The full New York Times Innovation Report was leaked last week. It’s worth reading if only because it lets you look at a paradigm – an entire way of thinking, laden with it’s own explanations of culture, causal factors, jargon, assumptions, myths, systems, and heretics. It enumerates the preferences and aspirations of a small group of people (including their preferred org-chart re-org!) and highlights a long-standing tension between technologists and journalists. It may also serve as a wake-up call that continuous improvement and scientific management is already a reality at several disrupting media startups. Let’s begin. Summary if you didn’t read it (and won’t): The document contains 97 pages. The term “Competitor” is mentioned on 39 of those pages. Analytics[…]
It’s a big week for analytics in Toronto. There’s a growing industry of digital intelligence / analytics, professionals in southern Ontario. It’s a brilliant and welcoming industry. This is the week when we get together, share knowledge, and welcome newcomers. The eMetrics Summit, the conference of the Digital Analytics Association (use the promo code BERSPK for a discount to the summit), will also mark second major Southern Ontario Chapter meeting. There will be case studies from TD, CBC, Bombardier, Intuit, The New York Times, TVO, Hyatt, and Maple Leaf Entertainment. Zoe Morawetz (TD) is showing us how they execute digital segmentation. Gareth Cull (Mozilla), Mark Dykeman (BMO) and Tim Ashby (CM) will be sharing which technical traps to avoid, Greg[…]
This piece from McKinsey highlighted the inflated expectations of big data analytics – “…expectations of senior management are a real issue…but too often senior leaders’ hopes for benefits are divorced from the realities of frontline application. That leaves them ill prepared for the challenges that inevitably arise and quickly breed skepticism.” The listicle (et tu, McKinsey?) summarized below, is somewhat related to that concern: 1. Data and analytics aren’t overhyped—but they’re oversimplified 2. Privacy concerns must be addressed—and giving consumers control can help 3. Talent challenges are stimulating innovative approaches—but more is needed 4. You need a center of excellence—and it needs to evolve 5. Two paths to spur adoption—and both require investment (automation and training) In a fit of[…]
There are varying concerns about what constitutes a causal model, the degree to which data is biased, certainty that the model is predictive about the future, and, that the model itself is a truthful depiction of nature. Over the course of the past two weeks I’ve talked with many people about their perspectives – data scientist, developers, technologies, product managers, brand managers, statisticians, consultants, professors, executive producers, and founders. We’ve talked about everything from why analysts and their customers won’t accept narrow models, why it’s far easier to summarize data than it is to describe the relationships in it, and the intractable differences between what is performance reporting and what constitutes an insight. The verdict is not in. There are varying beliefs[…]
This is a lot of inside baseball. The motivation is to share information while acknowledging that it’s wildly anecdotal. It’s directed at data scientists thinking about business. The Facts Andrew and I founded Authintic in late 2012. We landed three great customers. We met between 1,600 and 1,900 well wishers, competitors and prospective customers. Five major market hypotheses were tested. Revenue was earned and value was generated. Authintic was acquired by 500px in early 2014. The Feels Thrilled. Very excited. And a tad skeptical about the lessons learned. People are terrible about extracting causal factors from an experience. I’m people. So I reckon that applies to me too. A sample size of 1 isn’t authoritative. It doesn’t constitute proof, or evidence[…]
The listicle is an amazing communication device. A listicle schema for communication – always in the form of a list. Sometimes that list is random, but, often ordered. I continue to be in awe of the ongoing effectiveness of the listicle. Lists are effective communication devices in analytics. Why not listicles? Lists Effective analytics dashboards are filled with lists. “The top 10 performing landing pages” “The top 5 posts” “The top 7 competitor ads…they don’t want you to know about!” Lists are visually compact and editorial appropriate. An executive might scan a list for the top performers and the bottom performers. An analytics executive might scan a list for the top 20% and verify that it accounts for 80% of[…]
Technical debt builds up in software over time. It is the summation of all the liabilities built into the technology over time. It impedes the ease of adding new features and increases the cost of keeping the product functioning. For those that do not understand technical debt, it is enraging. Why Technical Debt is Important Assume a software product that solves a problem that a self-referential group of people (a market segment) is willing to pay for that product. Assume that the product has just enough features (m) that results in more customers (n), consumer retention (r) and market penetration (p) that all feed directly into the recovery time of an investment (I). These variables are at the core of[…]
The Circa app (As of January 2014) is notable for the choices the designers made. And the choices they made. The color palette is consistent. The leading is consistent and generous. Upcoming information is faded and effectively previews content. The app can be used with gestures from one thumb, making it great for one thumb use. Just the right number of stories are presented on each day. They made quite a few good choices. They chose to hide most social sharing under a button, instead of surfacing all the options directly within the app. They chose to invest in making good recommendations about related content. They chose to invest in designing an elegant right rail breadcrumb that both respects the[…]
“The End of Facebook” trumpeted the headline. 46 points in 46 minutes on Hacker News. “Facebook Screws Social Media Marketers!” trumpets Business Insider. “Facebook is losing teens” states Global Web Index. Here we go with the bandwagon. Hop on! Only that this time isn’t going to be quite like the last time(s). Teens have fled to their smartphones They’re computers they can control. They’re computers that aren’t tied to the family room, where parents can seen them. Small screens offer a degree of privacy and intimacy that larger screens, even the tablet, just can’t replicate. Facebook saw that a long time ago and snapped up a few cool startups. Ditto Twitter. Ditto Google. And the rest of us are behind[…]
A strategy is a set of choices that, when combined, cause a sustainable competitive advantage. Conscious, reinforcing, choices, are powerful. That’s what you learned in B-school. I’m far more pessimistic that strategic choices are generally conscious. I’ll explain. A set of deliberate choices, that constitute a strategy, might be: Because we chose the same aircraft we save money on maintenance. Because we chose the same aircraft we save money on ticketing. Because we chose the same aircraft we compete exceptionally well on specific flight pairs. Because we chose a large set of direct point-to-point flights without going through hubs, we save money on baggage transfer. Because we simplify baggage, we can turn planes around more reliably. Because we turn planes around[…]