The "new oil" needs someone to make sense of it. Good morning.
Data may be the “new oil” of the global economy, but it is still people and culture that drive business success. That was my takeaway from Fortune’s virtual CEO Roundtable on “Unlocking the Power of Data” yesterday, held in partnership with Salesforce. Some excerpts from the conversation:
“Data is everywhere, and data sets and predictive analytics are important. But the power of human beings to access data and digest that data easily are also very important. We have to have our eyes on what’s happening from the macro perspective…and be able to connect all those dots.” —Nancy Green, CEO, Old Navy
“You need that ability to combine the data with that human capability and get A.I. and Machine Learning to help those humans be so much more effective…It is that human insight and that human ability that helps you take the jump from raw data and make sense of it.” —Mark Nelson, CEO, Tableau Software
“I’ve been in the data space for almost 30 years…and you know, one of the things that I’ve learned about data is that it’s really good at modeling stuff where you’re feeding it the data, and it’s really bad at coming up with solutions for a better future.” —Mohamad Ali, CEO, IDG, Inc.
“There’s a very small slice of the human population that even wants to be a data analyst.” —Peter Brereton, CEO, Tecsys
“I think the explosion of data analysts as a job is a real problem in our industry, not a solution. The answer is to democratize the data…so that’s it’s consumable by the businesspeople that we trust to drive these processes.” —Brent Hayward, CEO, MuleSoft
More news below.
Alan Murray @alansmurray alan.murray@fortune.com
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Google Germany
Google is suing over a new provision in Germany's hate-speech law that allows law enforcement to demand people's data before it is clear that a crime has been committed. Sabine Frank, YouTube's local public policy chief: "This massive intervention in the rights of our users stands, in our view, not only in conflict with data protection, but also with the German constitution and European law." Reuters
Shooting war
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Activision apology
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The worker-employer relationship disrupted How can business leaders respond to the challenges brought on by the pandemic such as the evolving worker-employer relationship? Deloitte's 2021 Global Human Capital Trends Special Report explores the importance of a clear and sustainable workforce strategy. Read more
AstraZeneca safety
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Flight A.I.
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Delta vs offices
Disaster Avoidance Experts CEO Gleb Tsipursky says it's "pure folly to pursue a normal office return" in the context of the Delta variant's surge: "The reason that so many large employers fail to listen to the concerns of employees, whether about their work preferences or their health, stems from the wishful thinking of dangerous judgment errors called cognitive biases. These mental blindspots lead to poor strategic and financial decision-making when evaluating options." Fortune
VR appraisal
Here's a good (and provocatively titled) Wired piece about how virtual reality just hasn't taken off, no matter how much Big Tech throws at it. The problem, it posits, is not the technology—which is pretty much there now—but rather a lack of vision. Wired
This edition of CEO Daily was edited by David Meyer.
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