data is consistent, reliable, and usable for analysis. Analysis and reporting issues are more often related to data governance issues, not technology issues. Data governance initiatives are generally designed to assure the data is accurate, consistent, and complete in order to maximize the use of data to make decisions, to find unique insights, and to improve business planning. It assures that your data capture mechanisms are set up to capture what you need to capture and assures there is alignment between analytics tactics and strategic goals. But carriers face governance challenges. Data is spread across a wide variety of applications, and data ownership is most often shared across the business and IT. Carriers report cultural resistance to understanding data issues, which makes it harder to find sponsors for data governance initiatives. Consequently, a large number of carriers deploy informal data governance initiatives — especially larger carriers. I’ve just published a new report that surveys carriers around their attitudes, challenges, and initiatives related to data governance. Some very interesting findings. Check it out. http://celent.com/reports/importance-data-governance-current-practices
Insurance companies regularly deal with lots of data. I think the key for them is to be able to use this data to their advantage. Like the post points out, they should be able to leverage the data they have to make decisions, gain valuable insights, and improve business planning. Needless to say, they cannot meet these goals without proper technology investments.