How to create a data-led organisation
Most executives understand that having a data-driven organisation will increase revenue, improve customer satisfaction, deliver operating efficiencies and drive profitability. So, then, why have only 24% executives created a data-driven organisation? It comes down to not having a data-led culture. The good news is most executives –?76% according to a BARC study ?– are making the relevant investments to transform their organisations.
If you are like most executives I speak to, you are probably asking yourself what is a data-driven organisation. Being data-driven means employees rely on numbers even when it’s not easy or convenient to do so. If you have a data-driven organisation, you’ve developed a data culture that permeates the entire organisation – not just at the executive level or within certain functional areas, but everywhere.
Creating a data-led culture requires a vision and a plan.?To help you understand what is a data-led culture, let’s first look at the characteristics of organisations that are not data-driven.?The bad before the good, in a way.?
Now that we have covered what not to do, let’s now look at what you should do if you’re starting off on the journey to creating a data-led culture.?Below are seven tips that will lower the time and cost to creating value from your data and, at the same time, start to introduce the characteristics of high performing data-led organisations:
1.Start with the question.?Start with what you’re trying to achieve from a business perspective and then source the data required to answer the question.?In doing so, you will start to create or reinforce a data-driven culture.?If you’re not sure where to commence, create a list of questions you and your colleagues seek to answer and then determine what data you have and don’t have available to answer the questions. This will help prioritise what value you can create in the short-term and what investment in data, people and technology you may need to make for the long-term.?
2.Get your hands on the data.?You’re sitting on a gold mine of data so start to use it.??A logical place to start is better understanding your customers in order to acquire or retain them.?Here are?six suggestions to help you generate quick value ?from your data.?
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3.Obtain the right tools.?Having easy-to-use tools that enable your colleagues to quickly access, understand and interpret?data is important to creating a data-led culture.?If they are confident in using tools, then they will start to apply the data to support them in making decisions.
4.Build data literacy.?Making sense of data is a challenge for most people in an organisation. To address this, it is critical that you invest in training and coaching colleagues so they can:?
5.Develop data strategy. The goal of a data strategy is to answer the question of how your entire organisation can leverage data in support of making business decisions, and to create a plan (with a clear data roadmap) that factors in the role of people, processes, and technology to make the plan a reality.??
6.Start to ask more questions.??After you have used data to answer foundational questions about your business, you’ll want to ask more far reaching questions such as?how do you reduce the costs of returns , which my colleague, Peter Hanlon, Head of Analytics at Xiatech, answers for you.
7.Recruit data scientists.?Once you have started to generate significant value from your data, and you have begun to ask more advanced questions of your data, you will want to bring in data science, either directly or through a partner. My colleague, Alberto Calzada, Xiatech’s Head of Data Science, has shared his tips to?help you build a data science?team .
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1 年Happy to schedule time if anyone would like to share thoughts or needs support or guidance on where to start.