Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Data steward

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A data steward is a person responsible for the management and fitness of data elements - both the content and metadata. Data stewards have a specialist role that incorporates processes, policies, guidelines and responsibilities for administering organizations' entire data in compliance with policy and/or regulatory obligations. A data steward may share some responsibilities with a data custodian.

Contents

The overall objective of a data steward is data quality, in regard to the key/critical data elements existing within a specific enterprise operating structure, of the elements in their respective domains. This includes capturing/documenting (meta)information for their elements (such as: definitions, related rules/governance, physical manifestation, related data models, etc. With most of these properties being specific to an attribute/concept relationship), identifying owners/custodians/various responsibilities, relations insight pertaining to attribute quality, aiding with project requirement data facilitation and documentation of capture rules.

Data stewards begin the stewarding process with the identification of the elements which they will steward, with the ultimate result being standards, controls and data entry. The steward works closely with business glossary standards analysts (for standards), with data architect/modelers (for standards), with DQ analysts (for controls) and with operations team members (good-quality data going in per business rules) while entering data.

Data stewardship roles are common when organizations attempt to exchange data precisely and consistently between computer systems and to reuse data-related resources. Master data management often makes references to the need for data stewardship for its implementation to succeed. Data stewardship must have precise purpose, fit for purpose or fitness.

Data Steward Responsibilities

A data steward ensures that each assigned data element:

  1. Has clear and unambiguous data element definition.
  2. Does not conflict with other data elements in the metadata registry (removes duplicates, overlap etc.)
  3. Has clear enumerated value definitions if it is of type Code.
  4. Is still being used (remove unused data elements)
  5. Is being used consistently in various computer systems
  6. Is being used, fit for purpose = Data Fitness.
  7. Has adequate documentation on appropriate usage and notes
  8. Documents the origin and sources of authority on each metadata element
  9. Is protected against unauthorised access or change

Benefits of data stewardship

Systematic data stewardship can foster fitness through:

  1. consistent use of data management resources
  2. easy mapping of data between computer systems and exchange documents
  3. lower costs associated with migration to (for example) Service Oriented Architecture (SOA)

Assignment of each data element to a person sometimes seems like an unimportant process. But many groups have found that users have greater trust and usage rates in systems where they can contact a person with questions on each data element.

Examples

The EPA metadata registry furnishes an example of data stewardship. Note that each data element therein has a "POC" (point of contact).

Data Stewardship Applications

A new market for data governance applications is emerging, one in which both technical and business staff — stewards — manage policies. These new applications, like previous generations, deliver a strong business glossary capability, but they don't stop there. Vendors are introducing additional features addressing the roles of business in addition to technical stewards' concerns.

Information stewardship applications are business solutions used by business users acting in the role of information steward (interpreting and enforcing information governance policy, for example). These developing solutions represent, for the most part, an amalgam of a number of disparate, previously IT-centric tools already on the market, but are organized and presented in such a way that information stewards (a business role) can support the work of information policy enforcement as part of their normal, business-centric, day-to-day work in a range of use cases.

The initial push for the formation of this new category of packaged software came from operational use cases — that is, use of business data in and between transactional and operational business applications. This is where most of the master data management (MDM) efforts are undertaken in organizations. However, there is also now a faster-growing interest in the new data lake arena for more analytical use cases.

References

Data steward Wikipedia