Randy Bean (Boston, MA; newvantage.com) is one of the leading voices for AI and big data in business. He is the CEO of NewVantage Partners, a strategic advisory and management consulting firm which he launched in 2001. Randy is also a frequent contributor to Forbes, Harvard Business Review, MIT Sloan Management Review, and The Wall Street Journal, where his insights into digital transformation are read by business leaders around the world. Bean has been near the center of the data revolution for nearly 4 decades. He brings the experience of an industry insider, with the unique perspective of a critic and outsider. Randy wrote a monthly column on Big Data for The Wall Street Journal from 2014-2015, often focusing on the cultural issues and challenges that large organizations routinely face. He is currently a regular contributor to Forbes, MIT Sloan Management Review, and Harvard Business Review on the topics of Big Data and innovation, and the challenges and issues relating to the adoption and application of new approaches by Fortune 1000 companies. Randy is noted for his pragmatic non-academic business perspective as an executive who has worked on Wall Street, Silicon Valley, and in the management consulting worlds, and his written extensively on these subjects.
Fail fast, learn faster: lessons in data-driven leadership in an age of disruption, big data, and ai Ebook
Fail Fast, Learn Faster presents a broad, historical, and cultural perspective on the evolution of data over three decades and shows how data is being applied to transform businesses and industries. This book tackles one of the most disruptive and central issues facing leading corporations today at a moment when data, analytics, and science are being ignored by some in positions of leadership – the ability to transform their companies into data-driven organizations with a data-driven culture. The book explores the evolution of data in the context of a changing world, considering technology factors, the rise of consumer-driven services, and changing customer demographics, and considers the broader social and cultural implications of being “data-driven”. What is the business value and benefit from investing in capabilities such as Big Data, AI, Digital, and other transformational solutions that have emerged over the course of the past three decades? What does the future look like? More than simply an academic ‘how-to’, this book takes a critical look at what it means for an organization to be data-driven, communicating the critical need for data, analytics, and science in business in a style that is understandable and easy for business leaders and a non-technical general audience to relate to. The heart of this story is the cultural and human aspects of business transformation that often prevent these efforts from gaining organizational traction. What are the challenges and barriers to achieving business success? What are the opportunities? What are the challenges? Where are the pitfalls? What is at stake? Why do some organizations succeed, where others fail? Fail Fast, Learn Faster takes a long-view and provides a historical perspective in the larger context of change and transformation and how these impact industries and companies.
Year | 2021 |
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Format | Ebook |
Author |
Randy Bean |
Publisher |
John Wiley |