#SMX Liveblog: Revolutionizing Decision Making: How The Analyst Will Take Over Business (#ms3)

“Today, analytics practitioners influence business decision makers. In the future, analysts will own business decision making.” That is a heavy statement from the #SMX West agenda description for the session I am sitting in right now.

You may have noticed this session has a special hashtag — #ms3 — which signifies this presentation is the third session in today’s 11-part Marketing Summit Track. The Marketing Summit Track is special because in this track attendees hear three 25-minute mini-sessions on three different topics during one 1.5-hour session slot, rather than hearing several speakers share on one topic for the full 1.5 hours (which is the standard SMX session format).

In this 1.5-hour block we have the following three mini-sessions bundled:

(9:00-9:25) From Content Marketing to Media Company (#ms1)
(9:30-9:55) The Coming Paradigm Shift In Mobile Marketing (#ms2)
(10:00-10:25) Revolutionizing Decision Making: How The Analyst Will Take Over Business (#ms3)

In this post I’ll cover the third in the 9-10:25 series: Revolutionizing Decision Making: How The Analyst Will Take Over Business. Click the above links to read liveblog coverage of #ms1 and #ms2.

// Start liveblog session

Leading us through this 25-minute talk on the “analytics revolution” is Natalie Kortum (@NatalieKortum), director of analytics and consumer insights at Humana. She’s going to be discussing Revolutionizing decision-making.

ms4-presenter
Natalie Kortum speaking at the #SMX West 2014 Digital Marketing Summit.

She starts by saying plain and simple Big Data will change analytics (and how we report them) forever.

Not only will more data allow us to better connect with our consumers during specific/targeted phases in their lives, it will also allow us come to more statistically relevant conclusions. A lot of data increases our statistical relevance.

HR is even using analytics in 2014! (They want to get a feel for whether they’ve recruited the right people; whether their employees are going to be star performers or expendables.)

In Mad Men times we used our gut instinct a lot. Today we use DATA!

Look at:
1) High level exporting/trends. Generalized data.
2) Key performance indicators; where are we? What metrics represent success?
3) Business intelligence data exploration.
4) Math modeling.
5) Machine learning

At each one of these decisions you need Acceptance – at every stage you need someone to give you buy-in. To approve what you’re doing; to accept your data; to give you a green light to move on to the next stage.

The difference between a good analyst and great analysts – getting buy in!

The Key: 3 Ways to Nurture Successful Ongoing Analytics

What do I need to create a project that continually gets funding quarter over qurter? Year or over?

1) Make sure your data collection meets a strategic business need.
By this we mean the business itself needs to find it important. Not the analytics team finds it important; the business leaders need to find it important. Stakeholders need to ask about it in follow-up meetings; they need to be interested in it.

2) Explain the analytics in a way that the stakeholders can understand.
How can you explain to your directors — in an accessible way — what the data is saying, and why the data is critical?

3) Demonstrate ROI to stakeholders.
How can you improve this data gives you stronger confirmation than a primal instinct, and that the data collection and analysis is worth the investment.

4 Tips for Communicating Analysis to Stakeholders

1) Walk a mile in their shoes.
What does it the person you’re communicating to need? Ask them! What are your top of mind problems you’re dealing with? What do they need to communicate to their supervisors? What data do they need to give X project value? How can you mine the right data to solve the right problems?

2) Run your presentation past a nontechnical supporter.
Seriously. Make sure your nontechnical volunteer understands what you’re saying before you run your presentation by a stakeholder. Another approach is to pretend that you’re giving your presentation to your mother, or your neighbor; will they understand what you’re saying?

Pro tips:
Only take  two-minutes to explain your methodology.

Use analogies!

3) Create proof points for your techniques.
For example: Are there other markets that are already using a similar approach? Other companies? Other internal resources? Respected industry expert? Can you get examples of their work, or actually get the person in the room with you (if in-house)?

4) Watch your assumptions!
Only show two or three if you need to show them. Don’t get them overwhelmed with maybe data.

How to integrate data into business decision-making

A flow might go like this: [She calls this “the evolution of the non-technical business decisions maker”]

Sure, let’s test it!
Implement it – but I want to approve final decisions.
Implement – but you approve final decisions.
Ok. This is working great. Let’s automate it!

What you want is for your business decision maker to hand you the keys: “You own this! You know it better than I do; let me just give you the context of what I am trying to accomplish, and you mine/collect the data to make it happen.”

When developing your speaking skills it’s remember: We all learn from our failures. Keep trying, keep failing, keep learning.

Chelsea Adams Brooks is a long-distance cyclist, aspiring cob house builder, schema/analytics/algorithm obsessor, and a former senior content writer at Bruce Clay Inc.

See Chelsea's author page for links to connect on social media.

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