Tom Morris on Nostr: I mean, the problem is widespread. Everyone claims to be "data-driven", right up ...
I mean, the problem is widespread.
Everyone claims to be "data-driven", right up until a head of product trying to prove themselves decides the data people have dutifully collected and analysed contradicts their hunches, and the hunch wins.
Or entire development cycles are disrupted following the discovery that 0.00001% of users are more likely to click a button that is a slightly different shade of blue.
Data is a slippery bugger—easy to ask for, then very easy to misuse.
Everyone claims to be "data-driven", right up until a head of product trying to prove themselves decides the data people have dutifully collected and analysed contradicts their hunches, and the hunch wins.
Or entire development cycles are disrupted following the discovery that 0.00001% of users are more likely to click a button that is a slightly different shade of blue.
Data is a slippery bugger—easy to ask for, then very easy to misuse.