Data Management Plans (DMP)
Create, review, and share the data management plan for your research project.
What is a DMP and why do you need it?
A Data Management Plan (DMP) defines how research data are generated, documented, stored, shared, and preserved during and after a project, following FAIR principles (Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, Reusable).
Many national and international funders require it as part of research proposals, ensuring transparency and optimal use of the data generated.
Main features
Guided creation
Create your DMP from national and funder templates. The system suggests the structure and provides contextual help in each section.
Team collaboration
Several researchers can edit the same plan with different permissions (read-only, editor, owner).
Versioning and institutional control
Keep successive versions of the plan and allow your institution’s management staff to monitor it without needing to edit the content.
Publication and persistence
The plan can be deposited in the national CARREDI repository, obtain a DOI via DataCite, and be made publicly accessible if you choose.
Export whenever you need
Download your DMP in PDF or Word for reports, or in structured formats (XML / JSON) to integrate it into other tools.
Who can use DMPs?
Citizens / Unregistered user
They can view public plans, see real examples, and download official templates without authenticating.
Researcher (registered user)
They can create, edit, and version DMPs; assign licenses; share the plan with their team; and export it in various formats.
What will you be able to do from here?
Create a new DMP from scratch or from an existing one from another of your projects.
Add co-authors and collaborators with differentiated permissions.
Associate your DMP with the data you deposit in the national CARREDI repository.
Publish the DMP so it obtains a persistent identifier (DOI) and becomes citable.
Export it in the format required by your funder or your university.
Integration with the PLATICA ecosystem
Your DMPs connect with CARREDI
Part of the information may be consumed by the Open Science Monitor (for example, for open data management policies).
Your DMPs feed Open Science monitoring”
Part of the information may be consumed by the Open Science Monitor (for example, for open data management policies).