Why This Matters
Most reporting breaks when the systems underneath it change. ERPs get replaced, new operational tools are added, spreadsheets accumulate, and every transition threatens to fragment reporting or force expensive data migration.
A governed data layer removes this dependency. It sits between source systems and consumers, holding a consolidated, reconciled view of the business under a single set of definitions. When source systems change — an ERP is replaced, a new inventory system is added, a marketing data feed gets plugged in — the reporting layer absorbs the change without asking the business to rebuild history.
This is where governance becomes infrastructure rather than policy. Standardised chart of accounts, product and SKU master, customer hierarchies, and channel taxonomy live in the layer itself. Reports, dashboards, and AI tools read from the same governed foundation, so the answers don’t diverge.
Where This Fits
Sits within Data Governance & AI Readiness as the operational substrate where data from multiple systems is consolidated and governed. The semantic layer defines how business logic is applied on top of it. The dual-consumer data model is the design principle that makes the same layer readable by both humans and AI.