Nathan E. Myers

Self-Service Data Analytics and Governance for Managers


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solutions that organizational leaders need to cultivate and have at hand to forge forward in their digital journey, at whatever pace is appropriate to meet digital transformation goals and objectives. This pursuit has led to billions of dollars of investment in technology across many service industries, aimed at building core competencies, increasing competitive advantage and organizational efficiency, doing more with fewer employees, or reducing employee costs and footprint.

      It is this last goal that the authors predict will prompt a surge in adoption of data analytics tooling in the next five years, across medium-to-large scale enterprises. Managers are looking to structure their spreadsheet-based processes in a more mature and robust way. By reducing the amount of unstructured processing performed manually in Excel, managers can stabilize and lock down spreadsheet-driven processes into more automated, repeatable, structured, and time-efficient processing steps. By minimizing time spent in performing routinized processing steps, and by minimizing process variance through emulating system processing, the spreadsheet-based jobs of the past will evolve to remove the least value-added steps in the processing chain. While this book cannot but acknowledge many of these data analytics capabilities and technologies, its focus will be around one subset of the wide body of data analytics disciplines – self-service data analytics.

Schematic illustration of the Building Daily Productivity.

      The self-service data analytics toolset is an important growing subset of the suite of data analytics tools that is emerging as a focal point of digital transformations across large companies. It is distinct from the other sets of tools in the analytics toolkit in important ways. Self-service tools are typically off-the-shelf vendor products with which individual operators, not technologists, can interact and configure directly, due to their ease of use. Process owners that have no prior technology background and that may have never seen a piece of code are well equipped to lay out a customized, automated process, armed only with their knowledge of the raw data and the processing steps they previously performed in spreadsheets. Intelligent source data parsing and drag-and-drop operations replace SQL and Visual Basic commands, enabling the most inexperienced, inexpert, if not maladroit and bungling of us to quickly roll up our sleeves, forge and test processing steps, and implement a processing workflow, all in an afternoon (“small” automation).

      There are any number of relevant and overlapping frameworks that cover portions of IT governance and even portions of data analytics governance in the finance and accounting environment. However, no single framework exists that is fit for the universe of self-service data analytics builds. We will draw from mature system governance, model governance, data governance, process governance, SOX 404, COSO IC (internal control framework for the financial reporting process), COSO ERM, and COBIT 2019 (ISACA) frameworks, and even the AICPA's Statements on Auditing Standards – to sketch a foundational governance model that your organization can implement and build upon as necessary. This must be done early and determinedly, so it is in place and can play a formative role in safeguarding your organization, as it embarks on its inevitable digital journey.

      Let's look at the environment from the perspective of the employee.

      Generically, these operators are analysts, though very often, actual analysis is only a sliver of their day, compared to the time spent on the raw processing steps they are expected to perform, prior to generating output for evaluative analysis. Such processing steps likely include capturing information from a number of sources, enriching the data to assemble suitably rich datasets, before completing further processing steps and transformation steps to yield final outputs in the form of information and reports. It is really only at this point that the operator can embark on true analysis in earnest.

      If an organization is large enough to be layered, a pecking order emerges. More junior, if not entry-level, staff will be buried in the assembly of information and information processing. Over time, if they are