ATLANTA--(BUSINESS WIRE)--New research released today from Exasol, the analytics database, reveals that two thirds of data teams (65%) have experienced employee resistance to the adoption of data-driven methods at their organizations, despite an overwhelming (73%) belief that most employees are open to a data-driven approach. Of those respondents who have experienced some resistance, 42% of decision makers attribute a lack of understanding of the organization’s data strategy followed by a widespread (40%) lack of education about the positive impact data brings.
“Resistance to a data-driven approach stems from a fundamental lack of understanding around data strategy and the positive impact data brings,” says Helena Schwenk, Market Intelligence at Exasol. “In reality, healthy data cultures empower people to make better decisions, create open discussions and ultimately lead to the kind of superior innovation that is necessary for businesses to remain competitive and agile. Such disconnects make it impossible for truly data-driven cultures to exist.”
The report, Data Strategy and Culture: Paving the Way to the Cloud further revealed that decision makers overwhelmingly agree (83%) that data is perceived as strategically important to their business and 82% agree that their organization is working to improve the data culture. Yet understanding of their organization’s data strategy—and who is, and should be, driving data strategy—is unclear. Forty-seven percent of respondents consider data users to be very informed about their organization’s data strategy and only 37% consider mid-management or team leaders to be very informed about it.
The Data Strategy and Culture report also found a disagreement when it comes to who should be initiating data strategy in organizations. Two thirds of decision makers agree that data strategies are currently driven at the board level however, 57% believe middle management should drive their organization’s data strategy.
“A thriving data-driven culture can only exist when organizations employ a holistic, inclusive and committed approach to data across the entire business and for all employees—from entry-level to the c-suite,” said Schwenk. “The mere existence of data within an organization is not enough to translate to success. Successful data cultures demand transparency and a commitment to demystifying how data works.”
Note about research
Survey conducted by Sapio Research of over 2,000 data strategy decision makers from four key markets: the UK, Germany, the US and China. Respondents work in a broad range of business roles – from C-level through to marketing and operations – and are all responsible for gathering or applying insights from data.
About Exasol
Exasol is the analytics database. Its high-performance in-memory analytics database gives organizations the power to transform how they work with data, on-premises, in the cloud or both – and turn it into value faster, easier and more cost effectively than ever before.
To learn more about Exasol please visit www.exasol.com