AI Issue 4 2018 - John Harrison & Company

50 Acquisition International - Issue 4 2018 or those in customer communications, everything changes on the 25th May 2018. This is the date that the EUGeneral Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) is set to come into effect, marking a significant change in the way that global businesses manage their customers’ personal information. The regulation introduces serious implications for non- compliance - including sanctions of up to €20 million or 4% of your company’s revenue - and expands the territorial breadth of European data protection law. Although there are severe repercussions for being in breach of GDPR, a startling number of EU bosses are completely unaware of how the new regulation will affect their business. Latest figures show that 60% of European business leaders are not prepared for the directive, and many companies have adopted a high risk ‘wait-and-see’ approach at a potentially high cost. The introduction of GDPR addresses two of the most significant weaknesses in the existing EU Data Protection Directive; namely that a) each member state originally implemented the directive in its own way, resulting in inconsistency; and b) the directive only applies to EU-based organisations. The GDPR, however, imposes new consistent rules that will affect all companies that collect, store or otherwise manage the data of individuals who live in the European Union, regardless of where in the world they are based. How, then, can consumer-focused companies that fall under this blanket achieve compliance and circumvent the serious implications of breaching GDPR? Controllers and processors What GDPR means for your company is dependent on whether your business is either a controller or a processor. To help define these terms, a controller is a company that collects personal data and decides how it is to be processed, whereas a processor is a supplier that handles the data on behalf of the controller. For example, whilst a bank (controller) will collect their customers’ data, they will use a direct mail agency (processor) in order to communicate with them. GDPR compliance lies mainly at the door of the controller, particularly in regards to securing user consent, but that doesn’t mean that processors The countdown toGDPR: What itmeans for customer communications andhowto prepare for the appointedhour F aren’t liable for how they handle data. Under GDPR, all companies - controllers, processors, small businesses and large enterprises alike - are expected to protect the data-related rights of EU residents. All rights reserved The GDPR makes a big deal about protecting ‘data-related rights’ but what exactly are these rights? Well, according to the UK’s Information Commissioner’s Office, EU residents will be entitled to the following: • The right to be informed: organisations must state clearly how they intend to use personal data. That means an end to excessively complex and long-winded privacy policies. • The right of access: organisations must provide individuals access to the data they hold on them without any charge. • The right of rectification: if the data held by an organisation is found to be incorrect, it must be amended and the correction must be sent to any third parties with whom the incorrect data was shared. • The right to erasure: EU residents can ask organisations to delete their data and prevent further processing of it. • The right to restrict processing: individuals control how and where organisations use their data. • The right to data portability: individuals must be able to export their data in an open format, such as CSV. • The right to object: This grants individuals a wide-ranging ability to ask organizations to stop processing their data. • Rights regarding automated decision making: This grants EU residents the right to know when a decision was made automatically/ algorithmically (e.g. by artificial intelligence, or AI) regarding their personal data. The guidance outlined by the GDPR certainly leaves a lot up for debate. For example, while individuals can use the right for erasure to ask a company to delete their data, there are certain instances in which those organisations can refuse. The company is then required to present their decision and the legal basis of their refusal within a month, ultimately leading to a murky area where the rights of the individual are pitted against certain defined needs of the organisation. As each EU member state implements GDPR, we can expect to see a number of court cases test the elasticity of this grey area. Ambiguities aside, the fundamental overarching principle of the GDPR is that individuals will now have control over how their data is collected, processed and used in decision-making. And whilst this will ultimately affect the whole wider ecosystem of business processes for any given company, one area in which it is of particular importance is in customer communications. Customer communications and radioactive data When GDPR comes into effect on the 25th May, will need to dedicate more time and energy into understanding exactly what data they need, what they are planning to do with it, and why their organisation is legally allowed to have it. Carefulthoughtwillneedtogointoeverycommunication made with customers as well as each item of personal data that is collected or processed. This is a far cry from the majority of customer communications today, which often occur without a single concern of legality. But under GDPR, permissions and informed consent are essential considerations for every SMS sent and every IP address stored. For business leaders this might sound like a daunting prospect - and it should do. GDPR requires a complete re-evaluation of how your company regards and treats personal data. Furthermore, with such a great deal of room for error and misinterpretation, the new regulations mandate the need for businesses to operate with the utmost vigilance. It goes without saying that detailed documentation and clear-cut audit trails are your company’s best defence if something goes wrong and an individual threatens legal action. But there are also a number of steps that businesses can undertake in order to ensure they are GDPR-compliant before D-day. Preparing for GDPR The first step for any company looking to achieve compliance should be to identify what personal data they have and determine where it resides. This should be established before defining any new GDPR-compliant policies, procedures, roles, and responsibilities related to the access, management and use of personal data. At the same time, decision makers and key people within the organisation should be made aware of GDPR and the potential impact that the new regulation may have on the business.

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