Build a living, searchable glossary of your organization's data assets — standardized definitions, clear ownership, and a single source of truth that every team can trust.
In most organizations, data means different things to different teams. "Revenue" in Finance is not the same as "Revenue" in Sales. "Active Customer" in Marketing is not the same as "Active Customer" in Operations. These definition gaps create misalignment, bad reporting, and costly decision errors.
A Data Dictionary is the solution: a centralized, collaboratively maintained glossary that defines every important data term, links it to actual data assets, and makes it searchable by anyone in the organization.
Caninsoft's Data Dictionary is not a static document. It is a living, governed record that evolves with your business — version-controlled, ownership-assigned, and connected to the rest of your data operations platform.
Add business terms, data fields, and data assets to the dictionary. Write plain-language definitions that anyone in the organization can understand.
Tag each term with an owner, a business domain, related systems, and any linked data assets or schemas. Connect definitions to real data.
Any team member can search the dictionary, propose changes, and flag outdated definitions. Changes are tracked and version-controlled.
Centralized repository of business terms, data fields, and data asset definitions.
Find any term instantly by name, domain, owner, or linked asset.
Every term has a named owner and a business domain.
Full change log for every definition — see who changed what and when.
Teams can propose edits, add context, and flag stale definitions.
Export the full dictionary or filtered subsets for compliance and documentation.
Maintain authoritative definitions and govern how data terms are used across the organization.
Stop wasting time asking "what does this field mean?" — find the answer instantly.
Onboard faster by having a searchable, plain-language reference for every data concept in the business.
Align Finance, Operations, Sales, and IT on a shared understanding of the data they all use.
definition disputes between departments working from different assumptions
onboarding — new team members self-serve answers instead of chasing experts
governance — every critical data element is documented, owned, and version-controlled
demonstrate data governance maturity to regulators and auditors