Building a Data Governance Framework in 90 Days
A week-by-week sequence for chartering, structuring, and rolling out a governance program that survives year two.
StewardIQ, Contributing Reporter
June 3, 2026
3 Min Read

Weeks 1–2: Charter
Lock the executive sponsor, the P&L-adjacent metric, and the first workflow. Three decisions, one page, signed. Anything more elaborate at this stage is procrastination.
The executive sponsor must be a P&L owner, not the CIO or the Chief Data Officer. Without P&L gravity, the program will lose every quarterly resource fight against revenue-adjacent initiatives. The sponsor’s signature on the charter is the budgetary insurance policy.
The P&L-adjacent metric is the single hardest part of weeks one and two. ‘Data quality’ is not a metric. ‘Hours per month reclaimed from manual reconciliation by the finance close team’ is a metric — it has a number, an owner, and a P&L line it touches.
Weeks 3–6: Structure
Name accountable humans per workflow. Build the minimum control library. Stand up the exception queue. Wire telemetry. Do not start training users until these four are real.
The minimum control library is intentionally minimum. Most programs over-engineer this and ship 200 controls in week six that nobody understands. Twelve controls that everyone can recite outperform 200 controls living in a Confluence page.
The exception queue is the single most diagnostic artifact in the entire program. It must exist before launch, have a named owner, and have a service-level target written in advance. A queue without an SLA is a graveyard.
"If telemetry is not live before launch, you are shipping a pilot, not a program."
Telemetry in weeks three through six should answer two questions: how many workflow runs happened, and how many landed in the exception queue. Two numbers. Refreshed daily. Visible to the sponsor without a login.
Weeks 7–12: Rollout
Roll out to a single business unit. Measure weekly. Publish the first evidence pack at day 60 — not day 90 — so the steering committee learns what review looks like before the formal checkpoint.
Single business unit means one. Not ‘one region with three product lines.’ Programs that try to launch into two units simultaneously end up with two half-functional pilots and no clean evidence base from which to expand.
By day 90, the program should have a concrete decision: expand to the next business unit, refactor the workflow, or pause and rebuild. Programs that refuse to make this decision — and instead ‘continue monitoring’ — are the ones that quietly die in year two.
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