Earlier this summer, we wrote about “getting the data right” in your benefits administration system, including a grading rubric to help you assess your data excellence. There are several concepts to unpack, and I will start doing that with this post.
In our earlier post , we emphasized that data is a root cause of many fund office challenges (from business operational complexity to the expense of technology deployments to high quality member services). Getting your data right is the path to unlocking many internal logjams and obstacles. In order to help fund administrators and unions achieve data excellence, MIDIOR has developed a comprehensive, 10-step data quality program that correlates to the 10 elements in our data grading rubric. We will tackle each element in turn in the coming weeks, starting with the first (in bold below).
Maybe this seems obvious, but the first place to start is to be sure you have an accurate list of systems and sources for your data. A seemingly simple exercise is to create your own data inventory (aka, a list), including the “provenance” of every piece of data. To get you started, figure out where the data about your members lives (including the many details about each member); do the same thing for your dependent and beneficiary data, your list of employers (maybe with multiple contacts per employer), as well as your work history or contributions data. This is a good start.
When you start digging into the details - by looking at each of these “lists” and trying to add data about your data - you will uncover some primary sources of data challenges. Even if you can’t “fix” your data sources, it’s always better to be aware of them. Start by creating a spreadsheet of all of your data elements if possible. A document will also work but a spreadsheet will be more helpful later. Then log the potential systems (sources) for each. You can start by asking yourself multiple questions about each data element. An easy place to start is to consider the typical data associated with your basic list of members. How do new members get added? Are they added manually by fund office staff? If so, where do they get their information from? Does it come from the members via a paper form? Do you receive new member lists from employers as well? What about from local union offices? Digging further into the details – do you get member’s names along with their address from the same source? Do you require an SSN or other identifier, like a Union ID for every member? Do those come from different places? For every single unique piece of data, ask these questions and log ALL of the potential sources along with the primary “system of record” for that data if you know it. Give yourself 100 points if you already have such an inventory.
Stay tuned for MIDIOR's next post on identifying Data Conflicts and Inconsistencies.
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