Data Management Plans (DMPs)
Data Management Plans are used to plan, organize, and document how you’re going to use your data throughout your research project.
Table of Contents
What is a Data Management Plan?
A Data Management Plan (DMP) is a living document describing your plan for how you will manage your research data. As a living document, this will be something you’ll work with as you go through your research process and adapt as things change during your research.
The best time to start making your DMP is at the start of your research. It’s meant to be a proactive process that helps you anticipate and identify opportunities and challenges in managing your data before they emerge, so that you’re under a little less pressure during your research.
A good DMP covers the management of data both during the active phases of your research and after the completion of the research project.
Research almost always a team effort. DMPs are a great way to get on the same page as collaborators. If you’re working as team, discuss and develop your DMP with anyone who will be part of collecting, analyzing, and storing the data: research assistants, coordinators, and other staff. If you’re a graduate student, your supervisor can review and comment on your DMP. If you’re working with research participants, your DMP could be reviewed by community leadership, partner organizations, and the participants themselves–this is especially important for Indigenous research data. Staff who support research can also contribute: RDM professionals, IT units, archivists and librarians, research offices, ethics boards, and more.
Some research funders require grant applicants to submit a DMP. In the US, the National Science Foundation (NSF) and the National Institutes of Health (NIH) both require DMPs (or a variant) to be submitted with the grant application. The Wellcome Trust in the UK also requires a DMP, as do a lot of the other European funders. Recently, the Tri-Agency (SSHRC, NSERC, and CIHR) has also started requiring DMPs as part of grant applications.
What goes in a Data Management Plan?
Pretty much anything that pertains to your research data will go into your data management plan. More specifically:
Data Collection |
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Documentation and Metadata |
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Storage and Backup |
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Preservation |
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Sharing and Reuse |
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Responsibilities and Resources |
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Ethics and Legal Compliance |
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Try this quick quiz - Are the following statements about Data Management Plans (DMPs) true or false?
DMP Assistant
The best way to build a Data Management Plan is to use DMP Assistant.
DMP Assistant is a web-based data management planning tool that’s available to all researchers in Canada for free.
After making an account and logging in to the website, DMP Assistant will ask you a series of questions about your data management practices. By answering these questions, you are essentially filling in and creating your data management plan.
The website offers lots of data management guidance and links, including McMaster-specific guidance on what kind of resources are available to you here. At the end, you’re able to export your document into a PDF document, a Word document, or just about any other format you’d like.
You can also add collaborators or other researchers to the site so that you can work on the DMP together.
To check out DMP Assistant, you can go to https://assistant.portagenetwork.ca/.
McMaster RDM Services has developed a “McMaster General Purpose DMP Template” which has specific guidance for services and resources at our university. Just click the “Write Plan” button and click on the “Comments and Guidance” sidebar in each section.
We also offer a full workshop on Data Management Plans and using DMP Assistant. You can find that here: https://scds.github.io/intro-rdm/dmp.html.
Key Points / Summary
- DMPs are living documents that should be used and updated regularly throughout the entirety of the project’s life cycle.
- Some research funders require applicants to submit a DMP.
- DMPs should address how data will be managed during and after the project, including Data Types and Data Collection, Documentation and Metadata, Storage and Backup, Preservation, Sharing and Reuse, Responsibilities and Resources, and Ethics and Legal Compliance
- DMP Assistant has a McMaster General Purpose DMP Template with McMaster-specific advice and available resources in the “Guidance” sidebar.
Additional Resources
- DMP Assistant
- DMP and DMP Assistant Workshop: Building a Data Management Plan for your Research Project
- Digital Research Alliance of Canada (formerly Portage Network) DMP Exemplars and Templates