Intelligent CIO Africa Issue 10 | Page 28

TALKING BUSINESS Data governance regulations are an opportunity rather than a challenge for SA organisations Data protection regulation is likely to continue evolving, and a clear view of how data moves across the business will be critical to staying on top of change, explains Dragan Petkovic, Security Product Leader ECEMEA at Oracle South Africa. 28 INTELLIGENTCIO W hen Tim Berners-Lee declared data to be the “new raw material of the 21st century” back in 2011, he was perfectly describing the direction many economies were heading in – from industry to insights and intelligence. be acknowledged, but recorded and accounted for. Data-rich businesses are being acquired not for what they do, but for what they know, while exchanges trading in data have become profitable businesses in their own right, in the same way as exchanges that trade in metals, currencies and more. But in the six years since, data has defied the economic principles that many commodities adhere to: unlike other raw materials, the more plentiful the data the more valuable it becomes. It is coveted like precious metals and valued accordingly for its power to drive the insights that help transform businesses. Just as a business’s finances are carefully recorded, detailed, audited and regulated, the recognition of data is reaching a similar point of maturity. The financial good governance of a business is inextricably linked to its value, and the same can be said of data governance. The data a company owns can help it to cut costs, open up new markets and identify new business; it can make the difference between taking the lead or seeing rivals overtake it. As such, data has a value that shouldn’t just Now, the uses of data have reached such a level of value to businesses that it is becoming subject to more stringent standards and controls to safeguard its value and availability, which also ensures its responsible usage. www.intelligentcio.com