This browser is not actively supported anymore. For the best passle experience, we strongly recommend you upgrade your browser.

Mike Daly

| less than a minute read
Reposted from Analytics Insights

Analytics is a team sport

But frequently, it is implemented by an insular group beset with cognitive bias and incomplete analytics skills.

"  To avoid this problem, leaders should push their organizations to take a multifaceted approach in analyzing data. If analyses are run in silos, if the outputs do not work under real-world conditions, or, perhaps worst of all, if the conclusions would work but sit unused, the analytics exercise has failed."

Quoted from "Making data analytics work for you- instead of the other way round McKinsey Quarterly October 2016 

The scenario above makes it harder for the CEO who does not treat BI and Analytics as a priority. See "why at "CEOs have a problem with the truth!

One other critical factor the CEO can insist on- insisting that the organisation does not make future decisions based on past perspectives. Take account of them but realise that behaviour and therefore outcomes change.

See "Making future decisions based on past perspectives" to help avoid that mistake.

Assembling a great team is a bit like creating a gourmet delight—you need a mix of fine ingredients and a dash of passion. Key team members include data scientists, who help develop and apply complex analytical methods; engineers with skills in areas such as microservices, data integration, and distributed computing; cloud and data architects to provide technical and systemwide insights; and user-interface developers and creative designers to ensure that products are visually beautiful and intuitively useful. You also need “translators”—men and women who connect the disciplines of IT and data analytics with business decisions and management.

Tags

analytics, bi, big data