Details

The Real Work of Data Science


The Real Work of Data Science

Turning data into information, better decisions, and stronger organizations
1. Aufl.

von: Ron S. Kenett, Thomas C. Redman

32,99 €

Verlag: Wiley
Format: EPUB
Veröffentl.: 01.04.2019
ISBN/EAN: 9781119570769
Sprache: englisch
Anzahl Seiten: 144

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Beschreibungen

<p><b>The essential guide for data scientists and for leaders who must get more from their data science teams</b></p> <p><i>The Economist</i> boldly claims that data are now "the world's most valuable resource." But, as Kenett and Redman so richly describe, unlocking that value requires far more than technical excellence. <i>The Real Work of Data Science</i> explores understanding the problems, dealing with quality issues, building trust with decision makers, putting data science teams in the right organizational spots, and helping companies become data-driven. This is the work that spells the difference between a good data scientist and a great one, between a team that makes marginal contributions and one that drives the business, between a company that gains some value from its data and one in which data truly is "the most valuable resource."</p> <p>"These two authors are world-class experts on analytics, data management, and data quality; they've forgotten more about these topics than most of us will ever know. Their book is pragmatic, understandable, and focused on what really counts. If you want to do data science in any capacity, you need to read it."<br /><b>—Thomas H. Davenport,</b> Distinguished Professor, Babson College and Fellow, MIT Initiative on the Digital Economy</p> <p>"I like your book. The chapters address problems that have faced statisticians for generations, updated to reflect today's issues, such as computational Big Data."<br /><b>—Sir David Cox,</b> Warden of Nuffield College and Professor of Statistics, Oxford University</p> <p>"Data science is critical for competitiveness, for good government, for correct decisions. But what is data science? Kenett and Redman give, by far, the best introduction to the subject I have seen anywhere. They address the critical questions of formulating the right problem, collecting the right data, doing the right analyses, making the right decisions, and measuring the actual impact of the decisions. This book should become required reading in statistics and computer science departments, business schools, analytics institutes and, most importantly, by all business managers."<b> <br />—A. Blanton Godfrey,</b> Joseph D. Moore Distinguished University Professor, Wilson College of Textiles, North Carolina State University</p>
<p>About the Authors xv</p> <p>Preface xvii</p> <p>About the Companion Website xxi</p> <p><b>1 A Higher Calling 1</b></p> <p>The Life‐Cycle View 2</p> <p><i>Problem Elicitation: Understand the Problem </i>3</p> <p><i>Goal Formulation: Clarify the Short‐term and Long‐term Goals </i>3</p> <p><i>Data Collection: Identify Relevant Data Sources and Collect the Data </i>3</p> <p><i>Data Analysis: Use Descriptive, Explanatory, and Predictive Methods </i>3</p> <p><i>Formulation of Findings: State Results and Recommendations </i>4</p> <p><i>Operationalization of Findings: Suggest Who, What, When, and How </i>5</p> <p><i>Communication of Findings: Communicate Findings, Decisions, and Their Implications to Stakeholders </i>5</p> <p><i>Impact Assessment: Plan and Deploy an Assessment Strategy </i>5</p> <p>The Organizational Ecosystem 6</p> <p><i>Organizational Structure </i>6</p> <p><i>Organizational Maturity </i>6</p> <p>Once Again, Our Goal 6</p> <p><b>2 The Difference Between a Good Data Scientist and a Great One 9</b></p> <p>Implications 11</p> <p><b>3 Learn the Business 13</b></p> <p>The Annual Report 13</p> <p>SWOTs and Strategic Analysis 13</p> <p>The Balanced Scorecard and Key Performance Indicators 14</p> <p>The Data Lens 15</p> <p>Build Your Network 16</p> <p>Implications 16</p> <p><b>4 Understand the Real Problem 17</b></p> <p>A Telling Example 17</p> <p>Understanding the Real Problem 18</p> <p>Implications 19</p> <p><b>5 Get Out There 21</b></p> <p>Understand Context and Soft Data 21</p> <p>Identify Sources of Variability 22</p> <p>Selective Attention 23</p> <p>Memory Bias 23</p> <p>Implications 23</p> <p><b>6 Sorry, but You Can’t Trust the Data 25</b></p> <p>Most Data Is Untrustworthy 25</p> <p>Dealing with Immediate Issues 27</p> <p>Getting in Front of Tomorrow’s Data Quality Issues 29</p> <p>Implications 30</p> <p><b>7 Make It Easy for People to Understand Your Insights 31</b></p> <p>First, Get the Basics Right 31</p> <p>Presentations Get Passed Around 33</p> <p>The Best of the Best 34</p> <p>Implications 34</p> <p><b>8 When the Data Leaves Off and Your Intuition Takes Over 35</b></p> <p>Modes of Generalization 36</p> <p>Implications 38</p> <p><b>9 Take Accountability for Results 39</b></p> <p>Practical Statistical Efficiency 39</p> <p>Using Data Science to Perform Impact Analysis 41</p> <p>Implications 42</p> <p><b>10 What It Means to Be “Data‐driven” 43</b></p> <p>Data‐driven Companies and People 43</p> <p>Traits of the Data‐driven 44</p> <p>Traits of the Antis 46</p> <p>Implications 46</p> <p><b>11 Root Out Bias in Decision‐making 49</b></p> <p>Understand Why It Occurs 50</p> <p>Take Control on a Personal Level 50</p> <p>Solid Scientific Footings 51</p> <p><i>Problem 1 </i>52</p> <p><i>Problem 2 </i>52</p> <p>Implications 53</p> <p><b>12 Teach, Teach, Teach 55</b></p> <p>The Rope Exercise 55</p> <p>The “Roll Your Own” Exercise 56</p> <p>The Starter Kit of Questions to Ask Data Scientists 59</p> <p>Implications 60</p> <p><b>13 Evaluating Data Science Outputs More Formally 63</b></p> <p>Assessing Information Quality 63</p> <p>A Hands‐On Information Quality Workshop 64</p> <p><i>Phase I: Individual Work </i>64</p> <p><i>Phase II: Teamwork </i>65</p> <p><i>Phase III: Group Presentation </i>66</p> <p>Implications 66</p> <p><b>14 Educating Senior Leaders 67</b></p> <p>Covering the Waterfront 68</p> <p>Companies Need a Data and Data Science Strategy 70</p> <p>Organizations Are “Unfit for Data” 71</p> <p>Get Started with Data Quality 71</p> <p>Implications 71</p> <p><b>15 Putting Data Science, and Data Scientists, in the Right Spots 73</b></p> <p>The Need for Senior Leadership 73</p> <p>Building a Network of Data Scientists 74</p> <p>Implications 76</p> <p><b>16 Moving Up the Analytics Maturity Ladder 77</b></p> <p>Implications 81</p> <p><b>17 The Industrial Revolutions and Data Science 83</b></p> <p>The First Industrial Revolution: From Craft to Repetitive Activity 84</p> <p>The Second Industrial Revolution: The Advent of the Factory 84</p> <p>The Third Industrial Revolution: Enter the Computer 84</p> <p>The Fourth Industrial Revolution: The Industry 4.0 Transformation 85</p> <p>Implications 85</p> <p><b>18 Epilogue 87</b></p> <p>Strong Foundations 87</p> <p>A Bridge to the Future 88</p> <p>Appendix A: Skills of a Data Scientist 91</p> <p>Appendix B: Data Defined 93</p> <p>Appendix C: Questions to Help Evaluate the Outputs of Data Science 95</p> <p>Appendix D: Ethical Considerations and Today’s Data Scientist 97</p> <p>Appendix E: Recent Technical Advances in Data Science 99</p> <p>References 101</p> <p>A List of Useful Links 107</p> <p>Index 111</p>
<p><b>RON S. KENETT</b> is Chairman of the KPA Group, Israel, Senior Research Fellow at the Samuel Neaman Institute, Technion, Haifa and, previously, Professor of Operations Management, State University of New York, Binghamton, New York and President of the European Network for Business and Industrial Statistics. <p><b>THOMAS C. REDMAN,</b> "the Data Doc," is the President of Data Quality Solutions. He helps leaders and companies understand their most important issues and opportunities in the data, chart a course, and build the organizational capabilities they need to execute.
<p>The essential guide for data scientists and for leaders who must get more from their data science teams <p><i>The Economist</i> boldly claims that data are now "the world's most valuable resource." But, as Kenett and Redman so richly describe, unlocking that value requires far more than technical excellence. <i>The Real Work of Data Science</i> explores understanding the problems, dealing with quality issues, building trust with decision makers, putting data science teams in the right organizational spots, and helping companies become data-driven. This is the work that spells the difference between a good data scientist and a great one, between a team that makes marginal contributions and one that drives the business, between a company that gains some value from its data and one in which data truly is "the most valuable resource." <p>"These two authors are world-class experts on analytics, data management, and data quality; they've forgotten more about these topics than most of us will ever know. Their book is pragmatic, understandable, and focused on what really counts. If you want to do data science in any capacity, you need to read it."</br> <b>—Thomas H. Davenport,</b> Distinguished Professor, Babson College and Fellow, MIT Initiative on the Digital Economy <p>"I like your book. The chapters address problems that have faced statisticians for generations, updated to reflect today's issues, such as computational Big Data."</br> <b> —Sir David Cox,</b> Warden of Nuffield College and Professor of Statistics, Oxford University <p>"Data science is critical for competitiveness, for good government, for correct decisions. But what is data science? Kenett and Redman give, by far, the best introduction to the subject I have seen anywhere. They address the critical questions of formulating the right problem, collecting the right data, doing the right analyses, making the right decisions, and measuring the actual impact of the decisions. This book should become required reading in statistics and computer science departments, business schools, analytics institutes and, most importantly, by all business managers."</br> <b> —A. Blanton Godfrey,</b> Joseph D. Moore Distinguished University Professor, Wilson College of Textiles, North Carolina State University

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