Getting Personal Data Right Gets Expensive -- WSJ
28 May 2018 - 5:02PM
Dow Jones News
By Nina Trentmann
This article is being republished as part of our daily
reproduction of WSJ.com articles that also appeared in the U.S.
print edition of The Wall Street Journal (May 26, 2018).
Companies are spending millions on their security infrastructure
ahead of new European data protection rules, but some worry that
the law's lack of clear technical guidelines may mean that these
steps aren't enough.
The EU's General Data Protection Regulation, or GDPR, aims to
safeguard data-privacy rights by requiring companies to get consent
before using personal data and requiring them to store it safely.
The law, which goes into effect on Friday, also forces firms to
report a security breach within 72 hours and penalizes
noncompliance with hefty fines.
One of the challenges for executives is that the legislation
doesn't specify how regulators will assess compliance, making it
difficult for companies to decide if they have made sufficient
changes to their data policies or invested enough in upgrading
their systems.
German sportswear maker Adidas AG, U.K. recruiting firm Hays PLC
and French building materials maker Compagnie de Saint-Gobain SA
are among the firms wrangling investments to comply with the new
laws. Around 60% of companies surveyed by PricewaterhouseCoopers
LLP in the fall of 2017 said they would spend more than $1 million
on preparing for GDPR, while 12% reported allocating more than $10
million. PwC questioned 300 executives at U.S., U.K. and Japanese
firms with a presence in Europe.
Adidas' digital presence, whether on its online storefront or on
social-media platforms such as Facebook Inc.'s Instagram, is key to
building a stronger relationship with consumers, said finance chief
Harm Ohlmeyer. The company began making changes to comply with GDPR
in 2016. The shoe maker, which already records personal data such
as names, partial credit card details and addresses from customers
who buy goods on its website, plans to sell more products directly
through its own online retail channels; potentially resulting in
more personal data held by the company.
"You cannot spend enough to protect yourself," Mr. Ohlmeyer
said, declining to provide a figure for the company's GDPR budget.
"We have been taking it very seriously," Mr. Ohlmeyer said.
Forrester Research Inc., a research company, said it had
anecdotal evidence that large firms allocate on average $20 million
to $25 million to become GDPR-compliant, while smaller companies
budget $4 to $5 million.
At Saint-Gobain, the French building-materials maker, the cost
of becoming GDPR-compliant was "significant," according to Claude
Imauven, its chief operating officer.
Saint-Gobain introduced a new data-privacy management platform,
overhauled its data-processing procedures and held training
sessions for employees, Mr. Imauven said.
The company also deployed 400 so-called privacy correspondents
to ensure that data is handled correctly. The company forecasts
"additional ongoing costs" because of GDPR, the COO said.
Companies must maintain an updated record of all the EU-based
personal information they collect, and incorporate privacy and
data-protection controls into their system design. Standard clauses
in contracts and other legal documents need to be rewritten, adding
to the administrative burden.
Firms have to respond to individual data requests in a timely
manner, requiring some of them to hire additional employees, said
Russell Marsh, a managing director at Accenture PLC.
Recruiter Hays spent between GBP2 million ($2.7 million) and
GBP3 million to become compliant, said Chief Financial Officer Paul
Venables. The recruiter started making changes about a year ago to
account for how it would handle the more than 10 million individual
résumés on file.
"We had to go through our database and sort out those candidates
we didn't have meaningful exchange with in the past two years," Mr.
Venables said.
The stakes for getting it right are high. Companies which fail
to report breaches face a fine of up to 2% of global annual revenue
or EUR10 million ($11.7 million), whichever is higher. Firms that
process personal data without consent could be fined up to 4% of
annual revenue or EUR20 million, whichever is higher.
"It is really hard for companies to forecast how much they
should budget for this," said Laura Jehl, a partner at Baker &
Hostetler LLP. Some of her clients up until a few weeks ago didn't
have a budget for GDPR, she said
Making sure that third-party suppliers conform to GDPR adds
another layer of complexity. "We have seen companies ask their
business partners and suppliers to demonstrate their GDPR
practices," said Enza Iannopollo, a security and risk analyst at
Forrester.
Write to Nina Trentmann at Nina.Trentmann@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
May 28, 2018 02:47 ET (06:47 GMT)
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