They are Advertised like fast food.
Just like Fast Food, the data community has flashy but problematic advertising.
Analytical products such as Tableau and Power BI ironically canโt visualize hard hitting insights in an advert so resort to gorgeous screenshots of perfectly designed visualizations based off of perfectly manicured data.
This then normalizes the notion that analytics are pretty. We have a saying at work 'people will believe wrong analytics that are pretty' and that's a big problem in a world where data literacy isn't quite there yet..
Data isn't uniform or easy to whip up into something sexy. A sexy dashboard shouldn't be what customers are envisioning when they ask for data.
They offer drive-through results
Just like fast food offers instant satisfaction and convenience by way of a drive-through. Dashboards offer instant numbers on a web page in seconds.
However data is always more than what meets the eye. Every person is coming to the same dashboard for different reasons and yet the data in that dashboard was built for one specific reason. So it's not always a good situation to have this golden number so easy for people to get to.
I like to think of data as an Iceberg, where you really need to delve beneath the surface to understand what what you are dealing with.
Jordan Morrow, Head of Data Literacy at Qlik, says "move past the observation and onto the insight."
With drive-through / drive-by dashboards it doesn't challenge anyone to stop and think about what that data represents. No one sits down at a dashboard and really pulls it apart, asks questions, or even arranges for it to be fact checked. It's something they glance at 3 minutes before a strategy meeting.
No Nutritional Value
They are the empty calories of the insights world. If you only ever look at Dashboards you will never learn what's driving the data. Just like it's important that you make sure you are getting your nutritional needs met by real food, it's absolutely vital that you step away from what you are delivered and understand what makes up that data. Is it complete? How does it behave? What went into making this number?
Making numbers easy to access in handy dandy dashboards doesn't result in an increase in data literacy. Just like constant burgers don't meet your nutritional requirements. Teams need to understand what their nutritional (data) needs are, and work towards them, by familiarizing themselves with the reality of the underlying data. Once a team is familiar with how their data works then they can pull out meaningful insights.
Probably made from harmful ingredients
I see this a lot in my job. People using a report thinking that it represents something it doesn't. A series of data sharing and Chinese Whispers results in a wrong understanding. It hearkens back to the drive-through issue, where the customer is convinced by the the number they see in front of them and they won't question it. In some cases I've seen customers claim that reports represented data it actively excluded or data that didn't exist in our systems.
Prevents you from learning actual skills.
If you eat fast food every night you'll arguably loose the ability to cook.
Dashboards are not the end of your journey to being Data fluent. It's great that companies are becoming more comfortable with data driven decision making but the drive needs to go further. It's like a muscle that will atrophy if you don't use it.
Who am I?
Ronsoak ๐ณ๏ธโ๐๐ณ๐ฟ@ronsoakWho Am Iโ
|๐ณ๐ฟ |๐ฌ๐ง |๐ณ๏ธโ๐
๐ Senior Data Analyst for @Xero
โ ๏ธ My words do not represent my company.
โ๏ธ Writer on @ThePracticalDev (dev.to/ronsoak)
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๐ฐ๏ธ I โค๏ธ space!03:11 AM - 13 Oct 2019