105K
Downloads
139
Episodes
Are you responsible for creating business impact with data products, SAAS analytics solutions, dashboards or generative AI/ML applications? Do you believe one of the biggest challenges with monetizing data products is navigating the humans in the loop—from stakeholders to users? Do you believe that a product-driven approach coupled with solid UX design is critical to ensuring that analytics and ML solutions even get used? My name is Brian T. O’Neill, and on Experiencing Data, I offer you a designer’s perspective on why simply developing ML models, dashboards, and apps—outputs—aren’t enough to drive meaningful user and business outcomes with data. Through solo episodes and interviews with data product management leaders, CDAOs, VCs, and designers, I explore how teams are integrating product-oriented methodologies and UX design to ensure that data products get used in the last mile. After all, you can’t create business value if the humans in the loop won’t use your “solution.” Whether you work in product at a B2B / SAAS analytics company, or you build internal data products for a traditional enterprise, join me as I dig into what’s working—and what isn’t. Hashtag: #ExperiencingData. PODCAST HOMEPAGE: For 1-page summaries and full text transcripts, join my Insights mailing list on the podcast homepage: https://designingforanalytics.com/ed ABOUT THE HOST, BRIAN T. O’NEILL: https://designingforanalytics.com/bio/
Episodes
Tuesday Aug 23, 2022
098 - Why Emilie Schario Wants You to Run Your Data Team Like a Product Team
Tuesday Aug 23, 2022
Tuesday Aug 23, 2022
Today I’m chatting with Emilie Shario, a Data Strategist in Residence at Amplify Partners. Emilie thinks data teams should operate like product teams. But what led her to that conclusion, and how has she put the idea into practice? Emilie answers those questions and more, delving into what kind of pushback and hiccups someone can expect when switching from being data-driven to product-driven and sharing advice for data scientists and analytics leaders.
Highlights / Skip to:
- Answering the question “whose job is it” (5:18)
- Understanding and solving problems instead of just building features people ask for (9:05)
- Emilie explains what Amplify Partners is and talks about her work experience and how it fuels her perspectives on data teams (11:04)
- Emilie and I talk about the definition of data product (13:00)
- Emilie talks about her approach to building and training a data team (14:40)
- We talk about UX designers and how they fit into Emilie’s data teams (18:40)
- Emilie talks about the book and blog “Storytelling with Data” (21:00)
- We discuss the push back you can expect when trying to switch a team from being data driven to being product driven (23:18)
- What hiccups can people expect when switching to a product driven model (30:36)
- Emilie’s advice for data scientists and and analyst leaders (35:50)
- Emilie explains what Locally Optimistic is (37:34)
Quotes from Today’s Episode
- “Our thesis is…we need to understand the problems we’re solving before we start building solutions, instead of just building the things people are asking for.” — Emilie (2:23)
- “I’ve seen this approach of flipping the ask on its head—understanding the problem you’re trying to solve—work and be more successful at helping drive impact instead of just letting your data team fall into this widget builder service trap.” — Emilie (4:43)
- “If your answer to any problem to me is, ‘That’s not my job,’ then I don’t want you working for me because that’s not what we’re here for. Your job is whatever the problem in front of you that needs to be solved.” — Emilie (7:14)
- “I don’t care if you have all of the data in the world and the most talented machine learning engineers and you’ve got the ability to do the coolest new algorithm fancy thing. If it doesn’t drive business impact, it doesn’t matter.” — Emilie (7:52)
- “Data is not just a thing that anyone can do. It’s not just about throwing numbers in a spreadsheet anymore. It’s about driving business impact. But part of how we drive business impact with data is making it accessible. And accessible isn’t just giving people the numbers, it’s also communicating with it effectively, and UX is a huge piece of how we do that.” — Emilie (19:57)
- “There are no null choices in design. Someone is deciding what some other human—a customer, a client, an internal stakeholder—is going to use, whether it’s a React app, or a Power BI dashboard, or a spreadsheet dump, or whatever it is, right? There will be an experience that is created, whether it is intentionally created or not.” — Brian (20:28)
- “People will think design is just putting in colors that match together, like, or spinning the color wheel and seeing what lands. You know, there’s so much more to it. And it is an expertise; it is a domain that you have to develop.” — Emilie (34:58)
Comments (0)
To leave or reply to comments, please download free Podbean or
No Comments
To leave or reply to comments,
please download free Podbean App.