While the DPO may be accountable for ensuring data protection, every employee in your business has a responsibility towards it.
Often, employees view privacy and data security as legal or compliance issues. But help your staff to understand why data security and information privacy is such an important issue, and they’re more likely to take it seriously. Make them understand how their individual contribution can have a big impact and they will incorporate good data management principles into their everyday activities.
When your employees are properly trained, so they understand WHY they need to perform certain actions, rather than just telling them WHAT you want them to do, they feel invested in the business and you eliminate any guess work about the right course of action.
GDPR isn’t just a new law, it’s a new mindset. Therefore, incorporating your data policies into business-as-usual will require you to change the working practices of every employee in your organisation. The most important way of ensuring these changes stick is making a cultural shift in the way your organisation operates.
Include people and make them feel part of the change and empower them to take ownership of their individual contribution. If you give people greater responsibility over data privacy, they will actively follow your policies, and proactively seek ways to improve them.
Now, when they find that a step in your process doesn’t work, or could be done a different/better way, rather than find a way to work around it, they’ll speak up and identify ways for you to continuously improve.
Despite the fact that there’s hardly a role in modern business that doesn’t come in to contact with customer data, it’s surprising that training on data protection isn’t a standard part of a company’s induction programme.
And yet it should be.
ACTION:
Create a data protection training plan. Start by looking at who needs training. And in what form. Do they need role-specific training? Or something more general? Then ensure you have the ability to track when that training has taken place, and assess how frequently it needs to be refreshed. When employees feel confident about their interactions with your data, they’ll follow your security protocols, and are less likely to cause an incident.