According to numbers compiled by Statista, prior to COVID-19, just 17% of U.S. employees worked from home five or more days a week. After the pandemic? The number shot up to 44%.
Chances are, your business was one of those that was forced to flip the switch seemingly overnight. This meant the usual steps you take when making a major organizational change—strategizing, planning out, systematically executing—were thrown out the window in exchange for rapidly enabling a work-from-anywhere workforce.
While it’s understandable that your primary goal during this mad dash was to get remote tools up and running for your teams to be productive, simply letting people work from home is only half the battle.
With remote work trends not returning to their previous numbers any time soon, it’s time to focus on the critical steps that may have been missed in your compressed timeframe.
First and foremost, this means dedicating time and energy on proper data governance. Let’s dive deeper into what it is and how you can put it to work—quickly—in your organization.
To develop these processes, you need to conduct a thorough assessment of you data and current capabilities, including:
You can learn more about how the shift to remote work has impacted data governance here. But if you’re ready to dive into how to enact it, keep on reading.
Following this assessment, as you build out your governance plans for remote work, your guiding light needs to be enacting security at the cloud or on-premises level rather than on individual machines.
In this stage, your four areas of focus should be:
Of course, no governance plan is solid without the security measures in place to back the governance up, which is why it’s critical for you to utilize tools that both create an environment where data is accessible while ensuring breaches are minimal.
Tools we often recommend include:
By leveraging these types of security features, you will be in a much better position to actually enforce your measures without relying on your dispersed teams to always follow proper governance practices.
Every sound data protection plan assumes that breaches are a matter of when and not if—including plans centered around enabling remote work.
By applying proper governance at the on-premises or cloud level rather than relying on the security of individual machines, your business can go a long way toward ensuring your data is safe and only accessible to the right parties no matter where, or how, your team works.
To learn more about steps you can take to keep your data safe even when your employees are spread far and wide, check out our Workplace Modernization page.