The CTO's decision to drive digital transformation forward will impact the role of the DBA. The role of the DBA is changing to support the CTO in their mission and the business at large in monetizing data.
Digital transformation is no longer an option but an imperative for sustainable growth. While the CTO outlines the strategic narrative, DBAs serve as the force that activates data monetization—the fuel for transformation.
As data asset custodians, DBAs play a pivotal role in:
This evolution of the DBA will be vital for capitalizing on the numerous opportunities for monetizing data on a path toward continued business growth.
Going forward, the DBA is aligned with the adjusted role and mission of the CTO. They're now measured by and focused on monetizing data, embedding security into the business pipeline to ensure digital resilience, and shifting from database to data sources—building and integrating those data sources on the cloud.
The people who manage the business's data and what they do have changed in their day-to-day roles will change over time.
Businesses are moving from this labor arbitrage where they’ve added more DBAs to handle more of the database work as data grows—as unstructured data, semi-structured data, and machine data grow by orders of magnitude. They've had to look not to add people into the world but to create automation.
Through automation and AI, machine learning, and RPA infrastructure code, businesses have had to change the skills of the DBAs. In fact, the DBA generally moves from being mainly a database management administrator. You might call them a data source enabler.
That's the big change businesses must focus on regarding their operational teams and resources. It's not about a structured data source: rows, columns, and tables. It's now any source from any volume coming from any velocity to create business insight.
The smart cloud approach is that once I have it in the right place, you can consider native or agnostic implementation. Ask yourself: “Am I likely to move that data source around if I integrate it to various destinations, and therefore need to have it accessible from a networking perspective?” It’s essential to consider the automation involved in moving that data and making it accessible and available to various places.
The cloud is an amplifier and accelerator for digital transformation initiatives by providing the following.
Hence, cloud adoption is no longer a question of if—but of where, when, and how. The operating model for DBAs must also evolve in the cloud paradigm. The DBA becomes the cloud data manager of that specific information. For instance:
I often think of DBAs as data source enablers. However, I also see them taking on a new role as data automation developers. There has always been some development work for a DBA; they have written scripts to manage the database's health and created scripts to implement changes within the database through the development and QA in production environments.
Now, it's about creating more programming expertise. It's those same scripts that will become your intellectual property. The data automation developer will implement, change, and use the IP for organizational effectiveness and access to toolsets. They will create infrastructure code to move data, databases, data products, and applications through development, quality assurance, and production.
The skillset business will be hiring for will be looking for Python development experience and Terraform development experience. Those who have full platform engineering skill sets within the database team will be the ones who step into these roles.
DBAs would also consider themselves insight platform managers. They know it's not just about databases but also data sources. Databases might also be a data warehouse in a data lake or a lake house—a combination of a data warehouse and a lake. Consider what technology is being deployed and what cloud is being deployed on what third-party services will be used to manage the data—and have that data accessible externally.
You are considering a platform for insights, not just the data, for online transaction processing (OLTP) purposes.
As DBAs shift to data source enablers, they need to harness the skills of data security stewards. It's not just the data backup and protection type or role-based access security. There is so much more that the DBA needs to focus on when it comes to security:
Your business must embed digital resilience, not just data backup and protection. DBAs need to think beyond and consider what happens when a customer requests data erasure or when there are illegal protections on this data. These all need to be their concerns as the new data source enabler.
When it comes to emerging technologies and critical transformational strategy, the CTO charts the overall roadmap. This entails a cultural shift—the intellectual property of the database schema can no longer reside solely with DBA teams. Data must be democratized across the organizational fabric so business teams can harness insights to inform decisions.
The evolution of the role of DBAs and their pivot toward data enablement play an instrumental role in driving forward data monetization by:
DBAs thus have a key role in curating trustworthy, accessible data assets, building a data-driven culture, and providing the technical foundations for monetizing data—the core goal of the digital transformation program the CTO and CIOs are focused on driving forward.