Each day, we produce roughly 2.5 quintillion bytes of data, and that number will only increase. Without analytics, data is virtually useless. That's why the ability to make sense of the deluge of incoming information is essential to business success
Each day, we produce roughly 2.5 quintillion bytes of data, and that number will only increase. Without analytics, data is virtually useless. That’s why the ability to make sense of the deluge of incoming information is essential to business success. It provides the insights at speeds that enable companies to be more effective, efficient, and responsive to their customers. Most organizations understand this – and many have begun their data analytics journey – but few feel they are utilizing data and analytics to full effect to drive their business success. In fact, a large majority of senior leaders are not satisfied with the outcomes delivered through analytics.
The returns from data analytics have been well documented, but why are so many companies not realizing the promised benefits? That’s what led us to think through and introduce the concept of “analytics readiness†– the degree to which companies effectively collect and utilize data to guide business decisions. Through that process, we learned that many companies try to achieve analytics readiness by hiring more data engineers or data analysts. But that’s only one part of the solution – and maybe not the most critical component. Through our research with companies across the globe, we identified seven dimensions of analytics capabilities that are critical to analytics readiness: culture, leadership commitment, operations and structure, skills and competencies, analytics strategy alignment, proactive market orientation, and employee empowerment. We found that each of these seven dimensions can play a key role in achieving analytics success.
After surveying over 300 senior executives across B2B organizations on their analytics capabilities, we found that companies fall into one of three categories:
We then created a diagnostic tool, – that can be found below – to help companies: (1) discover where they currently are on the road to becoming proficient with data and analytics; (2) assess where their strengths and weaknesses lie; and (3) understand what areas they need to focus on and the steps they need to take to reach the “promised land†of data analytics leadership.
Also read: How treating data as public goods will let India reap the benefits of data-driven governance
[This article has been reproduced with permission from Knowledge Network, the online thought leadership platform for Thunderbird School of Global Management https://thunderbird.asu.edu/knowledge-network/]