If you can answer that question for your data, you will achieve the greatest success possible: governance that is invisible, sustainable, and eventually, boring. And boring data governance is the only successful data governance. This article is based on the principles established by Robert S. Seiner and the KIK Consulting group. For organizations looking to move from policing to enabling, the Non-Invasive approach remains the only proven model for enterprise scale.
Traditional data governance has failed. Not because the data wasn't important, but because the methodology was designed for a world that no longer exists. We built fortresses around data when the business was building speedboats. If you can answer that question for your
is the maturation of the discipline. It acknowledges that the best way to steer a ship is not to tie the sailors to the mast, but to make the rudder so smooth that turning toward the right direction is actually easier than going straight. Seiner and the KIK Consulting group
This article explores why the path of least resistance is actually the fastest route to high-quality, trustworthy data, and why force is the enemy of success. To understand why NIDG works, we must first diagnose why traditional governance breaks. Most organizations attempt a "Top-Down, Stick-Based" model. Not because the data wasn't important, but because
Enter . Popularized by Robert S. Seiner, NIDG is not merely a softer approach; it is a strategic realignment. It operates on a radical premise: Governance already exists within your organization. You just haven’t formalized it.
Take those three rules. Implement them as lightweight controls. If the rule is "Customer names cannot be blank," add a validation rule in the CRM. If the rule is "Product categories must align to finance codes," build a simple lookup table. Do not build a dashboard yet.