What aspect of a mature data and analytics culture are you most passionate about? This is your chance to get on the soap box and preach!

187 views5 Comments
Sort By:
Oldest
Director of Data in Healthcare and Biotech4 months ago
I'm most passionate about the transformative power of data analytics to drive innovation and create value for both organizations and stakeholders. It's not just about us, it's about our customers too. It's crucial to mature your data and analytics organization and culture to harness the full potential of data. This enables informed decision-making, identification of emerging opportunities, and addressing complex challenges with confidence. It's not all about technology, it's about fostering mindsets that are curious, willing to experiment, and continuously learn and change. Data becomes a strategic asset that fuels growth, builds resilience, and ensures sustainable success. It's not just about gaining a competitive advantage, it's a moral imperative to stay ahead of the digital and data landscape.
1 Reply
Chief Architect - Middle East & Türkiye in Software4 months ago

I agree with Claire. The innovation and potential that data analytics can open up are aspects everyone should be passionate about. It's about how far we are willing to go to uplift our belief in the usefulness of data. We now have tools that empower almost any business user to get their hands dirty with data. There's no obstacle anymore if you have the passion and believe in your project.

Head of Analytics & AI4 months ago
Everyone now agrees that data is extremely important to business. However, many people don't know how to concretely extract insight from data. I'm passionate about raising this awareness and making it easy for everyone in the company to enhance their daily job with data analytics and make informed decisions. It's also about explaining what data analytics can bring to their job. Clear communication, clear training, and sharing success stories are key to encouraging momentum in the company.

1 Reply
lock icon

Please join or sign in to view more content.

By joining the Peer Community, you'll get:

  • Peer Discussions and Polls
  • One-Minute Insights
  • Connect with like-minded individuals
VP of Data in Healthcare and Biotech4 months ago

Building on what Eva wrote, I get excited about data literacy programs and seeing people connect the dots. We've also developed a wonderful internship program on our data science team. The interns bring so much value to the program. They're prepared, hungry, humble, and smart. They keep us all young at heart.

President & Chief Data Officer in Services (non-Government)4 months ago
Two things excite me. One is the innovative work we're doing. We're moving from basic reporting to integrating advanced analytics into our work, which is much more exciting. Secondly, as a more mature organization, we can demonstrate the economic model around our work. We can justify the cost of our function by showing how our work has moved the needle on the economic side of the business.

Content you might like

VP of Global IT and Cybersecurity in Manufacturing6 years ago
Have clear business requirements up front, make sure the proposal includes items such as scope, timeline, cost, resources.
Read More Comments
22.1k views3 Upvotes28 Comments

Audio19%

Video70%

No preference8%

It depends (please explain in the comments)1%

View Results
3.7k views2 Comments
IT Manager in Constructiona month ago
Hello,
the topic is so broad, what are you focused on?
Read More Comments
4.8k views2 Upvotes5 Comments
10 views

Increase47%

Stay Flat45%

Decrease6%

View Results
2.5k views4 Upvotes