Editor's Note: Take a look at our featured best practice, Pathways to Data Monetization (27-slide PowerPoint presentation). We are living in the Age of Data. Every company operating today is essentially a data company. However, only 1 inf 12 are monetizing data to its full extent. For organizations to achieve Data Monetization, there are 2 pathways they can take--one with an internal focus and the other with an [read more]
Data Valuation
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There is abundance of data being generated and stored by organizations across the globe. Data storage is growing at the pace of around 40% per year. Digital assets are of immense value for organizations. However, not too many organizations know the real worth of their data.
Technological disruption and adoption of Big Data and Analytics as the major engine to creating priceless insights and a Learning Culture has pushed the organizations to know how much their data assets actually value. Data Valuation, moreover, plays a key role in evaluating M&A deals, bankruptcy filings, and sales of data assets.
Enterprises are increasingly gathering and analyzing vast pools of data generated on a daily basis to know more about their customers’ requirements and preferences. For instance, Microsoft purchased LinkedIn for $26.2 billion in 2016. The major drive behind this acquisition of LinkedIn was the 433 million registered users (100 million active users) and the vast pools of valuable data that they generated each day.
Instead of valuing their data assets, organizations are generally more concerned about the issues associated with data storage, security, access, and analysis. These issues are the core responsibility of the IT function however, the IT unit alone is incapable of making the call to transform data into business value.
At most companies there aren’t any Data Valuation practices in place. In the name of Data Valuation practices, the most that majority of the organizations embark on include time and effort-intensive Data Classification efforts.
These Data Classification initiatives typically require categorization of terabytes of data into “critical,” “important,” and “other” groups. The “other” category is often challenging to categorize due to its context-specific nature. The valuation of this category is complicated as it is based on a number of attributes, e.g. content, usage, age, author, frequency, history, revenue potential, security needed etc.
To work around these challenges, executives need to formalize their data valuation practices into a structured Data Valuation Framework. The Data Valuation Framework is a combination of 3 sources of value:
- Value of Data as a Strategic Asset – Deals with analyzing the availability, usability, and monetization of customer data that has the potential to produce critical insights.
- Value of Data in Usage – Pertains to mapping the usage frequency, workload, and transaction rate of data across organizational applications and systems.
- Expected Future Value of Data – Data assets are typically tracked with other intangible assets, e.g., goodwill, patents. However, their recognizable market-based transactions, revenue generated through savings, and cost borne to create / substitute them are important to measure their value.
Whichever way a business takes to incorporate Data Valuation into its overall strategy, research brings to light a practical 3-step approach that organizations can embrace to implement Data Valuation practices.
- Define and Disseminate Data Valuation Policies Across the Board.
- Develop Internal Data Valuation Capabilities.
- Select and Establish Appropriate Data Valuation Processes.
Let’s delve deeper into the first step of the Data Valuation implementation approach.
Define and Disseminate Data Valuation Policies Across the Board.
The 1st step involves clearly outlining, classifying, and sharing Data Valuation policies throughout the organization. Leadership should analyze whether there is a practice to develop a data catalog—to track all data assets and their utilization—already in place at the organization. The business case for Data Valuation is often an internal security audit to assess data risks, a desire to evaluate which business units produce the most data volume, and the cost and value associated with data volume growth, or an M&A.
Interested in learning more about the other steps to valuating Data assets? You can download an editable PowerPoint on Data Valuation here on the Flevy documents marketplace.
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About Mark Bridges
Mark Bridges is a Senior Director of Strategy at Flevy. Flevy is your go-to resource for best practices in business management, covering management topics from Strategic Planning to Operational Excellence to Digital Transformation (view full list here). Learn how the Fortune 100 and global consulting firms do it. Improve the growth and efficiency of your organization by leveraging Flevy's library of best practice methodologies and templates. Prior to Flevy, Mark worked as an Associate at McKinsey & Co. and holds an MBA from the Booth School of Business at the University of Chicago. You can connect with Mark on LinkedIn here.Top 6 Recommended Documents on Data Monetization
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