Menu
Sign In Search Podcasts Charts People & Topics Add Podcast API Pricing
Podcast Image

CDO Matters Podcast

CDO Matters Ep. 20 | Happy Hour with Scott Taylor

23 Mar 2023

Description

What happens when you get two modern data experts in a room to talk shop over a beer? Let’s find out!In celebration of the 20th episode of the podcast, Malcolm sits down again with the guest who kicked things off on Episode 1 of the CDO Matters podcast, Scott Taylor (aka. The Data Whisperer). Malcolm hosted Scott for a casual chat in his Florida home to catch up and talk all things data over drinks. Throughout the episode, the two discuss current trends, issues and observations about the data space.Topics of conversation include:• A retrospective of the CDO Matters podcast• Data storytelling and finding a unique voice within the industry• Lessons and tips for current and aspiring CDOs• The importance of data messaging• Upcoming events and appearancesAnd so much more!Key Moments[3:00] Looking Back at Episode 1 on Data Storytelling[10:00] Bringing a Unique Voice to the Data Conversation[15:30] The Failure in Data Management Consulting Today[23:12] Lessons for CDOs from Scott and Malcolm’s Travel Consulting[28:05] Reformatting Data Message Delivery[31:15] Misconceptions about Organizational ‘Culture Change’[35:50] Separating Data from Analytics: Analytical vs. Operational[41:06] Scott’s Upcoming Data Plans and AppearancesKey Takeaways Delivering a Data Narrative in a Unique Voice (10:00)“I hope I am bringing a unique voice to the [data] space. That was the whole goal [with the podcast]. One of the reasons why I wanted Scott to be guest number one and why I’m thrilled that he’s guest number 20…I wanted this to be a different voice. I’ve been in the data space for a long time. A lot of what I see…is the same old messaging over and over and over…the conclusion that I came to is that the way we’re delivering the message is wrong…what I was seeing from Scott was him delivering the message in a very different way through storytelling.” — Malcolm HawkerSeparating Data and Analytics: Operational vs. Analytical Use Cases (38:20)“Going back to analytical versus operational, I don’t know how you throw those into siloes. It doesn’t make any sense to me. What I see happen is when you give the keys to domains or groups or functions or departments to come up with their own analytics…they’ll create their own rules and their own data definitions and their own data quality rules and dashboards…and maybe that freedom is good, but then you have to operate cross-functionally to move a contract out of sales and into finance or move the product from manufacturing into marketing…and then, what happens?” — Malcolm HawkerSelling Leadership on a Data Solution (31:20)“When you’re going for funding [on a data project] and you’re back at saying that some version of this latest, greatest thing is going to fix all of the problems that I told you we were going to fix…the same as the last time. And so you’ve got, I believe on the business side, a certain amount of cynicism and weariness…And I don’t think it helps that, as data people, we come barging in there talking with selective amnesia…pretending that we never said that our previous approach would solve the problem.” — Scott TaylorAbout Scott TaylorScott Taylor, also known as The Data Whisperer, has helped countless companies by enlightening business executives to the strategic value of master data and proper data management. He focuses on business alignment and the “strategic WHY” rather than system implementation and the “technical HOW.” At MetaMeta Consulting he works with Enterprise Data Leadership teams and Innovative Tech Brands to tell their data story.EPISODE LINKS & RESOURCES:Follow Malcolm Hawker on LinkedInFollow Scott Taylor on LinkedInVisit MetaMeta Consulting’s website

Audio
Featured in this Episode

No persons identified in this episode.

Transcription

This episode hasn't been transcribed yet

Help us prioritize this episode for transcription by upvoting it.

0 upvotes
🗳️ Sign in to Upvote

Popular episodes get transcribed faster

Comments

There are no comments yet.

Please log in to write the first comment.