7 Steps to Kickstart Your GDPR compliance

After years of warning and clarifications, the time is nearly here. Enforcement of the EU’s General Data Privacy Regulation (GDPR) is due to start on May 25, 2018. Affected organizations find themselves at vary states of readiness, with some years into their journey and others just now realizing the mountainous effort required to achieve compliance. If you find yourself in the latter camp, don’t despair. The hardest part of any long journey is starting. Here are seven steps to help start you down the path.

​After years of warning and clarifications, the time is nearly here.  Enforcement of the EU’s General Data Privacy Regulation (GDPR) is due to start on May 25, 2018.  Affected organizations find themselves at vary states of readiness, with some years into their journey and others just now realizing the mountainous effort required to achieve compliance.

If you find yourself in the latter camp, don’t despair.  The hardest part of any long journey is starting.  Here are seven steps to help start you down the path.

Step 1 – Determine if you are subject to GDPR

The GDPR’s primary focus is on the rights of European citizens.  As such, where a company is based or even where data is housed is not the primary considerations.  The mandate extends to all companies that process data to offer goods or services to European residents or that monitor the behavior of European residents.  Any company that collects—or even just processes—personal data of EU citizens is subject to the law. 

Step 2 – Learn the basics

Here are a few key terms and concepts:

Tip:  Ignore the alarmists.  Many GDPR consultants and software vendors menacingly tout the law’s maximum fine of €20M or 4% of annual revenue, whichever is greater.  The truth is, fines of this size are reserved for repeated, serious violations.  Initial penalties will be far lower or more likely just a warning.  That doesn’t mean you should take it easy as the real risk is spending time scrambling to respond to regulator questions, taking precious attention from business goals.

Step 3 – Focus on the Key Articles

With 99 articles, the GDPR isn’t going to be anyone’s light summer reading.  Not every article is created equal and it can help to focus first on the most important.

Step 4 – Appoint a Data Protection Officer (If You Need To)

Not every organization will need a DPO, but with estimates of DPO positions topping 75,000, the time to determine if you need one is now.  Under GDPR, a DPO is required for all public authorities, organizations which regularly process personal data on a large scale, and when sensitive data is processed. 

GDPR language is maddeningly short on what terms such as “large scale” and “sensitive” mean, but DPO’s will be needed by organizations that process personal data as a core part of their business and also for any organization that captures or processes any form of tracking and profiling on the internet, including for the purposes of behavioral advertising.

Step 5 – Establish Enterprise Visibility

Most organizations, beginning their journey to GDPR compliance, understand the importance of identifying the location of personal data repositories and focus on systems as SAP, Oracle databases and middleware, Marketo, and Salesforce.  But these large systems often represent just a fraction of the systems that process personal data.  Like an iceberg, the vast majority of applications are often effectively invisible, unconsidered by the GDPR team and include SaaS applications purchased by business units with little to no involvement by IT.

Step 6 – Eliminate Personal Data Blind Spots

The funny thing about blind spots is that they are often unknown unknowns.  You don’t even know you have them. While this works great for bald spots on the back of your head, it isn’t quite so advantageous when it comes to unknown personal data repositories. Use existing or new automated discovery tools to uncover all personal data repositories across the enterprise.

Step 7 – Build Your People, Process, and Technology Arsenal

There is no silver bullet to GDPR compliance. No single application you can buy or consultant you can hire.  Instead, GDPR compliance takes a combination of people, process, and technology. 

People. Set up a cross-functional data governance team, made up of the DPO, IT leaders and business leaders from a range of functions including Compliance, Legal, HR, Customer Service, and Marketing. 

Process. Once the data governance team has defined what personal data means, they need to share this understanding across the organization. In addition, privacy rules must be documented and shared across all lines of business.

Technology.  There are a number of solutions that can accelerate and maintain GDPR compliance including case management systems for handling data subject requests, data discovery systems for finding applications (including Snow’s own GDPR Risk Assessment), structured data, and unstructured data, Identity and Access Management to track role management and who has access to which data, and Software Asset Management  which can help create the system, users, and device visibility required to ensure claims of “compliance” are based on a complete understanding of the enterprise.

Still working on how to become GDPR compliant? Why not download our new eBook 7 Steps to Kickstart Your GDPR compliance, just click on the link below.