AIIM Research Shows Just 10% of Organizations Have a Workable Information Governance Policy

Data leaks and security breaches push information governance up the corporate agenda, due to concern about excess litigation costs, loss of intellectual property and damage to reputation


SILVER SPRING, Md., May 20, 2014 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- via PRWEB - Many organizations feel that they are at risk because of a lack of information governance polices, according to new AIIM research launched today, with data lapses over the past 12 months sharpening focus on the security and privacy elements of information governance.

The survey of more than 500 business leaders revealed that although electronic records are "increasing rapidly" in 68 percent of organizations, just 10 percent of respondents have an information governance policy in place that is respected and enforced. Twenty-one percent have a policy in place, but it is mostly ignored.

The new study, 'Automating Information Governance – assuring compliance' by independent information management analysts AIIM, looks at how the security of information assets is increasingly on the corporate agenda.

"The impact of data leaks and security breaches over the past year has brought the security and privacy elements of information governance into focus more than ever before," said Doug Miles, Director Market Intelligence, AIIM. "Massive data leaks of personal information have damaged corporate reputations and organizations need to work much harder to protect and preserve content."

The survey also found a strong movement away from narrowly focused records management policies, to the much wider scope of information governance across all active and stored content.

With only 12 percent of respondents confident they store only what they are required to store, 43 percent said that automated classification was the only way to keep up with the rapidly increasing information volumes. Just 14 percent are already using automation although a further 35 percent have immediate plans to do so.

The three biggest benefits from automated classification according to research participants were improved searchability (48 percent), higher productivity (29 percent) and defensible compliance (29 percent).

To be successful, automated projects need to be matched with a comprehensive information governance policy. However, of those with an agreed policy, only 19 percent regularly audit for compliance. Forty percent do not allocate any staff time for information governance training, and only four percent specifically update senior management. Creating a comprehensive information governance policy is a major task, and the keys to success are senior management endorsement and staff engagement.

"The reality for organizations now is that many more types of content and information need to be governed, but the volume, velocity and variety of it makes it virtually impossible to manually maintain the all-important metadata and so automation is a critical requirement," said Miles. "We would encourage any organization to get senior buy-in around their information governance policy. It is a business issue, not an IT one and CEOs must be aware of the requirements and the best ways of meeting those."

The research for 'Automating Information Governance – assuring compliance' was underwritten in part by ASG, AvePoint, CCube Solutions, Concept Searching, IBM, and OpenText. The full report can be downloaded here.

The survey was taken using a web-based tool by 531 individual members of the AIIM community between March 15, and April 8, 2014.

About AIIM

AIIM has been an advocate and supporter of information professionals for 70 years. The association's mission is to ensure that information professionals understand the current and future challenges of managing information assets in an era of social, mobile, cloud and big data. Founded in 1943, AIIM builds on a strong heritage of research and member service. Today, AIIM is a global, non-profit organization that provides independent research, education and certification programs to information professionals. AIIM represents the entire information management community, with programs and content for practitioners, technology suppliers, integrators and consultants.

This article was originally distributed on PRWeb. For the original version including any supplementary images or video, visit http://www.prweb.com/releases/2014/05/prweb11866053.htm


            

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