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Volume No. 40
Data Sharing "Rules of
the Road"
Over the past several years, my partners and I have spent
considerable time and effort applying our performance
management technologies in the Energy and Utility Sectors,
among others. One of the unique things about that sector is
the "extremely open" nature with which they share
performance information and best practices with each other.
Perhaps a little TOO OPEN? When was the last time you heard
of Proctor and Gamble sharing information with its closest
competitors THAT openly?
Am I saying that you should stop sharing information all
together? Far from it. What I am saying though, is to TAKE
SPECIAL CARE when doing so. You can instill a learning
culture and share peer to peer information, but don't do it
without taking the right precautions. As much of a paradox
it is, you can BET that P&G is one of the best benchmarkers
and learning organizations around. They are just very
deliberate and careful about how they do it.
Here are some tips that will help you "manage" the
information as you go about your benchmarking and best
practice acquisition process.
1.
Don't even THINK about sharing information in an UNBLINDED
fashion.
This is cardinal sin #1. The ONLY reason someone would want
you to do that is to be able to strip it down and glean
information for competitive gain. If the information is
blinded, the consultant won't be able to target you for that
lucrative project unless YOU want him to. And that overly
philanthropic peer company won't be able to use the data for
competitive positioning. Only you will be in control of your
data assuming it stays masked. Peer companies will often
tell you that having the data unblinded is necessary in
order to maximize value from the program. Hogwash. There are
TOO MANY ways to foster learning with blinded data that I
have discussed in previous posts for you to give in to that
kind of BS. Either share information in BLINDED FASHION or
NOT AT ALL.
2. Don't begin without clear Executive approval.
Make sure they know EXACTLY how the program will work, make
sure you know what the PROTOCOLS for that sharing are for
your company, and follow that process diligently. Trust me,
your executives are the only ones with a broad enough
purview to make good decisions and tradeoffs between
information sharing and shareholder value. Second, is a deep
concern I have about decentralized sharing that is not
managed centrally. True story: A member of one of these
"peer company" sponsored initiatives told me that despite an
"iron clad" confidentiality agreement, and the decision to
mask data, the FIRST thing that occurred at their results
meeting was an exchange of identity codes! No kidding? Do I
believe this was endorsed behavior? Absolutely not. It was,
however a direct product of information sharing being too
decentralized – to the point that the employees sharing the
codes had lost touch with their corporate policies on
information sharing.
3.
Demand Confidentiality / Non-Disclosure agreements.
I'm not talking about these little "we won't tell anyone if
you don't" type of statements. I'm talking about agreement
that will hold legal steam. Be clear about when and how the
information can be used. For example, our data cannot be
used outside of x, y or z departments for purposes other
than a, b, and c. If the information is used for purpose d
(e.g. acquisition analysis, competitive targeting, etc.), be
clear about the penalty and how it will be enforced (who
will enforce it, what jurisdiction, etc.). Also, the less
"blinded" the information is, the more complex the non-disclosure agreement must be. The first line of defense is
in what you share and what the peer company can glean from
the data. The non disclosure is your SECOND line of defense.
Once they're in, they're hard to stop.
4.
Thoroughly vet your benchmarking facilitation.
There are
many types of benchmarking facilitation options, from
boutique research houses to the mega-consultant strategy
firms to less facilitated online services. Be careful of
firms who just want your benchmark data to simply expand
their offering of consultancy services. Rather, look for
companies who have a strong program in place, the
operational expertise to give it credibility, and a track
record of providing valuable insights regardless of how much
consultancy services you buy.
5.
Make sure your partner's data management process is bullet
proofed.
Even with an iron clad NDA in place, a poorly configured
process can be as dangerous as not having an NDA at all.
Look for assurances from your vendors or partners that their
process is secure. Ask to see their process. Was it audited
or tested for compliance? Is it ISO certified in these
domains? Is the data transfer technology and platform
secure?
There you have it. A nice checklist to go through each time
someone invites you into a data sharing environment. Data
sharing can be a very rewarding game if it is played right.
But you need to be both cautious and prudent about the
process. It's kind of analogous to "let the buyer beware",
only we're dealing with bigger companies, more shareholders,
and bigger stakes!
Author:
Bob Champagne is a Vice President of Performance Management
Solutions with UMS Group, Inc., a privately held
international
management consulting organization specializing in
Performance Management tools, systems, and solutions.
Included in UMS Group's product portfolio are a wide variety
of performance tracking, reporting, and benchmarking
solutions, as well as customized performance assessments and
diagnostic services. UMS Group has consulted with
hundreds of companies across numerous industries and
geographies. Visit UMS Group at
http://www.umsgroup.com
or contact us directly at 973-335-3555.
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