That just reads as leaders who are high on cognitive bias.
...probably true to some extent, but not all leaders are self important ass hats who refuse to acknowledge they are simply “making decisions” not “making good decisions”. Most leaders are doing the best they can (often even very well) with the insights available to them.
I don’t think most data teams are really at fault; they’re just doing what they’re told.
The problem imo lies with the analysts who fail to do anything useful with the data they’re given, and demand constant changes from the data team because they want to deliver silver bullet results to the leadership level.
That’s the problem layer; people who want to be important but have nothing to offer, whipping their data team to produce rubbish and then blaming them for either a) not producing anything fast enough or b) not making the numbers big enough.
...probably true to some extent, but not all leaders are self important ass hats who refuse to acknowledge they are simply “making decisions” not “making good decisions”. Most leaders are doing the best they can (often even very well) with the insights available to them.
I don’t think most data teams are really at fault; they’re just doing what they’re told.
The problem imo lies with the analysts who fail to do anything useful with the data they’re given, and demand constant changes from the data team because they want to deliver silver bullet results to the leadership level.
That’s the problem layer; people who want to be important but have nothing to offer, whipping their data team to produce rubbish and then blaming them for either a) not producing anything fast enough or b) not making the numbers big enough.