It’s always people, process, and technology

It's always people, process, and technology

I speak and write a lot about people, process, and technology (Here's a whole bunch on that.) In a nutshell, your highest performance will come when the right people are using the right technology in the right way (process). So whenever there is a data management challenge, we need to ask: "Is this a people problem, a process problem, or a technology problem?" (And it could be more than one!)

This point was driven home recently by a client. My client was asked by staff: "What if our members print out their invoice and send in a check for a different amount? How do we prevent that?” To which my client responded: "Until we take a human out of the equation, something can always go wrong and we can’t predict or account for that. No software will ever fix that."

That's the thing about the "people" in people, process, and technology; no matter how good your process and technology is, people will do what people will do.

So when trying to improve data management, be careful about assuming you have a technology issue. The problem might just be the people!

Wes's Wednesday Wisdom Archives

Baby Steps

March 21, 2019

One of the keys to developing good data management habits is to be aware of […]

Success Requires Discipline

March 14, 2019

When it comes to data management, most of us know what to do; we just don’t […]

Take a moment to be grateful

March 7, 2019

Because we’re so focused on always improving what we have now, it’s easy to overlook […]

KPIs and Dashboards

February 28, 2019

I saw DJ Muller from MemberClicks speak on KPIs (key performance indicators). In his session […]

Documenting Process is Critical

February 22, 2019

When it comes to managing data successfully, process is critical. For example, a client of […]

Motion vs. Action

February 14, 2019

In James Clear’s book Atomic Habits (I recommend it!), he discusses the concept of motion vs. action. […]

Are You Answering Your Calls?

February 7, 2019

I’ve written about this before, but apparently I have to keep repeating it. If you’ve […]

Who do you trust?

January 31, 2019

Who Do You Trust I was reading an article recently about Warren Buffet’s “rules” for […]

Set benchmarks to measure progress

January 24, 2019

It’s impossible to measure progress if you don’t know your starting point. This sounds axiomatic, […]

You’ll make incorrect decisions. Acknowledge them and fix it.

January 17, 2019

A client of mine recently wrote the following to me: “It’s so hard to set […]

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