5 data integration challenges to look out for (and the solutions for overcoming them)

Data integration challenges

When data is missing, inaccurate, or outdated, your teams are forced to make less-than-optimal decisions on behalf of colleagues, prospects, clients, and your business.

Addressing the root of this issue requires improving the end-to-end process of collecting data from source systems, transforming it, loading it into your data warehouse, and then sharing it with downstream applications. 

We’ll help you undertake this initiative successfully by breaking down common faults in a data integration process and highlighting the solution for each issue.

Learn how Workato can address any of your integration challenges by scheduling a demo with one of our automation experts.

1. Delays in delivering data

In many cases, your business teams will need data in near real-time. 

For example, once your business receives an inbound lead, the process of extracting their information, transforming it, loading it into your data warehouse, and then pushing it back into downstream apps needs to happen as soon as possible. Any delays can prevent your reps from reaching out quickly, which—as we discovered—dramatically lowers the chances that the prospect converts into a client.

Unfortunately, the workflow above, in addition to many other business processes, can’t be executed quickly when handled manually.

Solution: To ensure your data moves at the speed that’s needed, you’ll need a platform that can use a trigger event (e.g. lead fills out a form) where, once met, sets off the corresponding actions across your apps, employees, and data in or near real-time.

Related: A complete guide to data integration

An icon for a lock

2. Security risks

Chances are, you’re integrating a significant share of data that’s considered confidential. This can fall under customer data (e.g. billing information), employee information (e.g. social security numbers), a company’s financials (e.g. private company’s earnings), etc.  

Failing to protect this data can not only cause significant harm to your reputation, but also leave your organization vulnerable to violating data privacy and protection measures, like GDPR. 

The solution: You’ll need a platform that supports several safeguards for your data. These include aggressive measures that fall under data encryption, data retention, data masking, and role-based access controls.

An icon of people

3. Resourcing constraints

While enlisting engineers and IT to build your data integration process from the ground up might seem like a good idea, especially if these employees are open to it, the level of time and energy required makes the endeavor a costly one. 

More specifically, the process of implementing and managing a high-volume of integrations between your data warehouse and your source and destination systems is extremely time-intensive when done in-house. And, as a result, the employees involved are forced to focus less on the tasks they’re uniquely qualified to solve for your organization.

The solution: You should invest in a platform that offers a low-code/no-code UX so that business teams can participate in the implementation process; also, the platform should offer pre-built connectors for data warehouse platforms and popular business apps so that integrations can get built quickly and easily.

An icon of a bar chart

Related: 6 reasons to implement data integration

4. Data quality issues

Poor quality data comes in various flavors, from duplicates to incorrect formats. Asking your IT or engineering teams to look out for and address these problems might work out when you’re working with a small volume of data, but at scale, the task leaves them overwhelmed and prone to slip up. 

Moreover, these employees may not be properly suited to perform this kind of quality control. They may be unfamiliar with the data they’re looking at, leaving them poorly positioned to identify any that appears suspicious. 

The solution: Similar to the previous solution, you’ll need a low-code/no-code platform so that business teams can participate in the process of implementing integrations and data flows between their apps and your data warehouse. After all, it’s these employees who are most familiar with the data and understand how it needs to be moved to downstream apps.

Related: 4 criteria to prioritize when evaluating no-code automation tools

An icon of gears

5. Lacking actionability

Even after you’ve addressed the challenges above, and your employees can access the data they need, when they need it, there’s still no guarantee that your team will know how to leverage the data appropriately. 

To illustrate this point, let’s go back to our earlier example on lead routing: Once a sales rep gets notified of a lead, they might not know which nurture sequence to put them in in a platform like Outreach. In addition, they might not be familiar with the best practices for engaging that kind of lead themselves (best practices can vary by company size, industry, etc.). 

The solution: Using a customizable platform bot, you can provide intelligent and concrete action items to employees via their business communications platform (e.g. Slack). In the case of sharing an inbound lead, it can be a Slack message that includes a button for putting the lead into the appropriate sequence as well as a link to a card from an app like Guru, which provides tips for managing that type of lead.

At this point, you might be wondering how you can implement these solutions. We’ll cover a platform that lets you do just that, next.

Overcome any data integration roadblock with Workato

Workato, the leader in enterprise automation, offers a low-code/no-code UX so that employees in IT and across lines of business can implement integrations and workflow automations. In addition, the platform provides:

  • Hundreds of pre-built connectors and thousands of automation templates (“recipes”) to help teams brainstorm and implement integrations and automations more easily 
  • Workbot®, a platform bot that allows employees to access the actions and data from their apps (that fall within their levels of permissions) without leaving their business communications platform
  • Enterprise-grade governance and security, as evidenced by passing the SOC 2 Type 2 audit and being compliant with GDPR
Workato logo

Want to learn more?

Discover how Workato can help you integrate and automate at scale by scheduling a demo with one of our automation experts.

Schedule a demo

About the author
Jon Gitlin Content Strategist @ Workato
Jon Gitlin is the Managing Editor of The Connector, where you can get the latest news on Workato and uncover tips, examples, and frameworks for implementing powerful integrations and automations. In his free time, he loves to run outside, watch soccer (er...football) matches, and explore local restaurants.