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Data Governance Failure Case Studies

Short answer: governance failures usually come from missing ownership, weak definitions, poor controls, and slow incident response. The fix is an operating model that makes trusted data measurable.

In June 2025, Formula 1 officials reversed a penalty against Pierre Gasly after discovering a 77-centimetre measurement error in telemetry data. The incident exposed something far more alarming: a data governance failure at the highest level of precision sport. If it can happen in F1, it can happen in your enterprise. In most organisations, it already has.

1. The F1 Telemetry Incident: When There Is No Single Source of Truth

The Monaco pit-lane measurement relied on telemetry from multiple sources never formally reconciled. There was no authoritative source of record, no lineage tracking, and no governance control to flag the discrepancy before a decision was made.

Enterprise parallel: Finance teams running month-end close with three versions of revenue data from ERP, CRM, and data warehouse that do not agree. Decisions get made on whichever number arrived in the inbox last.

What proper governance fixes:

  • A formally defined Critical Data Element (CDE) framework naming the authoritative source for each metric
  • Data lineage so every number traces to its origin
  • Reconciliation controls surfacing discrepancies before data reaches decision-makers

2. Access Without Accountability: The Shadow Permission Problem

A pattern seen across healthcare, financial services, and public sector breaches: access controls were technically present, but stewardship was absent. Data was accessible to people with no defined role, no documented need, and no audit trail. The technical infrastructure existed. The operating model did not.

Enterprise parallel: In most large organisations, Snowflake or Azure Synapse has role-based access configured at go-live and never reviewed again. People change roles, accumulate permissions, leave teams. Nobody owns the review cycle.

What proper governance fixes:

  • A Data Stewardship model where named stewards own access review for their domain
  • Quarterly access certification workflows integrated into your data catalog
  • DLP controls flagging sensitive data movement outside approved patterns

3. The Retail MDM Disaster: 47 SKUs for One Product

A major North American retailer discovered during a supply chain crisis that the same product existed under 47 different SKU identifiers across its systems. Warehouse management, e-commerce, and finance operated on different product records with none considered the master. The result was over $100M in stranded inventory that could not be located, allocated, or liquidated because no system agreed on what existed or where.

What proper governance fixes:

  • A Master Data Management programme with a golden record strategy per entity
  • Data quality rules enforced at ingestion, not discovered in reporting
  • A data catalog mapping entity relationships across systems

4. The AI Hallucination Root Cause: Ungoverned Training Data

An insurance company deployed an LLM-based claims assistant trained on five years of internal claims data. Within weeks, it produced recommendations contradicting current policy. The model was not broken. The training data was ungoverned. Historical records contained deprecated policy language, incorrectly labelled outcomes, and data from decommissioned systems. Nobody had catalogued which records were fit for AI consumption.

What proper governance fixes:

  • An AI Readiness Assessment identifying which data assets are fit-for-purpose for training and inference
  • Data contracts enforcing schema, quality thresholds, and freshness SLAs before data reaches ML pipelines
  • Documented lineage from source system to model training dataset

5. The Merger Integration Collapse: No Semantic Agreement

Two mid-market financial services firms merged. Technical data platform integration completed on schedule. Eighteen months later, the combined entity still could not produce a consolidated client view because nobody had governed the semantic layer. “Customer” meant different things in each legacy system. Revenue recognition rules differed. KPI definitions did not align. Every dashboard told a different story.

What proper governance fixes:

  • A Business Glossary as a Day 1 deliverable in any integration programme
  • Semantic layer governance through dbt models with agreed metric definitions
  • A data stewardship council with representation from both legacy organisations

The Pattern Across All Five Cases

None of these failures were caused by bad technology. Every one had functioning platforms: Snowflake, Azure, Databricks, modern BI tools. The failure was operating model: no ownership, no standards, no enforcement, no lineage. Data governance is not a compliance checkbox. It is the operating infrastructure that makes your platform investment pay off.

DataKrypton helps enterprise data teams build the governance operating model that makes their platform trustworthy. Learn more about our approach to data governance.

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