Organizations around the world still have plenty of work ahead of them in terms of building trust in their data and analytics strategies, according to a report by KPMG.

Ariella Brown, Ariella Brown

November 14, 2016

3 Min Read
Credit: Pixabay

One of the recurring themes in this community is how data and analytics hold great potential to uncover insight to give us direction. For businesses to adopt the means of achieving more data-driven decisions would seem to be an obvious choice. So why don’t they all do it? Some just don’t trust the results. That’s the finding of KPMG’s report Building trust in analytics: Breaking the cycle of mistrust in D & A.

To discover the extent of trust in data and analytics, KPMG International commissioned Forrester Consulting to assess it based on responses to a survey that included over 2,000 organizations around the globe. The report took into account the state of four key anchors of trust: quality, effectiveness, integrity, and resilience.

With regard to the four anchors of trust, numbers tended to be on the low side. For resilience, 20 percent of respondents expressed confidence in data and analytics security, and 18 percent in governance. There was more divergence for rankings on integrity. Just 13 percent expressed faith in their organization’s privacy and ethical use of data and analytics, but 44 percent were confident about regulatory compliance.

The numbers were lower for trust in quality. A mere 10 percent of organizations expressed faith in the quality of their organization’s data, tools, and methodologies, and 22 percent expressed confidence in the of capabilities of D & A, Only 16 percent expressed confidence in the accuracy of their analytics models, and 20 percent said they trusted the utility of models and processes.

The majority -- 60 percent -- indicated they are not very confident in the D & A insight of their organization. The report attributes that lack of confidence to a lack of understanding. Decision makers who don’t understand what goes into D & A are apt “to miss the full value of their investments and assume that a large proportion of their D & A projects don’t work.” Consequently, it is essential for organizations to set up ways “to assess and validate the effectiveness of their analytics in supporting decision-making” to foster understanding and appreciation for what they gain from D & A.

But the report is not only concerned with the decision makers’ trust. Because data analytics are expected to become central to more processes in future, it is necessary to gain trust from all who are touched by it. Accordingly, Sander Klous, a partner with KPMG in the Netherlands, is quoted as saying, “We need to find ways to establish societal trust in how organizations operate in the emerging data-driven society."

He added that it is necessary to win over trust to data and analytics, though it won’t be easy. He references a saying of his native country, “Trust comes on foot and leaves on horseback." So there is no easy fix, but the report does hold out hope, offering seven key recommendations for enhancing trust in D & A.

They are:

  • Start with the basics: assess your trust gaps.

  • Create purpose: clarify and align goals.

  • Raise awareness: increase internal engagement.

  • Build expertise: develop an internal D&A culture and capabilities as your first guardian of trust.

  • Encourage transparency: open the "black box" to a second set of eyes; and a third.

  • Take a 360-degree view: build your ecosystems, portfolios, and communities.

  • Be innovative: enable experimentation.

The last point relates to the interview with Dr. Mark Kennedy of Imperial College, London, which was cited in the report. He offers this insight:

  • I often tell executives that if they aren’t setting aside enough people and resources to try new things, they’re going to be permanently stuck in yesterday. You need to accept a level of risk and conduct the kinds of trials that start to increase learning and build trust.

 

About the Author(s)

Ariella Brown

Ariella Brown

Ariella holds a PhD in English and has taught writing to college and graduate students. Since 2005 she has served as a scorer for the SAT essay. She is the owner of Write Way Productions, which publishes Kallah Magazine. Her freelance writing services include articles, press releases, letters, blogs, Web content development, editing, and ad copy, as well as ad design.

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