Why data scientists aren’t enough
McKinsey & Company
Share this email LinkedIn Twitter Facebook
Share this email on LinkedIn  >
LinkedIn
Share this email on Twitter  >
Twitter
Share this email on Facebook  >
Facebook
McKinsey Classics | June 2021
 
The art and science of listening
Data analytics for top teams
Hard-to-find, pricey data scientists are obviously important for data analytics, but they can’t tell a company how it should use their services. Much as the CEO and the top team must determine a company’s strategy, they must also determine how data analytics supports it.
In 2016, a team of McKinsey authors offered some rules for top teams struggling with analytics. Here are a few of the most important. Ask clear questions, such as “How can we speed time to market,” not “What patterns do the data show?” Embrace “soft” data. Use a variety of analytics techniques and combine them in a variety of ways. Build a team that includes not only data scientists but also engineers in fields such as distributed computing; cloud and data architects; “translators,” who connect IT and data analytics with business decisions and management; and developers of user interfaces, because an attractive one makes a data-analytics solution more usable than any computation, however sophisticated. Which brings us to the most important rule: analytics is nothing unless your company knows how to implement it.
These lessons still hold good. To learn more, read our classic “Making data analytics work for you—instead of the other way around.”
— Roger Draper, editor, New York
Learn how top teams manage analytics
LinkedIn Twitter Facebook
Related Reading
 
The strategy-analytics revolution
The strategy-analytics revolution  >
The forces shaping Asia’s future
Catch them if you can: How leaders in data and analytics have pulled ahead  >
Letter to a newly appointed CEO
Mobilizing your C-suite for big-data analytics  >
Did You Miss Our Previous McKinsey Classics?
 
The four global trends
The four global trends
Four powerful forces are transforming the world: urbanization in developing economies, faster technological change, aging, and a new kind of globalization. Learn about them in our 2015 book excerpt “The four global forces breaking all the trends.”
Master the four forces  >
LinkedIn Twitter Facebook
McKinsey & Company
Follow our thinking
LinkedIn Twitter Facebook
McKinsey Insights - Get our latest
thinking on your iPhone, iPad, or Android
Download on the App Store   ANDROID APP ON Google play
Share these insights
Did you enjoy this newsletter? Forward it to colleagues and friends so they can subscribe too.
Was this issue forwarded to you? Sign up for it and sample our 40+ other free email subscriptions here.
[