Despite billions of dollars invested globally in cloud platforms, AI tools, and data infrastructure, many organizations continue to operate with an outdated mindset, where the IT team ‘handles the data,’ while business leaders focus on revenue, customers, and operations.
This split is the reason why so many data initiatives fall short. When CEOs and business leaders view data as something that lives in systems rather than in decisions, they unintentionally disconnect the asset from the value it can generate. This leads to disappointing outcomes such as overengineered technology, underutilized insights, and transformation programs that fail to deliver the promised impact.
Many companies seek highly specialized talent for analytics, governance, or AI, but they cannot articulate the business outcome they want to achieve. Teams often ask for help cleaning or organizing their data without understanding how that data will ultimately support their operations and wider business strategy. Business leaders that are not sufficiently data literate often defer crucial data decisions to technical teams who simply don’t have the institutional context to determine value or priority.
This is why business leaders must take ownership over data decisions
There’s nothing wrong with asking input from technical experts, but leaders must make the final decision and understand the rationale behind them.
If data is the fuel for an organization’s decision?making, innovation, and customer understanding, then the responsibility for data must sit with the leaders who set the direction of the business. However, this shift won’t happen until organizations recognize that data is not a by-product of operations; it is a business asset as critical as capital, brand, and intellectual property.
The cost of poor data governance
Poor data governance leads to duplicated efforts, bad decisions, compliance risks, and wasted investment. This results in many problems down the chain, including inaccurate reporting leading to flawed forecasts, operational inefficiencies, and AI models producing biased or unreliable output. The negative financial impact is significant, with over a quarter of businesses losing more than $5 million each year to poor data quality.
Proper data governance should not be dismissed as unnecessary bureaucracy
Instead, it should be the foundation for trustworthy insight. When governance is seen as a technical exercise, it fails. In contrast, if business leaders embrace it, data is able to deliver significant value to the organization.
Unlocking the value of data
To harness the value of data, organizations need to implement three key actions.
1. Assign clear ownership at the business level
Every critical dataset, such as customers, finances, supply chain, or operations, should have a defined business owner. This should not be someone who understands the systems, but someone who understands the outcomes the data supports. Ownership is the foundation for accountability and without it, governance is just theoretical.
2
Introduce data quality metrics that matter Businesses measure what they want to improve, which is why data quality is so important. Data quality is not abstract, and it can be quantified through metrics such as completeness, accuracy, timeliness, and consistency.
3. Align data performance with business outcomes
Data should not be treated as a “nice-to-have.” It should be directly linked to measurable business value, such as faster reporting cycles, lower regulatory and compliance risks, and improved customer insights and personalization.
Winners of the data age
The companies that will succeed in the coming years aren’t the ones with the most sophisticated technology stacks or the largest analytics teams. They will be the ones that treat data with the discipline, stewardship, and strategic focus reserved for their most valuable business assets.
Ultimately, data is not merely a technical resource
It is the foundation of modern business competitiveness. It influences every decision, shapes every customer interaction, and fuels every innovation initiative, from automation to AI. But, like any asset, its value is only realized when it is intentionally managed, actively governed, and clearly owned.
The companies that appreciate data as an asset of the entire business will move faster, operate smarter, and innovate ahead of their competitors. On the other hand, the ones that don’t will find themselves surrounded by tools, dashboards, and reports, but will still be unable to turn any of these into meaningful advantage.
