>I think the challenge is that the CEO/COO's job is to figure out "what should we do about this?
Totally agree. I'd even go a little further and say the business is in trouble if the CEO doesn't know "what we should do about this". It's the CEOs job to know those things, and it's the data team's job to provide the tools to make those decisions easier, faster and better.
> Totally agree. I'd even go a little further and say the business is in trouble if the CEO doesn't know "what we should do about this". It's the CEOs job to know those things, and it's the data team's job to provide the tools to make those decisions easier, faster and better.
I agree with one modification. Also the CEO's job to empower folks to pitch what they think the CEO should know too. I've worked in plenty of successful shops where the CEO's answer to "what should we do" is "I'm not sure yet - what do you think?" - and that is a golden opportunity to show your chops if you've got the opportunity
People frequently overestimate the role of data in decision-making. Metrics, numbers and other quantitative information don't tell the full story. For a CEO to make decisions, the full picture must include qualitative information - risks, opportunities, market events, competitor's actions, etc. Metrics are just part of the full picture. Far less significant than many BI developers and "data teams" tend to think.
Totally agree. I'd even go a little further and say the business is in trouble if the CEO doesn't know "what we should do about this". It's the CEOs job to know those things, and it's the data team's job to provide the tools to make those decisions easier, faster and better.