Data Lifecycle Management (DLM) organizes data into distinct stages: creation, storage, active use, archival, and secure deletion. Each stage is governed by automated rules based on access patterns, business value, and regulatory requirements. The goal is simple: keep the right data accessible, move inactive data to lower-cost tiers, and dispose of what’s no longer needed.
For organizations managing massive unstructured data environments, DLM is non-negotiable. Without it, storage grows unchecked, often 20–30% annually, while nearly half of stored data sits untouched for years. This “data ROT” (Redundant, Obsolete, Trivial) quietly drains budgets and creates compliance risk.
Effective DLM depends on rich metadata to classify files, track usage, and trigger automated actions like tiering or deletion. Starfish Storage’s Unstructured Data Catalog and Automation Engine put these lifecycle policies into practice across heterogeneous file systems at scale, moving organizations from reactive storage management to proactive data governance. DLM goes beyond simple Hierarchical Storage Management by covering the full data journey, including when and how data moves or expires.
Related links
- Data Life Cycle (Glossary) | NIST
- The Importance of Data Lifecycle Management & Best Practices | IEEE Computer Society
- Data Lifecycle Management | Coursera
- Data Lifecycle Management (PM-14-009) | Georgia Technology Authority
- Data Lifecycle Management | IBM
- Data Lifecycle Management | Varonis
