Opinion & Analysis
Why scoring governance feels safe - and why CDOs pay the price.
Written by: Jenna Zhou | Distinguished Engineer, Dell
Updated 2:46 PM UTC, May 28, 2026

Enterprise data governance is gaining renewed momentum as organizations enter the AI era, with growing emphasis on balancing access, trust, and speed. For CDOs, effective governance enables faster AI adoption, trusted decision automation, and reduced risk as generative AI (GenAI), RAG, and agentic systems embed proprietary data directly into business operational workflows and decision-making loops. Enterprise data governance is re-emerging as a results-driven imperative and foundational capability.
Despite this shift, many organizations continue to rely on traditional data governance maturity models as the primary mechanism for establishing governance, assuming these models will define a baseline and provide a reliable way to measure progress.
In practice, this approach frequently becomes the very factor that slows governance initiatives and ultimately stalls momentum. It often has serious consequences for data leadership credibility and tenure.
A data governance maturity model is a structured framework that describes how an organization’s governance capabilities evolve typically across 5 stages, such as:
Each stage characterizes the maturity of people, processes, technologies, and decision rights involved in governing data.
The intent of the model is to provide a shared language for assessing the current state, defining a target state, and sequencing as an evolving capability rather than a one‑time implementation.
Data governance maturity models have long been a default starting point for organizations. They are easy to understand and simple to communicate. They are also widely adopted across consulting frameworks, operating models, and transformation playbooks.
Their structured, stage-based logic makes them attractive, and today, they are just as likely to be recommended by AI-generated guidance. As a result, maturity models have become one of the most common ways organizations attempt to establish and scale enterprise data governance.
Organizations typically adopt maturity models for four main reasons:
For example, at stage 1, no enterprise governance, teams make decisions; at stage 2, centralized governance for consistent KPI reporting; stage 3, federated governance with domain execution; stage 4, the product team decides with enterprise guardrail; and at stage 5, automated governance with machines making most decisions within explicitly defined boundaries.
Maturity models assume linear, uniform advancement, yet enterprise data environments are inherently uneven. Organizations may be highly mature in regulated domains while lagging in unstructured, operational, or AI-driven data. Although some organizations have moved towards a more evidence-based approach, because of the messy state in most organizations, most assessments are often based on qualitative judgment rather than objective evidence, leading aggregated scores to obscure real risks and misstate true progress.
When perception-based scores fail to reflect real progress or value delivered, teams feel undervalued, eroding morale and trust in the governance program. For CDOs and data executives, this misalignment undermines credibility, limits investment, and fuels skepticism – leading governance initiatives to be deprioritized or canceled not for lack of progress, but for lack of recognized impact.
At the executive level, maturity scores can signal that governance is “on track” even when foundational gaps remain. This false confidence delays critical decisions and investment in data quality, security, and AI readiness, such as bias, explainability, and accountability. When failures surface – often through AI incidents or regulatory scrutiny – the gap between perceived and operational reality finally becomes visible and costly to fix.
Maturity models emphasize visible governance artifacts – policies, councils, catalogs, and roles – over measurable business and AI outcomes. When disconnected from decision quality, delivery speed, or risk reduction, governance is perceived as administrative overhead rather than an enabler of value, weakening executive sponsorship.
Repeated assessments, often driven by consulting or audit cycles, become resource-intensive with diminishing returns. Organizations expend increasing efforts on measurement while actual governance improvement stalls, creating fatigue among data teams and frustration among business stakeholders.
While a maturity model can provide a shared framework for discussion and team alignment, maturity scores are frequently used to compare teams or domains, encouraging competition around scoring rather than collaboration on the most complex, high-risk governance challenges. Teams strive for assessment of performance rather than a meaningful impact.
Although a certain level of structure is necessary to avoid chaos, stage-based models encourage organizations to lock in governance structures before data usage, especially AI-driven usage, is fully understood. In fast-moving environments, this rigidity constrains innovation and limits adaptability as business needs evolve. The challenge is finding the right balance between structure and flexibility when applying the maturity model.
Maturity models deliver measurable governance improvements over quarters or years – if at all, especially in large organizations. In the AI era, where impact is expected quickly, organizations lack the patience for governance approaches whose outcomes materialize too slowly to drive meaningful results. As a result, using data governance maturity models as the primary driver for AI-era outcomes is increasingly misaligned with business reality.
When applied thoughtfully, a data governance maturity model can serve as a navigation aid rather than a scorecard. Its true value lies in fostering informed discussions about tradeoffs: speed versus control, centralization versus autonomy, and standardization versus flexibility – rather than in assigning a numeric maturity level.
Traditional data governance maturity models rely heavily on subjective, perception-based scoring that obscures real operational risk. While they create the appearance of progress, they often mask capability gaps, reinforce false executive confidence, and leave organizations exposed precisely when analytics and AI begin influencing high‑value decisions.
In an AI-driven enterprise, mistaking perceived maturity for true readiness is no longer a tolerable risk – it directly impacts execution speed, risk exposure, and business outcomes.
As enterprises move deeper into AI-driven decision-making, leading organizations are evolving beyond static maturity frameworks toward governance approaches that emphasize fitness for purpose, continuous adaptation, and measurable business outcomes.
In this context, the executive question is no longer how mature our governance looks, but whether it enables the enterprise to deploy AI with confidence, accountability, and velocity.
This requires a fundamentally different approach to enterprise data governance – one built for the realities of the AI era.
*In my next article in this series, I’ll outline how to establish that kind of governance in practice. Stay tuned.
About the Author:
Jenna Zhou is an Enterprise Architecture, Data & AI leader with a proven track record at Fortune 500 companies. Currently a Distinguished Engineer (Data Management & AI) with Dell where she has been growing her leadership and expertise through Product MDM, Customer MDM, Enterprise Data Quality, EMC Integration, GDPR, Data Governance and Strategy, Data Products, Data Marketplace, and Data Mesh, etc. Most recently, Jenna has built the Enterprise Information Architecture team from the scratch, spearheading Data as a Product initiative and is currently leading the Data Management Technical Authority team, influencing cross functional, cross BU teams and executives on future ready enterprise data management directions.
Before joining Dell, Jenna was with Eli Lilly where she initiated and achieved executive buy-in on data centric IT transformation well ahead of the industry. Jenna also briefly worked for Lenovo as the Director of Enterprise Architecture and re-established the Enterprise Architecture function there.