All researchers, including postgraduate students, are encouraged to have a Data Management Plan in place — and thus fully consider the management of their research data — before the start of a research project. This plan is a living document that will change and grow as your research projects progresses. Your inital plan could be very concise.
According to the University’s research data management policy a Data Management Plan is compulsory for all publicly-funded research that is conducted at the University. It is considered best practice for all other research.
In addition, funding bodies are increasingly requiring Data Management Plans from their grant-holders at the bid-preparation stage. Many research funders, including all UK Research Councils and the European Commission, have research data policies that specify their expectation of how grant holders will manage, preserve and share their data.
Why should I plan?
Some of the benefits of planning the management and sharing of your research data as early as possible include that it helps you to
identify issues and strategies early in your research project
Under the new GDPR legislation, when gaining individual consent from participants for gathering your data you will now need to include a Privacy Notice with your ethical consent material. See GDPR Guidelines for Researchers for further information.
ensure that you have documented your compliance with institutional and funder policies and ethics approval requirements
make sure that your data remains useful and is stored securely during the lifetime of your project and beyond, so that you can find and understand your data when you need to use it, so that you avoid data loss or data corruption, so that there is continuity if project staff leave or new researchers join, and to avoid unnecessary duplication by re-collecting or re-working data
think about data sharing and reuse opportunities of your research data
What should I plan?
You plan for the entire life of your research data, especially
storing your data safely during your project
keeping it for the long-term and possibly sharing your data after your project
explaining it through careful documentation of your data, so that you and others can make sense of it
A typical research data management plan provides information on (a selection of) the following topics, depending on the funder’s requirements or your specific needs
data collection
documentation and metadata
ethics and legal compliance
storage and backup
selection and preservation
data sharing
responibilities and resources
The Digital Curation Centre has produced an extensive Checklist for a Data Management Plan with all topics that a data management plan could (but not necessarily should) contain.
If you are developing software, then writing a Software Management Plan may be an option to ensure your software is accessible and reusable in the short, medium and long term. A template for a Software Management Plan has been developed by the Software Sustainability Institute.
DMP Online has a number of templates built into it, including SHU and funder specific templates. It also provides guidance on completing your DMP.
General Advice
General advice
The general advice for DMPs (given in this video by Peter Dukes of the MRC) is to keep it ‘specific’ as well as ‘simple and short’. For some projects where data sharing is not on the agenda, a quarter of a page may be enough. For other projects, a statement of up to 2 pages is generally sufficient.
If you are using DMPOnline to write your plan, the tool will indicate when you have reached a length that is generally considered to be sufficient for a DMP that is part of a funding application.
UKRI applications
If you are applying for UKRI funding the University of Bristol has detailed guidance for each of the seven UKRI (formerly RCUK) funding agencies.
To complete your data management plan you will need to add details of data security measures you are taking and provide links to key policies. For a full list of answers to the questions and policy links see UKRI-data-security-questions
Use DMPOnline to write your plan
The Digital Curation Centre has developed an online data management planning tool, DMPOnline. DMPOnline contains
templates for each major research funder that requires a data management plan as part of a funding application
a generic SHU template for all other research conducted at Sheffield Hallam University
a generic SHU template for PGR students
SHU specific guidance that will help you to fill out the form
suggested answers for certain questions for you to copy and paste
example answers taken from previous data management plans written by SHU researchers
How to get started
Follow this guidance or watch the video at the top of this page
If you have never used DMPOnline before, you should first create an account. You can link your DMPOnline account to your SHU credentials, so that you can always log into DMPOnline using your normal SHU username and password. Simply follow these steps:
Choose your funder, or leave this field blank if you are writing a generic DMP that is not funder-specific
Select ‘Sheffield Hallam University’ to see SHU’s institutional guidance to help you fill out your plan
Click on ‘Create plan’
How to share your plan with others
Once finished, you can share your plan with others, and download (‘export’) it as a pdf or Word document (docx).
You are asked to attach your Data Management Plan to your ethics application. Your plan will be used to identify the support you require, and to make sure that sufficient storage and archival space will be available when you need it.
Doctoral plans with DMPonline
You can access the template for doctoral research projects as an online form via DMPOnline. When you are creating a new plan in DMPOnline, please leave the field for “research funder” blank, and choose the SHU Template for Doctoral Students., as shown in the image below.
If you have never used DMPOnline before, see the explanation on how to get started with DMPOnline on this page, which shows you how to create an account on DMPOnline.
PDF researcher and doctoral DMP templates
As an alternative to using DMPOnline, you can download a PDF or Word version of the generic template for a Data Management plan including SHU specific guidance.
DMPOnline contains example answers taken from previous data management plans written by SHU researchers.
There are a variety of examples available from Research Ideas and Outcomes (RIO) – an open access journal that publishes research ideas and outcomes that constitute the research cycle.