h, 2009
People
and business are influenced by numbers. For the years 2008 – 2009 the
overall numbers haven’t been very encouraging. Entire industries have
been disrupted, the global economy is in transition and everyone and
all media is discussing the meaning of these changes.
As we prepare for a new year the media is reporting numbers and using numbers to suggest that “things may be getting better in 2010“. What if they are looking at the wrong numbers?
The Numbers Behind The Numbers
Mike Mandel writes in Business Week: The GDP Mirage: (I strong suggest you read this entire article) “R&D
isn’t the only type of intangible investment that seems to be
declining. U.S. companies spend an enormous amount on worker
training—$134 billion worldwide—but they have been cutting back. The
drop started in 2008, when employers reduced their per-worker “learning
expenditures” by 3.8%, according to the American Society for Training
& Development. No data are available for 2009, but “from anecdotal
evidence, obviously there’s a lot of cutback,” says Pat Galagan,
executive editor of publications.”
“Ideally, a big burst of training would occur during a period of
creative destruction such as this so that people can acquire the skills
needed for the jobs of the future. The problem is how to pay for that
training, since unemployed people don’t dare spend money on long-term
training when they’re worried about short-term survival.”
W. Edwards Deming once said ” In order to truly understand
current condition one must look at the numbers behind the numbers and
put them into context of systemic performance. Systemic performance is
not indicative of measuring results rather measuring processes behind
the results”
What Deming was saying is that measuring results doesn’t tell you
what is or isn’t creating the results. Behind every result there are
processes, people, markets and related interactions. If you don’t
understand the interactions and how well they are performing than you
can’t effectively improve the pieces aimed at influencing end results.
What Are The Influences?
Today markets, people, businesses, governments and society at large
are influenced most by communications. Media represents a form of
communications and media surrounds us, influences us and leads us to
conclusions (results). If we are being led to the wrong conclusion
(results) then we make poor decisions aimed at creating more results.
Poor decision create bad results and the process repeats itself due to
a lack of relevant and relative data from which we should be learning
to make more informed and educated decisions.
Social media is an influence on markets. The market of conversations
can be used to increase our knowledge, our understanding and the
quality of our thinking. That is of course if we are listening to the
right conversations and learning from these conversations.
With corporations cutting R&D, training and education just maybe
they ought to look at innovative ways to use social media to accomplish
the same. But how would they know unless they had the right data?
What does your data tell you? Look behind it.