Motion vs. Action
One key to successful data management is understanding the difference between motion and action. Simply put, motion = planning but action = doing. Too often we spend a lot of time planning out all the different ways we'll improve our data management. We make plans to clean the data, to establish clear business rules, to create effective documentation, to create an internal data management team, and so on. We make lots of plans. But what do we do? It's the doing that will get the data clean and make it useful, not the planning. Are you spending most of your time on motion or action? |
Wes's Wednesday Wisdom Archives
"Experience is unobservable to everyone except the person who it happens to."
In Dan Gilbert’s book Stumbling on Happiness, he writes: “Experience is unobservable to everyone except […]
Know Your Audience Before You Speak
This one may seem obvious, but when you’re speaking to anyone, whether it’s one person, […]
"Behavior is a function of the person in their environment."
Lewin’s equation says “behavior is a function of the person in their environment.” (He was […]
Signal-to-noise ratio
Signal-to-noise ratio Signal-to-noise ratio, formally used, applies to electricity and engineering, and refers to how […]
Consultants bring perspective
Consultants bring perspective At a recent speaking engagement, I was asked what I think is […]
Garbage in, gospel out
Garbage in, gospel out We’ve all heard the phrase “Garbage in, garbage out.” If the […]
Dramatic change does not happen overnight
Dramatic change does not happen overnight Like most things in life, dramatic change does not […]
Implementation Intention
Implementation Intention Editor’s note: I have a new email newsletter, sent weekly, called Wes’s Wednesday […]