Iron Mountain Study Shows Data Archives Represent Blind Spot,
Business Opportunity for Most Organizations
BOSTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--
Iron
Mountain (NYSE: IRM) today announced the results of the landmark
studyi, “Mining for Insight: Rediscovering the Data Archive,”
an IDC white paper, sponsored by Iron Mountain. The results confirm
every executive’s worst nightmare: Organizations of all sizes and across
industries are drowning in data, unable to effectively mine their data
archives for key insights that could ultimately improve business
outcomes. However, the findings also indicate that a subset of
organizations are in fact successfully leveraging their data archives
and the benefits are impressive – as much as an additional $10M in
revenue from streamlined IT and customer service operations.
To see the full results of the research, please visit: www.ironmountain.com/DataRedefined
The research reveals that organizations with a well-defined data archive
process stand to realize value from two potential avenues: cost savings
and added revenue from monetizing archives. On the savings front, more
than half of the organizations polled realized $1M or more in savings
over the past year from risk mitigation and avoidance of litigation,
with the top 21 percent reporting savings of more than $10M. Similarly,
44 percent of organizations reaped $1M or more in savings stemming from
reduced operational or capital costs, with the top 18 percent capturing
more than $10M.
More striking is an organization’s ability to draw new revenue from an
effectively managed data archive. While 39 percent of companies surveyed
benefited from an additional $1M or more in revenue, the top 15 gained
more than $10M. On average, companies polled saw an additional $7.5M in
new revenue streams from their data archive.
Despite leaving money on the table, the majority of organizations – 76
percent – believe they are already maximizing the value of their
archives, making data archiving a real blind spot for business leaders.
With only 38 percent of companies using archives for business analysis,
a critical process to drive additional revenue by better understanding
markets, improving products and service delivery and better serving
customers, it’s clear that the majority of respondents are not truly
leveraging the power of their archive.
Of the 24 percent of businesses that acknowledge they could be
leveraging their archives more effectively, nearly three quarters
believe they could be extracting two times or more value than they
realize today, with more than a quarter believing they could gain five
times or more value.
To help organizations bridge the disconnect between perception and
reality, Iron Mountain and IDC recommend organizations implement the
following processes:
-
Appoint a Chief Data Officer to oversee and derive value from
the data archive, while working closely with the Chief Operating and
Chief Information Officers to set long-term business and data
strategies.
-
Develop Information Maps of all data sources and repositories
(and their value) across the organization.
-
Implement a holistic, consistent archiving strategy that
addresses data retention schedules, use cases, the value of data,
necessary accessibility and archive costs.
-
Consider working with a third party vendor with specific
expertise to help optimize your archiving solution while freeing up
internal IT resources to focus on more strategic and innovative work.
Other Key Findings
-
More data, more problems: Most companies maintain six or
more electronic archives, storing a range of structured and
unstructured data.
-
Process makes perfect: A staggering 88 percent of organizations
lack a uniform process for archiving across data types, making it hard
to identify and access important information when needed.
-
Organizations panic when confronting information overload:
Without a clear process and pressure from the top to implement Big
Data programs, more than 40 percent of organizations simply archive
everything to avoid investing time and resources upfront to determine
what’s truly important.
-
Unclear archiving processes make data unusable: Over time,
companies archiving everything quickly amass “data swamps,” making
data hard to find when needed, as opposed to the “data lakes” many
businesses aspire to create with a crystal clear data archiving
strategy for quick and easy information retrieval.
Iron Mountain Quote
Eileen Sweeney, Senior Vice President
and General Manager, Data Management, Iron Mountain
“Data
archiving isn’t just about meeting legal and compliance requirements
anymore. The research shows that there are real financial benefits to be
realized by implementing an effective data archiving strategy. To truly
leverage the power of enterprise information, organizations must first
take a hard look at their data management program. Even organizations
with advanced archiving processes can stand to gain cost savings and
additional revenue streams.”
IDC Quote
Sean Pike, Program Director, eDiscovery and
Information Governance Research, IDC
“There’s a real disconnect
between the value people think they’re currently realizing from their
archives and the potential additional revenue they could stand to gain
by simply managing their data more effectively. However, organizations
of all sizes and across all industries can expect to see an uptick in
revenue and cost savings by revisiting their archives to fulfill
business objectives. This is especially critical in today’s
information-driven economy, where the key to success or failure comes
down to how effectively businesses can manage data and how quickly they
can act on that information.”
About Iron Mountain
Iron Mountain Incorporated (NYSE: IRM)
is a leading provider of storage and information management services.
The company’s real estate network of over 67 million square feet across
more than 1,000 facilities in 36 countries allows it to serve customers
with speed and accuracy. And its solutions for records
management, data
management, document
management, and secure
shredding help organizations to lower storage costs, comply with
regulations, recover from disaster, and better use their information for
business advantage. Founded in 1951, Iron Mountain stores and protects
billions of information assets, including business documents, backup
tapes, electronic files and medical data. Visit www.ironmountain.com
for more information.
i IDC for Iron Mountain. IDC surveyed 1,011 members of senior
and executive management involved in data archiving from organizations
with more than 500 employees across a broad range of industries.
Participating countries include the United States, Canada, the United
Kingdom, France, Spain, Netherlands, Germany and Australia. Respondents
were from IT departments and Legal/Compliance departments as well as
lines of business. They were asked about their current archiving
strategies and processes, the business value of their data archives and
how satisfied they are with their access to archived information for a
variety of business use cases.

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Source: Iron Mountain