Strategy & Leadership

Gut & gigabytes

September 10, 2014

Global

September 10, 2014

Global
James Chambers

Former senior editor

James is Bureau Chief for Monocle, Hong Kong. Prior to this he worked as a Senior Editor with The EIU's Thought Leadership team for over three years researching business, technology and cities. He has also written about business and technology for The World In 2015 and economist.com. James has previous experience from IR magazine, a finance publication, where he was research editor in London and Shanghai. Additionally he contributed to Legal Week, a weekly legal magazine, and worked on the FT Innovative Lawyers Awards in the US and Europe. James is an English law-qualified solicitor (currently non-practising) and holds post-graduate legal qualifications from BPP Law School and an LLP in Law from the London School of Economics.

Exploring the agenda for big decisions in 2014-15 and the process that business leaders will go through in making these decisions

Big decision making is changing. Many business leaders now have an enriched set of information to draw upon before making a choice about the direction in which to take their company. This report considers the agenda for big decisions over the next 12 months and examines the role that big data and enhanced data analysis are set to play in guiding the decision-making process.

The Key Findings of the UK country report are as follows:

  • Growing the business is regarded by senior executives in the UK as the single most important area for big decisions in the year ahead. However, an ongoing commitment to cost discipline explains why collaborating with competitors is the most common big decision on the UK corporate agenda.
     
  • The quality of big decision making is improving, more so in the UK than the global average. Highly data-driven companies are more likely to report improvements in big decision making.
     
  • Own experience and intuition are the main inputs into the big decision making process for British business leaders, followed by advice and experience of others internally. Data and analysis are only the third most important input.
     
  • Concerns about data quality and overload are the main barriers to the greater use of data. In addition, more than half of UK respondents (61%) feel that “relying on data analysis has been detrimental to our business in the past”.
     
  • More people are involved in big decision making at UK organisations than before. The rise in the availability of data has encouraged a kind of evidence-driven, and more democratic, approach to big decisions.

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