GOVERNANCE FRAMEWORKS

Business Glossary

A business glossary is a self-contained collection of categories and terms or sub-categories contained within each category. The terms may be semantically mapped to objects throughout the rest of the repository, such as tables and columns in a data model. Once mapped, you may perform semantic lineage traces such as definition lookups and term semantic usage across any configurations containing the business glossary, mappings and mapped objects.

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Improves Communication Between IT and Business

A business glossary provides a list of terms that are important to a specific business. The glossary should be unique in its terms and definitions to ensure its completeness and accuracy. Through listing the definitions, examples, synonyms, and so on of specific terms, individuals throughout various departments of a business will be able to communicate without issue.

A business glossary will prove especially beneficial when dealing with communication between IT personnel and customer service, or web developers and a sales manager. A glossary will help ensure all team members are on the same page without employees having to repeatedly explain terms to one another and draw out different versions of a definition. The glossary keeps definitions consistent and puts them in an easy-to-reference location, saving everyone time. Moreover, when a dedicated tool is used to capture the business terms, it is often linked to a data dictionary and this helps IT better connect the business metadata to the technical metadata.

Promotes Understanding

Terms are sometimes used interchangeably or differently from one business to the next, such as with the example of “customer” and “client.” Varied terms and usages will be identified in a business glossary and will essentially help to improve understanding within a business.

Having core concepts in a business glossary, like “monthly sales,” along with the definition of a “sale” itself, the “beginning” and “end” of a month, and sales categorized by “region” will prevent confusion and result in more useful, accurate reports. Let’s not even mention getting consensus on the meaning of “bi-weekly”. Is it every two weeks or twice a week? Ask two people and you might get two different answers if such an artifact does not exist in the organization.

Incorporates Workflow

Whenever a business has multiple departments, it is common for each branch of employees to define their own sect of terminology. However, this can cause disruption and misunderstanding. A business glossary is available and implemented as part of the policies and procedures, it prevents the silo effect and creates an effective form of collective workflow.

Enriches Training

A complete business glossary is a useful tool for new and existing employees alike. It offers a more efficient way of providing accurate information that is easily accessible. Also, an in-depth business glossary will offer a comprehensive search feature that not only defines the terminology, but also includes details that promote data control such as analytical KPIs, metadata, and processes.

Gives Ownership

An effective business glossary will be routinely updated with new content, which should be verified and approved. Whether the business owner or an appointed individual or third party completes this final check of accuracy, the approval process establishes ownership and safeguards the legitimacy of the information. The beneficial downstream effect is that this ownership often rolls over into business ownership over data quality requirements, data stewardship, process management, and so on, over the same business and data domain.

Establishes Trust

A business glossary reduces the likelihood of terms being misunderstood or improperly used, which often results in incorrect data reports and dashboards. For instance, a report developer may compile information and run multiple tests based on his/ her understanding of certain terms. With pride the developer presents the report to the end user, who complains about it.

Perhaps the developer missed an error in the conversion, calculation, or testing of data. On the other hand a mix-up between the developer and end user may have transpired, due to lack of proper term usage. And even after the mix-up is cleared up, it is bound to happen again. This is a common mishap when an organization does not have a business glossary in place.

Increases Efficiency

When all team members understand the terms and definitions of the business glossary, they are better equipped to make informed decisions, and complete tasks with confidence, which increases overall productivity.

Conversely, when all parties involved have easy access to the business glossary, as well as a mutual understanding of the terms and how they correlate with various data points and metrics, it reduces errors and delays on how data should be transformed into information.

Reduce costs, improve the value of your data and boost business agility and profitability.

 

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