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Welcome to RIMScast. Your host is Justin Smulison, Business Content Manager at RIMS, the Risk and Insurance Management Society. Justin interviews three RISKWORLD attendees at RISKWORLD 2025. They are first, Audrey Trim of Thomson Rivers University, second, Lucy Straker of Beazley, and third, François Beaume of Sonepar and AMRAE. Audrey Trim shares information about her career and her experiences at RISKWORLD and on the Board at BC RIMS. She introduces the Second Annual Coast to Coast Risk Management Legacy Challenge for Canada and tells how student teams can compete. Lucy Straker describes the growing risk of political violence and active assailant events, and what insurance products are needed on top of general liability. She offers strategies for preventing and mitigating violent events. François Beaume presents the 17th Annual AMRAE RMIS Panorama, a survey of vendors and risk managers, with insights into the software and technology available to corporate risk teams. The Panorama and data sets are freely available online in French and English at the link below. Listen in for a glimpse of the variety of education at RISKWORLD. Be sure to save the dates May 3rd through the 6th for RISKWORLD 2026 in Philadelphia. Key Takeaways: [:01] About RIMS and RIMScast. [:16] About this episode of RIMScast, coming to you live from RISKWORLD 2025 in Chicago. There are so many topics and perspectives to cover! [:40] RIMS-CRMP Workshops! RIMS is co-hosting an intensive four-day program, which is your gateway to achieving two prestigious certifications, the DRI Certified Business Continuity Professional (CBCP) and the RIMS Certified Risk Management Professional (RIMS-CRMP). [:59] This workshop will be held from May 19th through the 22nd in collaboration with DRI International. Links to these courses can be found through the Certification page of RIMS.org and this episode's show notes. [1:14] Virtual Workshops! On June 12th, Pat Saporito will host “Managing Data for ERM”, and she will return on June 26th to present the very popular new course, “Generative AI for Risk Management”. [1:31] A link to the full schedule of virtual workshops can be found on the RIMS.org/education and RIMS.org/education/online-learning pages. A link is also in this episode's show notes. [1:42] We're at RISKWORLD this week, but preparations are already underway for the RIMS ERM Conference 2025 on November 17th and 18th in Seattle, Washington. RIMS is accepting educational session submissions through May 20th. [2:00] The best submissions will address current and future challenges facing ERM practitioners as well as provide leading practices and concrete takeaways for a diverse audience of risk professionals from industries or organizations of varied sizes, disciplines, functions, and roles. [2:16] These include officers, leaders, managers, and students. The link to the submission form is in this episode's show notes. [2:26] Of course, mark your calendars for November 17th and 18th, and I'll be sure to alert you when registration opens. [2:34] RISKWORLD 2025 was one of the highlights of the 75th Anniversary of RIMS. We had a fantastic time here at McCormick Place in Chicago. We've got a lot of perspectives that we're going to cover! [2:47] Our first guest is the Responsible Use of Space Coordinator in the Risk Management Department of Thomson Rivers University in British Columbia and a Board Member of BC RIMS. She is making her RISKWORLD and RIMScast debut. [3:04] Audrey Trim is here to tell us about her experience as a first-time attendee and the 2025 Coast-to-Coast Risk Management Legacy Challenge, which was a big draw among the students at RIMS Canada 2024, and we expect that to possibly outdo itself in 2025. [3:24] You could sense the energy on the exhibit room floor on Day 1 of RISKWORLD. Let's get to it! [3:32] Interviews! Audrey Trim, welcome to RIMScast! [3:38] On RISKWORLD Day 1, Audrey enjoyed the Matha Stewart opening keynote. It was a great, inspirational show. Audrey has taken in some great sessions. She's looking forward to some educational seminars. This is Audrey's first RISKWORLD; it will not be her last! [4:57] Audrey explains her job title, Responsible Use of Space Coordinator. She oversees the non-academic space, among other things, on the Thomson Rivers University campus. She focuses on the best use of the space in a responsible way. [6:07] In earlier roles, Audrey worked on the 2014 Tim Hortons Brier in Kamloops and was an Event Coordinator for the City of Kamloops. She also coordinated a Buskers Festival. Then she fell into risk management, and she's loving it. [6:28] Audrey joined the Risk Group at Thomson Rivers three years ago. She became a BC RIMS member and now serves on the chapter board. Audrey is on the organizing committee of the Coast to Coast Risk Management Legacy Challenge, working with the SA RIMS Chapter. [7:01] This is the Second Annual Coast to Coast Risk Management Legacy Challenge for Canada. They will try to outdo the premier year. The Challenge involves students in teams of four from universities across Canada. [7:31] The teams get a case study and compete for the top two spots. The top two teams will get a chance to present their findings at the 2025 RIMS Canada Conference, which will be in Calgary, Alberta, from September 14th through 17th. [7:50] This year, Ken Letander, Case Study Champion, owner and Founder of Strat First Inc., a Canadian risk management firm, has chosen the case study topic: Reporting, Set Aside, Spend: Indigenous business joint venture, ethical dilemmas, and program integrity benefits. [8:15] It's going to be a big draw. Audrey hopes lots of teams apply. Ken Letander and others will judge the entries. [8:45] Audrey describes the passion and thought that went into the submissions to the 2024 Coast to Coast Challenge. The winning submission developed a tool to measure health equity across the province. The tool was given to the Fraser Health Authority to use day-to-day. [9:35] The Coast to Coast Challenge is open to students across Canada. One of the members of the winning team last year changed her direction from business to risk management, because she had such a great experience at the conference and during the case study. [10:38] Apply to join the Coast to Coast Risk Management Legacy Challenge by May 24th. The case study will be assigned on May 30th. Each team submits a 10-page report. The judges will pick the top two teams to present at the RIMS Canada Conference 2025. [10:55] A link to the submissions page and contact information is in this episode's show notes. [11:16] Audrey's advice to anyone considering attending RISKWORLD 2026: “Know where you're going and how to get around the conference. Also, curate your sessions. There are a lot of options here. Pick out the ones that will have an impact on you and teach you something great.” [11:35] “There are so many networking opportunities. Take advantage of those. Get out there. Don't be afraid to try new things!” [11:39] RIMS Canada 2025 will be held from September 14th through 17th in Calgary. Registration will open soon. Audrey says, “Do it! The RIMS Canada Conference was a great opportunity to meet people and network!” [12:20] Plug Time! RIMS Webinars! We are back on May 22nd, with GRC, a TÜV SÜD Company, and their newest session, “Asset Valuations in 2025: Managing Tariffs, Inflation, and Rising Insurance Scrutiny”. [12:36] On June 5th, Zywave joins us to discuss “Today's Escalating Risk Trajectory: What's the Cause and What's the Solution?” [12:47] On June 17th, Origami Risk returns to present “Strategic Risk Financing in an Unstable Economy: Leveraging Technology for Efficiency and Cost Reduction”. This session was rescheduled from May. If you were already registered, you do not need to take any action. [13:03] More webinars will be announced soon and added to the RIMS.org/Webinars page. Go there to register. Registration is complimentary for RIMS members. [13:15] Spencer Educational Foundation's Grants program is starting soon. Spencer's goal to help build a talent pipeline of risk management and insurance professionals is achieved, in part, by its collaboration with risk management and insurance educators across the U.S. and Canada. [13:34] Since 2010, Spencer has awarded over $3.3 million in General Grants to support over 130 student-centered experiential learning initiatives at universities and RMI non-profits. Spencer's 2026 application process is now open through July 30th, 2025. [13:55] General Grant awardees are typically notified at the end of October. Learn more about Spencer's General Grants through the Programs tab of SpencerEd.org. [14:05] On the 7th of October, the New Jersey RIMS Chapter will return to the beautiful Fiddler's Elbow Country Club in Bedminster, New Jersey, for their Annual Charity Golf/Pickleball Event. [14:18] Registration is open, and the event proceeds are used to fund the chapter's Spencer and Kids' Chance Scholarships. It was the filming location for the upcoming movie sequel, Happy Gilmore 2. For more information and to register, please NewJersey.RIMS.org. [14:42] My next guest was a panelist on several RIMS webinars. I was delighted to see her, so we could record this special segment live at RISKWORLD 2025. She is Lucy Straker. She is the focus group leader for U.S. Political Violence & Deadly Weapons Protection at Beazley. [15:00] We will talk about the trends she's seeing in her area of practice. [15:06] Lucy Straker, welcome to RIMScast! [15:29] In 2016, Beazley looked at the landscape as it relates to terrorism and active assailant events and realized that traditional insurance options weren't providing sufficient solutions for its clients. Beazley created a product and a marketplace around active armed assailant events. [16:02] Lucy says what you see in the media is a fraction of what's happening. The media report the biggest and worst events. The risk is far higher than what is reported in the media. [16:31] Violence and shootings have increased. People are now more aware of the risk and are trying to respond to it through insurance products and legislation such as California's SB-553, with much more focus on preventing these events from occurring. [16:54] We want to avoid workplace violence before it becomes something. A lot of clients think they already have coverage for workplace violence in their traditional general liability insurance. [17:19] Recently, general liability carriers have put exclusions on their products for AMB, firearms, weapons, or the expected or intended injury exclusion found in a traditional ISA form. [17:38] Lucy says clients need to be aware that there is a potential coverage gap. A misconception among clients is that none of them think they will have a shooting. They're in denial. When there's a shooting, you hear, “I never thought it would happen to me!” [18:03] We're at a stage where gun violence is so prevalent in the U.S. that you can't argue you didn't think something was going to happen. You have to plan and prepare for the worst-case scenario. [18:28] Lucy advises risk leaders to buy coverage to help them cover the gap. They do not have to be alone. With most shootings, there is a warning sign. There is a trail. There are things to do to prevent it. [18:52] As a company, protocols have to be embedded from top-down and bottom-up. The company has to communicate every plan and procedure to its employees. Employees have to be trained and retrained. This is not something they're going to be thinking about every day. [19:09] You have to engage with your security team. You have to screen people. You have to screen the company. You have to create a culture of reporting. People are not going to report something unless they feel comfortable reporting it. You need to have anonymous reporting. [19:24] You need to instill a culture in your company of “See something, say something, report it.” It could be someone coming in and acting funny, or someone posting on social media, “I'm going to go carry out a shooting.” [19:46] More often than not, if someone's going down a path to violence, there are signs. They don't just wake up one morning and say they're going to go carry out a shooting. There are warning signs, and we want to catch them before it becomes something more material. [20:13] There are different lines of coverage and ways that coverage can respond, such as active assailant forms. Think about your business and other areas of your business you might not have thought about. Lucy mentions the United Health Care CEO being shot off the premises. [20:38] It was a targeted event. Were there warning signs online by Luigi, the perpetrator? How can you identify those threats? Make sure you have risk management and preventive measures in place. Think of the litigious landscape. We're now seeing more nuclear verdicts. [21:02] People always want someone to blame. You've got to make sure that, if something happens, you're doing right by the people to try and eliminate and reduce that liability on the back end. [21:15] RIMS Plug! The first of hopefully many RIMS Texas Regional Conferences will be held in San Antonio from August 4th through the 6th, 2025. This groundbreaking event is set to unite the Texas RIMS Chapters and welcome risk management professionals from around the world. [21:35] Guess what, folks! Registration is now open! The advance rate is available through May 16th. A link is in this episode's show notes. You can also visit the Events page of RIMS.org to register. We look forward to seeing you in Texas! [21:51] Let's Move to My Final Guest, François Beaume, The SVP for Risks and Insurance at Sonepar and the VP of AMRAE (The Association for Corporate Risk and Insurance Management)! [22:16] François Beaume is here to discuss the findings of the 17th Edition of the RMIS Panorama that AMRAE produces in association with and with the support of several groups, including RIMS. [22:36] François Beaume, welcome back to RIMScast! [23:02] AMRAE has the 17th Annual Edition of the RMIS Panorama available. In 17 years, the most significant evolution in risk management information system offerings has been the integration of advanced technologies like AI, automation, and data visualization. [23:57] These add-ons transform the software from a pure data management tool to a much more sophisticated platform that provides productive analyses and real-time risk monitoring to enhance decision-making capabilities and processes in a wider scope of topics. [24:40] Panorama is a collection of surveys. One survey focuses on vendors and one survey focuses on risk managers. François says there is still room for improvement in this solution. Progress has been made on flexibility and integration capability, with changes to come. [25:12] François sees a need to guarantee the success of such solutions, train users, and provide support to users to streamline how they use the system. Vendors receive feedback to provide customizable solutions, enhanced integration capability, training, user clubs, and more. [26:07] Interconnection is a key area of these tools. With APIs, modular architecture, and code-based solutions, more and more, these tools can connect with other risk management information systems. Some corporations have several risk management systems. [26:45] There are more and more interconnected features in these systems, to allow the risk manager and all the teams involved in the use of the risk management programatics to extract the most important benefits from the use of the tool. [27:04] ESG is a key area where this matters more and more. In Europe, there is a strong push for ESG compliance that requires corporations to gather and manage a huge volume of data that, when organized, is helpful to fuel the risk management processes. [27:33] The report evaluates 52 solutions in four functional categories, covering 17 functional modules and 14 technical modules to allow you to compare and assess the value of the solutions and if they are compatible with your company's technology for audit, risk, and more. [28:22] AMRAE is looking at the functional scope and the depth of the features that are offered. Is the scope well-covered? They are looking at technical capabilities; is it easy to integrate a solution? Is it scalable? How is the user interface? What can the admin customize? [28:45] AMRAE also gathers user feedback and testimonials from using a given tool in real life. That feedback provides robust data capabilities, seamless integration capabilities, and more user-friendly interfaces that will benefit the users of the tool. [29:36] RMIS vendors use AI in predictive analytics of historical data. Risk management is gathering and dealing with historical data linked to risk management topics to anticipate future risks. [29:59] Vendors use AI to automate workflows and streamline data from the field and validation from the stakeholders, reducing manual intervention and increasing confidence in the data quality. All data will be analyzed more easily with AI and integrated into interactive dashboards. [30:34] Dashboarding has improved over the past year to provide more interactive dashboards for better risk insights and risk decision-making processes. [31:10] François has advice for risk managers looking for RMIS software. His most valuable advice is to use the RMIS Panorama. It's freely available to anyone. You can get it in French or English. Besides the Panorama PDF, there is an online platform that allows customization. [31:48] The entire data set from the vendor and risk manager surveys is freely available online. You can customize your analytics of the data based on your use case. [32:32] François speaks of captives and the evolving reinsurance market. The market today is favorable toward captives, a powerful tool for improving corporate risk management and the way corporations are living with ESG. There is a strong push in Europe for captives. [33:22] François has seen the creation of about 20 captives in France. Corporations need captives in the risk management process and risk financing optimization. [34:00] Special thanks again to all of our guests and all of the RISKWORLD attendees who made this year's RISKWORLD Conference so very special. Links to RISKWORLD coverage are in this episode's show notes. [34:13] Mark your calendars for May 3rd through the 6th, and join us at RISKWORLD 2026 in Philadelphia. [34:20] Plug Time! You can sponsor a RIMScast episode for this, our weekly show, or a dedicated episode. Links to sponsored episodes are in the show notes. [34:49] RIMScast has a global audience of risk and insurance professionals, legal professionals, students, business leaders, C-Suite executives, and more. Let's collaborate and help you reach them! Contact pd@rims.org for more information. [35:06] Become a RIMS member and get access to the tools, thought leadership, and network you need to succeed. Visit RIMS.org/membership or email membershipdept@RIMS.org for more information. [35:24] Risk Knowledge is the RIMS searchable content library that provides relevant information for today's risk professionals. Materials include RIMS executive reports, survey findings, contributed articles, industry research, benchmarking data, and more. [35:40] For the best reporting on the profession of risk management, read Risk Management Magazine at RMMagazine.com. It is written and published by the best minds in risk management. [35:54] Justin Smulison is the Business Content Manager at RIMS. You can email Justin at Content@RIMS.org. [36:01] Thank you all for your continued support and engagement on social media channels! We appreciate all your kind words. Listen every week! Stay safe! Links: RIMS Texas Regional 2025 — August 3‒5 | Advance registration rates now open. ERM Conference 2025 — Call for Submissions (Through May 20) RIMS-Certified Risk Management Professional (RIMS-CRMP) RISK PAC | RIMS Advocacy RIMS Risk Management magazine RIMS Now The Strategic and Enterprise Risk Center Spencer Educational Foundation — General Grants 2026 — Application Dates RISKWORLD 2025 — Show Daily! [Bottom of page] 2025 Coast-To-Coast Risk Management Challenge — Applications Open Through May 23 AMRAE RMIS Panorama 2025 New Jersey RIMS Spencer Golf/Pickleball Outing — Oct. 7 Global Trio of Risk Leaders Inducted Into RIMS Risk Management Hall of Fame RIMS Webinars: RIMS.org/Webinars “Asset Valuations in 2025: Managing Tariffs, Inflation, and Rising Insurance Scrutiny” | Sponsored by GRC, a TÜV SÜD Company | May 22, 2025 “Today's Escalating Risk Trajectory: What's the Cause & What's the Solution?” | Sponsored by Zywave | June 5, 2025 “Strategic Risk Financing in an Unstable Economy: Leveraging Technology for Efficiency and Cost Reduction” | Sponsored by Origami Risk | June 17, 2025 Upcoming RIMS-CRMP Prep Virtual Workshops: CBCP & RIMS-CRMP Exam Prep Virtual Bootcamp: “Mastering Business Continuity & Risk Management” | May 19‒22, 2025 | In Collaboration with DRI International Full RIMS-CRMP Prep Course Schedule “Managing Data for ERM” | June 12 | Instructor: Pat Saporito “Generative AI for Risk Management” | June 26 | Instructor: Pat Saporito See the full calendar of RIMS Virtual Workshops RIMS-CRMP Prep Workshops Related RIMScast Episodes: “RIMS 2025 Risk Manager of the Year, Jennifer Pack” “Risk and Leadership Patterns with Super Bowl Champion Ryan Harris” (RISKWORLD 2025 Keynote) “(Re)Humanizing Leadership in Risk Management with Holly Ransom” “Risk and Relatability with Rachel DeAlto” “Live From RISKWORLD 2024!” “The Rise of RMIS with AMRAE's VP, François Beaume” (2019) Sponsored RIMScast Episodes: “The New Reality of Risk Engineering: From Code Compliance to Resilience” | Sponsored by AXA XL (New!) “Change Management: AI's Role in Loss Control and Property Insurance” | Sponsored by Global Risk Consultants, a TÜV SÜD Company “Demystifying Multinational Fronting Insurance Programs” | Sponsored by Zurich “Understanding Third-Party Litigation Funding” | Sponsored by Zurich “What Risk Managers Can Learn From School Shootings” | Sponsored by Merrill Herzog “Simplifying the Challenges of OSHA Recordkeeping” | Sponsored by Medcor “Risk Management in a Changing World: A Deep Dive into AXA's 2024 Future Risks Report” | Sponsored by AXA XL “How Insurance Builds Resilience Against An Active Assailant Attack” | Sponsored by Merrill Herzog “Third-Party and Cyber Risk Management Tips” | Sponsored by Alliant “RMIS Innovation with Archer” | Sponsored by Archer “Navigating Commercial Property Risks with Captives” | Sponsored by Zurich “Breaking Down Silos: AXA XL's New Approach to Casualty Insurance” | Sponsored by AXA XL “Weathering Today's Property Claims Management Challenges” | Sponsored by AXA XL “Storm Prep 2024: The Growing Impact of Convective Storms and Hail” | Sponsored by Global Risk Consultants, a TÜV SÜD Company “Partnering Against Cyberrisk” | Sponsored by AXA XL “Harnessing the Power of Data and Analytics for Effective Risk Management” | Sponsored by Marsh “Accident Prevention — The Winning Formula For Construction and Insurance” | Sponsored by Otoos “Platinum Protection: Underwriting and Risk Engineering's Role in Protecting Commercial Properties” | Sponsored by AXA XL “Elevating RMIS — The Archer Way” | Sponsored by Archer RIMS Publications, Content, and Links: RIMS Membership — Whether you are a new member or need to transition, be a part of the global risk management community! RIMS Virtual Workshops On-Demand Webinars RIMS-Certified Risk Management Professional (RIMS-CRMP) RISK PAC | RIMS Advocacy RIMS Strategic & Enterprise Risk Center RIMS-CRMP Stories — Featuring RIMS President Kristen Peed! RIMS Events, Education, and Services: RIMS Risk Maturity Model® Sponsor RIMScast: Contact sales@rims.org or pd@rims.org for more information. Want to Learn More? Keep up with the podcast on RIMS.org, and listen on Spotify and Apple Podcasts. Have a question or suggestion? Email: Content@rims.org. Join the Conversation! Follow @RIMSorg on Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn. About our guests: Audrey Trim, BTM, Responsible Use of Space Coordinator, Risk Management, Risk and Safety Services, Thomson Rivers University BC RIMS Board Member Lucy Straker, Focus Group Leader U.S. Political Violence & Deadly Weapons Protection, Beazley François Beaume, SVP Risks and Insurance, Sonepar, VP AMRAE, [Association for Corporate Risk and Insurance Management] Production and engineering provided by Podfly.
Brauchen wir in einer Welt voller KI-Agenten überhaupt noch Dashboards? Andreas Wiener und Kai-Uwe Stahl stellen die provokante Frage: Ist Dashboarding noch zeitgemäß – oder längst von AI Analytics überholt? Klar ist: Wer heute noch denkt, ein hübsches KPI-Cockpit reicht aus, hat die Zeichen der Zeit nicht erkannt. In dieser Folge geht's um mehr als nur Technik: Es geht um das Ende von Pinguin-Dashboards, die neue Rolle des Adlers – und warum ohne das richtige Mindset selbst die beste KI nur Schrott liefert. Wer jetzt nicht versteht, wie AI Analytics und Dashboarding zusammenspielen, wird in der Datenwelt der Zukunft überrollt.
In this week's episode of the PolicyViz Podcast, I sit down with data visualization expert Moritz Stefaner to reflect on his journey in the field. We discuss Stefaner's work on the Data Stories Podcast, his shift from bespoke data visualization projects to scalable design systems, and his collaborations with organizations like the World Health Organization. Moritz shares insights on the evolution of data visualization trends, the importance of clear communication, and the challenges of building sustainable design frameworks.Keywords: Data visualization, Moritz Stefaner, PolicyViz Podcast, Data Stories Podcast, Design systems, Data journalism, WHO design language, Data communication, AI transcription, Data storytellingmathematics, Al, machine learningSubscribe to the PolicyViz Podcast wherever you get your podcasts.Become a patron of the PolicyViz Podcast for as little as a buck a monthExplore all of Mortiz's amazing work on his websiteFollow me on Instagram, LinkedIn, Substack, Twitter, Website, YouTubeEmail: jon@policyviz.com
Bas Land was topsporter maar koos voor het ondernemerschap. Samen met zijn broer runt hij twee bedrijven: Kimura Data Intelligence en Datachimp. En het werd hoog tijd om eens met Bas te gaan praten, ik zal uitleggen waarom...Ik weet niet of jij een 'numbers' person bent, maar ik ben het in elk geval niet. En dat is zonde, én gevaarlijk. Want als je de cijfers van je bedrijf niet scherp hebt, loop je veel resultaat mis. En weet je eigenlijk niet hoe je er voor staat. Tijd dus om eens diep in de cijfers te duiken.Bas deelt praktische inzichten die relevant zijn voor zowel startende ondernemers als ervaren ondernemers. Een interessante aflevering voor iedereen die meer uit zijn data wil halen en effectiever wil sturen op resultaten.Veel plezier!GerhardHOOFDSTUKKEN 00:00 Welkom bij Groeivoer! 00:43 Van loonslaaf naar ondernemer 01:48 Hordenlopen 03:19 Ondernemen met je broer 05:32 Grip op data in bedrijven 08:52 KPI's: wat meet je echt? 12:08 Dashboarding 15:46 De 80/20 regel 18:56 Accountability 22:02 Privédoelen in dashboards? 25:46 Data als stuurinstrument 30:42 De potentie van je klanten 36:19 Twee cruciale vragenSHOWNOTES Relevante links voor deze aflevering Wil je verbinden met Bas? Voeg hem toe op LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/basland/Link naar de website van Kimura: https://kimura.nl/ Liever kijken?
Gutes Design gewinnt am Ende immer! Michael erzählt Artur von seinen Anfängen mit Power Query und wie sich seine Arbeit in den letzten Jahren entwickelt hat. Sie diskutieren die Integration von Power BI und Fabric, die Herausforderungen bei der Organisation großer Datenmengen und die Bedeutung von Prototyping und Visualisierung. Außerdem sprechen sie über visuelle Standards und Best Practices in der Datenanalyse – und darüber, was wirklich funktioniert. Und ganz zum Ende nochmal ein Trigger-Thema für beide: graue Hintergründe! Michael ist mit einer umfangreichen Erfahrung als Senior Consultant im Bereich BI & Datenmanagement. Seine berufliche Laufbahn ist geprägt von der Adoption und Migration von Power BI für Organisationen, einschließlich der Entwicklung spezifischer Roadmaps sowie unternehmensspezifischer Leitfäden und Rahmenwerke. Sein Fokus liegt auf der Entwicklung von BI-Lösungen, von Self-Service bis zu Enterprise-Grade, mit einem Schwerpunkt auf modernen Technologie-Stacks und der Unterstützung durch führende Anbieter. Michael hat zahlreiche Trainings und Workshops zu verschiedenen Themen geleitet, darunter die Entwicklung von Coaching- und Trainingsprogrammen für Unternehmen. Er berät Unternehmen in Bezug auf Best Practices im Reporting und Dashboarding. Seine Expertise umfasst Business-Intelligence und Dashboard-Entwicklung sowie sechs weitere Kenntnisse, die ihn in seinem Bereich besonders auszeichnen. Sein beruflicher Weg ist ein Beispiel für kontinuierliches Lernen und Anpassung an die sich ständig verändernden Technologien im Bereich der Datenwissenschaft. Durch seine umfassende Erfahrung und Fachkenntnis trägt er maßgeblich zur Transformation und Optimierung der BI-Strategien von Organisationen bei, und seine Leidenschaft für die Vermittlung der Faszination für Daten und deren Analyse bleibt ungebrochen.
Eric Boduch of Venture Studio 24 and Up and Revcast joins Nick to discuss Scaling Unicorn Pendo, When to Hire Your First Sales Leader, How To Construct a Team Pre and Post PMF, and How to Balance Stretch vs. Strain. In this episode we cover: Pendo's Origin, Product Development, and Customer Acquisition Product Market Fit, Growth Strategies and Team Composition for Early-Stage SaaS Startups Hiring and Company Culture at a Fast-Growing Startup Building and Optimizing Revenue Organizations - Metrics and Assumptions AI's Impact on Software, Dashboarding and Agent Orchestration Guest Links: Eric's LinkedIn Eric's Twitter/X Revcast LinkedIn Revcast Website Pendo Website The hosts of The Full Ratchet are Nick Moran and Nate Pierotti of New Stack Ventures, a venture capital firm committed to investing in founders outside of the Bay Area. Want to keep up to date with The Full Ratchet? Follow us on social. You can learn more about New Stack Ventures by visiting our LinkedIn and Twitter. Are you a founder looking for your next investor? Visit our free tool VC-Rank and we'll send a list of potential investors right to your inbox!
(Finance-) Dashboards sind Kommunikation in Reinkultur, umso erstaunlicher, dass wir uns diesem Aspekt der Unternehmenkommunikation zu selten widmen. Mit dem Daten- und Visualisierungsexperten Oliver Ulbrich spreche ich darüber, wie ein perfektes (Finance-)Dashboard aussehen sollte. Was sind die DO's and DON'Ts und was ist eigentlich der NETFLIX-Effekt? Viel Spaß beim Zuhören!Weiterführende LinksDATA DRIVEN DECISION MAKING: Wieso Tuen Sich So Viele Unternehmen Schwer Damit | DAWICONPodcast DATA DRIVEN DECISION MAKING Für Unternehmen | DAWICONKey Performance Indicators | DAWICON - Podcast
Veel accountantskantoren kloppen zich op de borst dat ze op maat gaan van hun klanten. Maar is dat wel het geval voor de financiële dashboards en rapporteringen die ze aanbieden? Dat is de vraag die Joery Lauwers zich hardop stelt. Met Watchtower specialiseert hij zich net in die twee domeinen. Rechtstreeks voor bedrijven, maar ook als white label voor boekhoudkantoren."Ik denk dat we nog altijd te veel jargon gebruiken. We onderschatten hoe complex we klinken én overschatten tegelijk de financiële kennis van ondernemers."
Famous retail magnate John Wanamaker once said "Half my advertising spend is wasted; the trouble is, I don't know which half." And without clear, understandable dashboards, business owners today hit the same issues. Today's guest is Donna Dube, President of Productivity Plus. Donna's focus is something that I think every business owner should care about. In this episode, we are going to talk about how to set up dashboards and how to ensure you are getting the best bang for your buck. Donna is a certified director of operations, who focuses on data & measurement. She works with established online entrepreneurs who are ready to make a bigger impact and maximize their profit by leveraging the power of their data without complex spreadsheets or math. Her motto is to make data way less dull and her client's businesses way more profitable! After listening to today's episode, visit Donna's website to learn more about her website dashboard minicourse!
In dieser Episode geht es um die Vorstellung. Du erfährst, was dich erwartet, wenn du dir den Podcast Data To Go anhörst. Ich stelle mich, der Podcast Data To GO vor.
Für viele Nutzer eine neue Plattform einführen und Arbeitsabläufe zu ändern stößt immer auf Gegenwind. Benedict & Christoph erklären wie sie bei ÖBB Power BI eingeführt und die Fachkräfte auf ihre Seite gezogen haben. Außerdem in der Folge dabei... - Warum wurde sich für Power BI entschieden? - Wie kam es zum Projektnamen MARS? - Wie wurden die User von der neuen Technik überzeugt? - Welche Standards werden genutzt? - Wie wird mit Self Service umgegangen? Als Fachbereichsleiter für Managed Reporting hat Benedict gemeinsam mit seinem Team über die letzten 3 Jahre ein neues, digitales Dashboard-Reportingsystem in PowerBI für die ÖBB umgesetzt. Seither wird das System MARS (MassiveAnalyticsReportingSystem) stetig weiterentwickelt, wächst rasant und freut sich über eine hohe User-Acceptance. Christoph ist Product Owner bzw. Projektleiter und hat den Überblick über die ÖBB-eigene Power BI Plattform MARS. Christoph ist schon einige Jahre im ÖBB Konzern tätig, und hat dort schon einige Erfahrung mit verschiedenen Business Intelligence Projekten und Tools sammeln können.
Andy Cotgreave, Senior Data Evangelist at Tableau, sits down with us and talks about the future of dashboarding. We also chat about The Evolution of Tableau Dashboards and Data Communication and Storytelling in Tableau Dashboards. He has a wealth of experience and this episode is packed full of insights. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/women-in-data/support
Pascal mag keine unmöglichen Sachen. Zusatzprodukte in Power BI entstehen aus Projekten, wenn man sich weigert, zu akzeptieren, dass Sachen unmöglich sind. HTML-Visuals von BI Samurai bringen Web-Technologie in Power BI. Pascal gibt einen Ausblick, was sonst noch mit Custom Visuals möglich wäre, z.B. PDFs anzeigen und sieht Power BI als ganzheitliche Plattform, die viele Funktionen vereint. Er gibt einen spannenden Einblick, was es braucht, um externe Visuals zu erstellen und erzählt, dass Wartung am meisten Aufwand macht. Außerdem redet er mit Artur über Monitoring von Power BI Arbeitsbereichen, wie es umgesetzt wird und warum es wichtig ist. Pascal ist Geschäftsführer der BI Samurai GmbH mit Sitz in der Schweiz. Das BI Samurai Team implementiert Power BI Lösungen für Kunden aus aller Welt. Bei Power BI Themen gibt es nichts, was BI Samurai noch nie gesehen hat. Außerdem entwickelt BI Samurai eigene Custom Visuals für Power BI, allen voran die beliebten HTML VizCreator Visuals.
Dashboarding vs. Analytics geht in die dritte Runde! Diesmal haben wir Power BI Experte Artur und SAC Experte Carsten am Start. Die beiden zeigen Stärken und Schwächen der Tools in verschiedenen Disziplinen. Außerdem erfahren wir… … wann ist ein Toolwechsel sinnvoll? … was ist das bessere Tool, Sac oder Power BI? … wer ist besser in Reporting, Dashboarding, Analytics und Planning? … was wünscht sich Artur von Microsoft? … was wünscht sich Carsten von SAP? Mit über 20 Jahren Berufserfahrung im Banking mit Schwerpunkt auf Datenmanagement und Reportingsysteme liegt Carsten die Verbindung zwischen effizientem und qualitativ hochwertigem Reporting und einem funktionierenden Backend sehr am Herzen. Er ist ein echtes Nordlicht und lebt bei Hamburg mit seiner Frau und zwei Kindern. Er baut gern an seinem eigenen Haus und verpasst nahezu kein Heimspiel des Hamburger SV. Artur König ist Informatiker mit dem Schwerpunkt in der BI-Beratung, Datenarchitektur und Datenanalyse. Bei der reportingimpulse GmbH verantwortet er die gesamte technische Umsetzung von der Datenquelle bis zum fertigen Datenprodukt im Microsoft-Umfeld. Zuvor war er über 12 Jahre als Berater und zuletzt als Leiter eines BI-Bereichs tätig. Artur lebt im Herzen von Köln und wenn er nicht gerade virtuell in der Power BI Community, auf Meetups, beim TDWI-Verein, in Live-Streams oder auf seinem eigenen YouTube-Kanal unterwegs ist, ist er auch sehr gerne analog auf Reisen oder in der Natur.
Self Service ist ein stark diskutiertes Thema. Oliver und Kai definieren in diesem Teil der Serie, was dazu gehört und wie Unternehmen damit umgehen sollten. Das kannst du aus dieser Folge mitnehmen: - Was ist Self Service? - Wieso sind Grundstrukturen wichtig? - Warum sind die Methoden wichtiger als die Tools? - Was hat Teamwork mit Self Service zu tun? - Wie sieht die Zukunft für Self Service aus?
Oliver und Kai machen den Auftakt unserer Dashboarding vs. Analytics Serie mit dem Thema Design & Interaktivität. Die beiden sprechen über Anforderungen von Kunden, wie man diese spezifizieren und umsetzen kann. Außerdem dabei.. - Was ist ein "fancy" Dashboard? - Welche Dashboard-Typen gibt es? - Was haben Adler und Pinguine damit zu tun? - Warum sollte man kein Enten-Dashboard haben? - Wie einfach muss ein Dashboard sein?
Andreas und Kai starten in eine neue Podcast-Serie. Die großen Themen Reporting, Dashboarding, Analytics und Planning werden definiert und genau durchleuchtet. Was du in dieser Folge erfährst: - Worum geht es in der Serie Dashboarding vs. Analytics? - Wie definieren Andreas und Kai Reporting, Dashboarding, Analytics und Planning? - Wo kann man mit Experten aus der Praxis diese Themen diskutieren? - Welche der vier Kategorien brauche ich in meinem Unternehmen?
Warum werden spannende Datenprojekte, trotz toller Erkenntnisse oft nicht weiterverfolgt?Darüber spricht Christian Krug, Host des Podcasts Unf*ck Your Data, mit Dr. Julia Zukrigl, Data Storytelling Trainerin bei Data Story Lab.Die beiden sprechen die Kunst des Data Storytelling, die anderen dabei hilft, die Einsichten und Erkenntnisse aus einem Datenprojekt auch wirklich zu verstehen. So dass eine echte Entscheidung für den Unternehmenserfolg auf Basis der Daten getroffen werden kann.Nicht selten passiert es, dass Datenexpert*innen den Entscheider*innen versuchen alle spannenden Erkenntnisse und Details aus einen Projekt auf einmal zu erklären. Häufig wird die Interpretation der Daten, dann der Entscheider*in überlassen, was zur Ablehnung des Projektes oder der Umsetzung einer Maßnahme führt. Gerade wenn die Erkenntnisse unseren bisherigen Erfahrungen widersprechen ist unser Gehirn darauf programmiert, diese erst einmal abzulehnen.Viel mehr als Daten sind Bilder, Erlebnisse und Emotionen dazu geeignet diese Widerstände aufzulösen. Mit Data Storytelling gelingt es die Aussagen und Erkenntnisse der Daten in einen Erzählstrang zu verknüpfen, der die Empfänger*innen mit auf eine Reise nimmt. Am Ende dieser Reise steht die Entscheidung auf Grund der Daten eine Maßnahme einzuleiten.Julia zeigt an einem sehr anschaulichen Beispiel, wie so eine Datastory zu erzählen ist. Von dieser Geschichte zeigt sie unterschiedliche Varianten, die stets an die Empfänger*innen und Situationen des Erzählens angepasst sind.Eine wichtige Abgrenzung, die häufig nicht gemacht wird, ist das Dashboarding und die Datenvisualiserung. Diese können Teil einer Geschichte sein, oder sie unterstützen ein Bild zu erzeugen, aber der eigentliche Erzählstrang ist etwas anders.Julia gibt Einblicke in Ihren Data Storytelling Methodenkoffer und zeigt anschaulich wie ihr euer nächstes Datenprojekt intern vermarkten könnt.Ihr Tipp: Geschichten handeln immer von Personen mit denen sich das Publikum identifiziert. Die Analyst*innen müssen sich manchmal auch von den Daten lösen und sich in die Probleme der Nutzer*innen hineinversetzen.▬▬▬▬▬▬ Profile: ▬▬▬▬Zum LinkedIn-Profil von Julia: https://www.linkedin.com/in/julia-zukrigl/ Zur Website des Data Story Lab: https://www.datastorylab.net/ Zum LinkedIn-Profil von Christian: https://www.linkedin.com/in/christian-krug/▬▬▬▬▬▬ Buchempfehlung: ▬▬▬▬Gerd Gigerenzer – Bauchentscheidungen▬▬▬▬▬▬ Hier findest Du Unf*ck Your Data: ▬▬▬▬Zum Podcast auf Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6Ow7ySMbgnir27etMYkpxT?si=dc0fd2b3c6454bfaZum Podcast auf iTunes: https://podcasts.apple.com/de/podcast/unf-ck-your-data/id1673832019Zum Podcast auf Google: https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly9mZWVkcy5jYXB0aXZhdGUuZm0vdW5mY2steW91ci1kYXRhLw?ep=14Zum Podcast auf Deezer: https://deezer.page.link/FnT5kRSjf2k54iib6▬▬▬▬▬▬ Kontakt: ▬▬▬▬E-Mail: christian@uyd-podcast.com▬▬▬▬▬▬ Timestamps: ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬00:00 Intro01:54 Julia stellt sich vor03:08 Spannende Datenprojekte finden nicht immer Sponsoren05:30 Kommunikationswerkzeuge und Verhaltensforschung als Werkzeuge06:45 Data Science ist mehr als Coding07:35 Wie Löse ich die Ablehnung auf08:45 Was ist Data Storytelling11:53 Entscheidungen auslösen mit Datengeschichten13:35 Eine nicht gelungene Datastory führt nicht zu gewünschten Entscheidung15:07 Dashboards sind nicht Data Storytelling16:45 Ein gelungenes Beispiel für eine Data Story22:35 Was macht eine gute Data Story aus23:20 Verschiedene Arten von Data Stories26:35 Geschichten sind personenbezogen28:05 Wo Data Scientists sich von Ihren Daten...
Olga und ihr Team bei KPMG Deutschland kümmern sich um alle BI-Themen der Firma. Mit Kai spricht sie über ihre Learnings, die in jeder BI Journey wichtig sind. Außerdem erfahren wir… … für was der BI or DIE SAP Day besonders gut ist. … wie bei KPMG Dashboards geplant und genutzt werden. … wie wichtig es ist Dashboards vor dem Rollout gut zu testen. … dass man Mut haben sollte Projekte auf die Straße zu bringen. … welche aktuellen Themen das Team bei KPMG beschäftigen. Als Leiterin der SAP BI-Abteilung bei KPMG Deutschland verfügt Olga über mehr als 10 Jahre Erfahrung in den Bereichen Finance, Projektmanagement und Business Intelligence. Ihre Zielsetzung besteht darin, die Kluft zwischen IT und Fachbereichen zu schließen und gemeinsam Hand in Hand erstklassige BI-Lösungen zu entwickeln, um das volle Potenzial der Unternehmensdaten auszuschöpfen.
Op de Big Data Expo presenteerde Bas Karsemeijer (head of Data and Analytics bij HEMA) over de manier waarop HEMA data inzet om de klantervaring te optimaliseren. Naast de verwerking van transactiegegevens, verwerkt en analyseert deze Nederlandse retailer ook 1 miljoen klantvragen per jaar.In deze aflevering spreken we Bas over de manier waarop de HEMA haar data-organisatie verder heeft geprofessionaliseerd. Zo heeft de winkelketen ambacht bij ambacht gezet en migreert zij alle on-prem data naar Amazon Web Services. Ten slotte vertelt Bas hoe hij met zijn team de manier waarop HEMA rapportages maakt radicaal heeft verbeterd.Luister deze aflevering en laat je inspireren door de manier waarop data-toepassingen ook 'echt HEMA' zijn!Tien jaar geleden ontstond GoDataDriven als data-en-AI consultancyboutiek vanuit Xebia. Per 1 januari 2023 bundelen beide organisaties hun krachten weer en gaat GoDataDriven verder als Xebia. Hiermee levert Xebia naast hoogwaardige diensten op het gebied van software-ontwikkeling, cloud en digitale strategie, nu ook waardevolle oplossingen met data en AI. Xebia. Creating Digital Leaders. xebia.com Tien jaar geleden ontstond GoDataDriven als data-en-AI consultancyboutiek vanuit Xebia. Per 1 januari 2023 bundelen beide organisaties hun krachten weer en gaat GoDataDriven verder als Xebia. Hiermee levert Xebia naast hoogwaardige diensten op het gebied van software-ontwikkeling, cloud en digitale strategie, nu ook waardevolle oplossingen met data en AI. Xebia. Creating Digital Leaders. xebia.comDe Dataloog is de onafhankelijke Nederlandstalige podcast over data & kunstmatige intelligentie. Hier hoor je alles wat je moet weten over de zin en onzin van data, de nieuwste ontwikkelingen en echte verhalen uit de praktijk. Onze hosts houden het altijd begrijpelijk, maar schuwen de diepgang niet. Vind je De Dataloog leuk? Abonneer je op de podcast en laat een review achter.
In this next episode of Tech-Driven Business, Mustansir Saifuddin continues the conversation with Hau Ngo of Summerlin Analytics to discuss what enterprises should consider when choosing a tool like SAP Analytics Cloud (SAC). They cover everything from system landscape, data sources, visuals, security, and cost considerations. His key takeaway: look at how an analytics tool fits into your business, timeline, and total cost of ownership. Hau is an SAP Analytics Architect and an early adopter of SAP Analytics Cloud. In 2017, he helped a technology company in California consolidate global sales reporting across 7 different ERP systems. This effort culminated in one executive dashboard that displayed real-time information, eliminating weeks of manual coordination and data wrangling. Subsequently, Hau has presented his work at conferences such as SAPPHIRE 2019 in Orlando Florida, and has gone onward to help additional customers streamline their reporting processes and visualize the key company metrics. His experience with SAP Analytics Cloud extends to customers with various systems such as SAP Data Warehouse Cloud, BW/4HANA, and S/4HANA. Connect with Us: LinkedIn: Hau Ngo, Mustansir Saifuddin, Innovative Solution Partners Twitter: @Mmsaifuddin YouTube or learn more about our sponsor Innovative Solution Partners to schedule a free consultation. Episode Transcript [00:00:05.170] - Mustansir Saifuddin Welcome to Tech-Driven Business. Brought to you by Innovative Solution Partners. In this episode, I welcome back Hau Ngo of Summerlin Analytics. Listen in as he shares key points to consider when choosing an analytics tool like SAP Analytics Cloud or SAC. [00:00:27.750] - Mustansir Saifuddin Hello, how are you, man? [00:00:29.530] - Hau Ngo I'm doing well, Mustansir how are you doing? [00:00:32.610] - Mustansir Saifuddin Doing well. Welcome to Tech-Driven Business again. [00:00:36.030] - Hau Ngo I'm good to be here. Thanks for having me. [00:00:38.470] - Mustansir Saifuddin Awesome. Hey, so I know we've been kind of talking about different topics so far, and today I would like to kind of zoom in into this very important point where a lot of customers, when we talk about considering SAC as their cloud analytics tool of choice. What are some of the considerations they should take into account? That's how I'm thinking we can dig a little bit deeper, at least from a cloud analytics point of view. [00:01:11.490] - Hau Ngo Yeah. So it really depends on what their system landscape looks like, if they have the legacy ECC or S/4, or maybe they have a BW or HANA Data Warehouse. So all those decisions sort of come into play. And I don't think a lot of customers are aware that SAC Analytics Cloud as a tool has different functionality depending on what you have on the back- end. So we can talk about that in this episode. [00:01:43.230] - Mustansir Saifuddin Absolutely. And I think that kind of is a good segue to what I was alluding to earlier. When we talk system landscapes, it means a lot of different things depending on who you're asking. In this example, I'll use the system landscape, especially from a data source point of view. Especially when we're talking about creating models in SAC and those visuals, how does that come into play when you're dealing with, let's say, for example, an ECC source system or an S/4 for that matter, or compared to a non-SAP source, what are some of the things that you should take into account when creating your SAC models? [00:02:30.070] - Hau Ngo Oh, sure. So one thing SAP does really well is they market their tool in terms of features and benefits and everything you can do from a Dashboarding perspective. I think the inherent problem, though, is SAP has such a large product matrix that it's hard to say, does this feature work here versus another one? So if you're using the legacy ECC as a source, there's really nothing you can do in terms of getting around it. You have to have some sort of data warehouse because SAP Analytics Cloud works best with a proper data warehouse. But if you happen to have an S/4 system, you can connect your dashboarding tool directly to S/4. And I was going to say on my first project in late 2017-2018, the integration between the front-end Analytics Cloud and all the back-end system weren't fully fleshed out or developed at that time. But if you were to fast forward to today, you're almost looking at feature parity for all the different systems. Before, it used to be that we have to import the data into the tenant, into the cloud tenant first, to have everything in terms of all the functionality, all the utility of the tool. [00:03:46.820] - Hau Ngo But now a lot of that feature set is rolled out to BW, to the HANA data warehouse, of course, data warehouse, cloud, and now even S/4. So there are differences now, but they're getting much less and smaller between the different systems. [00:04:04.770] - Mustansir Saifuddin That's good to know, because especially you see, a lot of customers have a mixed bag of systems and depending on whatever source system they are using, it seems like the tool itself is capable of consuming that data, right. In a way that is, from a user standpoint, it doesn't really matter what is the source, it's just the visuals. And the tool itself can mask that from them, right? [00:04:34.680] - Hau Ngo Yes, absolutely. And then I think in certain cases, I think my current client now we're exploring even a use case, a dual use case where some reports come from their BW system that we're initiating, and then a different set of reports come from S/4. But the UI, the interface is still SAC, so to the user is transparent, but depending on the use case, it could come from a data warehouse or their transactional system. [00:05:03.690] - Mustansir Saifuddin Right. And I think that kind of brings up this point. Right? The lines are getting blurry when it comes to the data itself. Right. It is real time information versus data stored in a warehouse and being consumed based on whatever frequency is getting updated, right? [00:05:22.310] - Hau Ngo Yep, absolutely. [00:05:24.810] - Mustansir Saifuddin So, talking about tips, right? Can you share some ideas or tips that when it comes to using different visuals in SAC, are there any best practices or any ideas that you like to share? [00:05:43.410] - Hau Ngo Oh, sure. So the cloud itself, the tool itself, Analytics Cloud, has a number of different chart visualizations and they're categorized primarily by function. For example, you have a group of bar charts for comparisons. If you want to see trends, there are a set of line graphs, and then there's pie graphs and tree maps for distribution. So you have a good number of chart types to choose from, depending on what you wish to communicate with. That being said, the three that I've seen the most on my last ten projects has been bar, number one, numeric, the large numbers, the aggregation as number two, and tables as number three. And what I found early on, when I try to experiment with all the different chart types, it tends to confuse people if they're not statisticians. Right. You can't just throw a scatter plot and assume people know what that means. So what I find is most people tend to stick to those three bar numeric and table as the three most common chart types. If you stick with that and start from there, you should be in good shape. [00:06:57.150] - Mustansir Saifuddin That's a good tip. I mean, keep it simple. It seems like the more simple you keep, the better usability you get out of that, right? [00:07:05.940] - Hau Ngo Absolutely. And a lot of these folks, they do generate their existing dashboard from Excel. And if you were to look and use the existing dashboard from the managerial report deck, they almost typically use those three chart types. [00:07:23.270] - Mustansir Saifuddin I think one of the things that I'm looking at from a prerequisite point of view, talking about, what are some of the prerequisites required for a client. When they're using SAC as a self service tool? Because it's almost like a parallel, right. Things that are done currently in Excel, especially when you're doing some kind of manager or reporting that you want to customize in Excel and you want to take those skills into SAC. So what are some of the things that they should have in place from a prerequisite standpoint if they want to use this as a self service tool? [00:08:04.000] - Hau Ngo Oh, sure. So I think that may be a two part answer. From a personnel or staffing perspective, I would suggest that our audience consider finding someone, whether they be internal or external, who is excited about dashboards and what this tool can do for the company. And I'm not talking about the technical features of the tool, but the way the tool itself can benefit someone's day to day chores or workload. And now imagine if you were a business analyst and you can tell your team that they don't have to open their laptop and log into SAP to see the numbers. And that would be cool, because if they got an email each morning with a full color PDF with all information they needed, that simplifies and cuts out that friction. Right. And for the field staff, if they could open up a phone or a small tablet and get the customer sales history before going to a sales meeting, that would be easier than what they're using now. And from a technical perspective, companies with an S/4 landscape should consider SAC as a reporting tool of choice. I'm working on a proof of concept where I'm embedding the SAC dashboards into the S/4 environment for a customer, and maybe we can talk about that on a future episode. [00:09:28.670] - Hau Ngo But if you have a BW or Hana data warehouse and you're deciding between SAC or another cloud based tool, then I would strongly suggest you consider SAC. And that's because you get tighter integration with live data connections and you don't really have to worry about the security. [00:09:48.550] - Mustansir Saifuddin Yeah, for sure. And I think that kind of is a good segue into my next question, which is all about leveraging what you already have in place, right. So when you are dealing with an S/4 or data warehouse cloud source system, what are some of the quick wins when you want to leverage the security models the roles definition that you have in your source system, do you have some examples that you can share with us? [00:10:17.800] - Hau Ngo Oh, sure. So I would say the quickest wins you can do when you're going in and highlighting the features of a new tool is to eliminate the unnecessary things that you would have to do, which is building data model, model data validation, and setting up security. If you could connect your dashboard to existing data warehouse or S/4 system, you're halfway there. And the beauty of SAC in terms of integration is there is no security. You inherit the security profiles of your source system, whether it's BW Hana or S/4. And the front end tool with single sign on respects all of the privileges you set up versus another tool where you have to kind of maintain or even duplicate that setting. With SAC, you don't have to worry about it, single sign on takes care of all of that. [00:11:13.790] - Mustansir Saifuddin I think that can go a long way, right? I mean, I'm thinking from the ease of use as well as the ease of deployment. It seems like if I can leverage my source systems for my security and my roles that are already in place, it can make much easier for folks to kind of leverage that information. That mapping that is already in place. [00:11:40.450] - Hau Ngo Yeah, I would say it's an easier sell. And also long term, there's only one point of failure. There's no dual maintenance that someone has to maintain in different systems. So I think it's an easier path as well. In terms of the actual tool itself, you can have some limitation in terms of whether user is a content viewer where they can consume the information or if they're a power user. Right. But in terms of the actual line by line, row by row authorization, let that be taken care of centrally in either your data warehouse or your S/4 system. [00:12:18.830] - Mustansir Saifuddin Okay, that makes sense. Now, what are the opportunities? It seems like that's a good feature to have. Right. And that comes out of the box from SAC if you want to do any additional security in SAC because I know there are some planning functionalities as well as just pure reporting and dashboarding capabilities. Are there features available in SAC that allow you to further customize your securities or the role? [00:12:49.410] - Hau Ngo Yeah, sure. So for some customers, they have data sets that they upload, whether they're doing manual compiling of information or planning or something like that. You can still set up security inside analytics cloud from a team perspective. So you can define team roles where certain team members can see the financial information but other team members cannot. So there are some security functionality, but it's more around who can see what sensitive information that's maybe not in your systems, but in these confidential flat files. [00:13:29.990] - Mustansir Saifuddin That's good to know because I think your point earlier, right, when you talked about source systems, and especially when you're dealing with multiple source systems, it seems like it may be a better idea to have SAC drive some of the security of the role definitions. Right, because you have a mixed bag of information coming in to your models. [00:13:48.530] - Hau Ngo Yes, absolutely. [00:13:50.930] - Mustansir Saifuddin Good to know that. It's interesting when you look at this overall, we talk about everybody's looking at cloud analytics as the way to go and it's just so much simpler and the technology has advanced so much across the board. Right. It seems like the most logical choice for customers to move forward in the direction. Would you say so? [00:14:17.290] - Hau Ngo I would say so. I think what you're going to see moving forward is maybe not SAP specific, but more cloud based technology. Just because from a deployment perspective, the vendor only has to maintain one instance or one master copy of the tool. It's just so much easier to use than what I think we've had a struggle with in the past, where even though a lot of customers are doing similar things, we have to have our own installation on custom repository. Here I've noticed at least on the early days, SAP was rolling out features every two weeks and it was really hard to keep up. But now the products seem to have matured a lot more. So I think at this point we're going to focus more on usability versus features. [00:15:07.910] - Mustansir Saifuddin For sure. I know we covered a lot of different things in the session. Would you like to share any one key takeaway that our listeners can take it with them? [00:15:19.750] - Hau Ngo Oh, sure. So we talk about SAC quite often and some of the different considerations for implementing this tool. But overall there are other tools and if you consider implementation and tool selection in a broader perspective, I've been lucky to be in a few early conversations during the tool selection phase and most customers seem to struggle with either SAC or another cloud based tool such as Power BI or Tableau and deciding which one to use. And most of the time the conversation seems to be centered around features versus cost between these tools. And what I've seen in terms of outcome from a couple of these meetings with different companies is that the SAP centric customer tends to stay under the SAP umbrella due to the tighter integration and security benefits that we spoke about. And other customers with non SAP systems in the mix choose the other tools because they have similar features at a lower cost. But that cost saving is usually offset by higher development times. So that's just the cost of doing business when you're integrating different systems. But that's just something to think about. [00:16:42.830] - Mustansir Saifuddin Yeah, and that's a good tip, right. And a good takeaway, especially when you have all these choices available to you. One thing that folks tend to leave behind is the fact that sometimes costs can be a factor in most cases, it is a factor. But what is the cost? Are you looking at the cost at this point in time, or are you looking at a future cost perspective? Especially when you're doing integration? Right. And this is all about maintaining your systems in the long run, right. So you have to keep that in mind. [00:17:18.090] - Hau Ngo Yes, absolutely. I think a lot of customers, they're very intelligent, but sometimes they get too focused on a certain thing and they get tunnel vision. But like you said, if you were to step back and look at the total cost of ownership of not only the tool, but maintenance, and will this be accepted? And which tool can actually be embraced by the business community? So those factors are taken into account. I would leave, I guess, the audience with one thing. People now are more impatient than they were in the past, because at the speed of things and their expectations have changed. Right. So app development, dashboard development, it's much faster. And if your tool can meet that demand from your customer base, then you're golden. The fact that you can whip up a dashboard in an hour or two is great, but if you're taking three months to get a lower cost tool up and running, that might be a deal breaker for your community, for sure. [00:18:20.070] - Mustansir Saifuddin And that's a great takeaway. I mean, it's something to keep in mind, especially when you're doing any cloud based analytics, right? What is the time to delivery that matters? Thank you so much, how. This has been a great session. Thanks for some of the insights into what things we should consider, especially when you're going with SAP analytics cloud as a tool of choice. So really appreciate your time and we'll look forward to meeting with you in the future. [00:18:47.940] - Hau Ngo Yes, absolutely. Have a good one, Mustansir. [00:18:50.930] - Mustansir Saifuddin You too. [00:18:55.770] - Mustansir Saifuddin Thanks for listening to Tech-Driven Business, brought to you by Innovative Solution Partners. Hau has shared some key pointers for you to think about when choosing SAC. His main takeaway? Look at the bigger picture when choosing a tool. Be careful when being driven by cost. We would love to hear from you. Continue the conversation by connecting with me on LinkedIn or Twitter. Learn more about Innovative Solution Partners and schedule a free consultation by visiting Isolutionpartners.com. Never miss a podcast by subscribing to our YouTube channel. Information is in the show notes.
Fri, 16 Sep 2022 05:28:33 +0000 https://dataengage.podigee.io/57-employer-branding-marketing-welche-daten-sind-da-relevant-mit-toygar-cinar-von-rheinwest-hr-solutions b0eb2ba3a20af96f8acff0d39cc9a99b Was haben HR und Marketing eigentlich gemein? Zahlen, Daten und Fakten sind im Bereich von Branding und Marketing, ja nichts neues. Darum sprechen wir bei DataEngage ja auch so oft über Marketing Analytics, Performance Messungen und eben Reporting und Dashboarding. Es gibt dabei aber ein Feld, dass bis jetzt hier noch nicht beleuchtet wurde nämlich: Employer Branding, Employer Marketing was geht dort eigentlich mit Zahlen, Daten und Fakten? In dieser Episode sprechen Toygar Cinar und Philipp Baron Freytag von Loringhoven genau darüber: Welche Daten, welche Metriken helfen dem HR-Team wenn es um die Akquise, Anwerbung und Bindung von neuen Mitarbeitern geht. Interessanterweise lassen sich dort viele Vergleiche eben zum "klassischen" Marketing ziehen! Mehr zu Toygar Cinar findest du hier: https://www.linkedin.com/in/tcinar/ Seinen Podcast kannst du unter https://anchor.fm/gamechanger-podcast anhören Mehr zu Philipp erfährst du unter: https://www.linkedin.com/in/philipploringhoven/ Über Feedback wird sich immer gefreut! Hat dir die Folge gefallen? Hinterlasse doch eine Bewertung: Apple Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/de/podcast/dataengage/id1511140878 Aboniere den Podcast bei: Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/75v2BTvGvg533hiS906Jpo Apple Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/de/podcast/dataengage/id1511140878 Google Podcast: https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly9kYXRhZW5nYWdlLnBvZGlnZWUuaW8vZmVlZC9tcDM?sa=X&ved=0CAIQ9sEGahcKEwjgvsvh2Lj0AhUAAAAAHQAAAAAQAQ Podimo: https://studio.podimo.com/podcast/148838ad-f68d-4e9b-a034-38e2ee8ed2dc/ 57 full Was haben HR und Marketing eigentlich gemein? no employer branding,employer marketing,business intelligence,marketing analytics Philipp Loringhoven - Daten Baron
Famous retail magnate John Wanamaker once said "Half my advertising spend is wasted; the trouble is, I don't know which half." And without clear, understandable dashboards, business owners today hit the same issues. Today's guest is Donna Dube, President of Productivity Plus. Donna's focus is something that I think every business owner should care about. In this episode, we are going to talk about how to set up dashboards and how to ensure you are getting the best bang for your buck. Donna is a certified director of operations, who focuses on data & measurement. She works with established online entrepreneurs who are ready to make a bigger impact and maximize their profit by leveraging the power of their data without complex spreadsheets or math. Her motto is to make data way less dull and her client's businesses way more profitable! After listening to today's episode, visit Donna's website to learn more about her website dashboard minicourse!
When you think about it, how much time and professional development attention gets given to building business acumen in your business? How much time do you spend teaching your teams about the inner workings of cash, profit, assets, growth and people? If you did, would they be able to make better decisions that would likely help the business grow? And if you wanted to increase the level of business acumen, how would you go about it? This week Kevin Cope best-selling author and CEO of Acumen Learning, who teach business acumen to leaders and their teams to help them grow faster and more sustainably, shares tips and strategies to help you build the business acumen of yourself and your team to help you fuel your growth. Here's What We Cover This Week…. 02:51 – The Acumen Learning Business Model 05:19 – Kevin's Background 09:00 – How COVID Impacted the Business Model 16:29 – First Key Hires that Had Big Impact 17:14 – Self-Publishing a Book as a Lead Magnet 25:00 – The Key Levers that Drive Businesses 29:25 – Key Strategies to Immediately Improve Your Business Acumen 33:25 – Dashboarding in Practice 34:59 – Educate Your Team 38:25 – Profit as Benevolence 40:43 – Aligning Incentives with Desired Behaviour 49:01 – How to Contact or Follow Acumen Learning or Kevin ------------------------------------------------------ If you got value from today's episode, please remember to: 1. Rate and review us on Apple Podcasts 2. Register to be the first to know when new episodes drop and free tools are published at www.scaleupspodcast.com, or 3. Drop us a question about scaling using Speakpipe on the website, or email questions@scaleupspodcast.com. Follow us on your favourite socials: ScaleUps Podcast on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/scaleupspodcast ScaleUps Podcast on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/scaleupspodcast/ ScaleUps Podcast on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/scaleupspodcast Watch the full episode at ScaleUps Podcast on Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCLlvcqAuqJMYBVUBoiixChQ You can connect with Kevin Cope via: Website: https://www.acumenlearning.com/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/kevinrcope/ or you can reach out to connect with Sean directly via: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/seansteeleprofile/ Website: www.seansteele.com.au
Josh has some ideas for Referral Rock that involve scraping and Nate wishes he could launch a company around dashboarding.
Data Analyst: Praktikumstätigkeiten Dashboarding-Tools, Workshops, Projekte als Data Analyst
Link zur Umfrage: https://masterarbeit.team-advertico.de/149942 Im Marketing ersticken wir in Daten - wir wollen unsere Kunden besser verstehen, ihnen bessere Angebote machen, und diese Angebote besser Kommunizieren. Dafür nutzen wir Daten, eben Marketing Analytics. Aber wie transferieren wir als Analysten diese Erkenntnisse effektiv zu den Stakeholdern? Um das zu besprechen ist in dieser Woche Artur König Gast bei DataEngage. Gemeinsam mit Philipp Loringhoven diskutieren die beiden worauf es in den nächsten Jahren ankommt Daten nicht nur schön aussehen zu lassen sondern eben Handlungen daraus abzuleiten. Wie sieht es mit individuellen Dashboards aus? Welche Abläufe sind nötig, damit die Reports vom Business Intelligence Team auch genutzt werden? Und wie erfahren Analysten überhaupt was analysiert werden soll? Mehr zu Artur König findest du hier: https://www.linkedin.com/in/datakoenigartur/ Mehr zu Philipp erfährst du unter: https://www.linkedin.com/in/philipploringhoven/ Über Feedback wird sich immer gefreut! Hat dir die Folge gefallen? Hinterlasse doch eine Bewertung: Apple Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/de/podcast/dataengage/id1511140878 Aboniere den Podcast bei: Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/75v2BTvGvg533hiS906Jpo Apple Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/de/podcast/dataengage/id1511140878 Google Podcast: https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly9kYXRhZW5nYWdlLnBvZGlnZWUuaW8vZmVlZC9tcDM?sa=X&ved=0CAIQ9sEGahcKEwjgvsvh2Lj0AhUAAAAAHQAAAAAQAQ Podimo: https://studio.podimo.com/podcast/148838ad-f68d-4e9b-a034-38e2ee8ed2dc/
Watch the live stream: Watch on YouTube About the show Sponsored by Mergify! Special guest: Pat Decker Michael #0: New live stream / recording time: 12pm US PT on Tuesdays. Please subscribe to our YouTube channel to get notified and be part of the episodes. Brian #1: BTW, don't make a public repo private How we lost 54k GitHub stars Jakub Roztočil HTTPie kinda sorta accidentally flipped their main repo to private for a sec. And dropped the star count from 54k to 0 oops They're back up to 16k, as of today. But ouch. “HTTPie is a command-line HTTP client. Its goal is to make CLI interaction with web services as human-friendly as possible. HTTPie is designed for testing, debugging, and generally interacting with APIs & HTTP servers. The http & https commands allow for creating and sending arbitrary HTTP requests. They use simple and natural syntax and provide formatted and colorized output.” Actually, pretty cool tool to use for developing and testing APIs. Michael #2: The counter-intuitive rise of Python in scientific computing via Galen Swint In our laboratory, a polarizing debate rages since around 2010, summarized by this question: Why are more and more time-critical scientific computations formerly performed in Fortran now written in Python, a slower language? Python has the reputation of being slow, i.e. significantly slower than compiled languages such as Fortran, C or Rust. So yes, plain Python is much slower than Fortran. However, this comparison makes little sense, as scientific uses of Python do not rely on plain Python. Used the right way, Python is slightly slower than compiled code. Pat #3: Meta donates $300,000 to PSF to add a second year for the Developer in Residence Brian #4: Dashboards in Python Two suggestions from Marc Skov Madsen The Easiest Way to Create an Interactive Dashboard in Python Sophia Yang & Mark Skov Madsen Includes animated gif showing the dashboard video of Sophia walking through the article in under 6 minutes “Turn Pandas pipelines into a dashboard using hvPlot .interactive" hvPlot is part of HoloViz and this example is pretty short and amazing to get a great dashboard with controls up very quickly. Python Dashboarding Shootout and Showdown | PyData Global 2021 5 speakers, 4 dashboard libraries, nice for comparison. Nice clickable index posted by Duy Nguyen 00:00 - Begin and Welcome 03:15 - Intro to the 4 Dashboarding libraries 07:04 - Plotly - Nicolas Kruchten 22:01 - Panel - Marc Skov Madsen 37:38 - voila - Sylvain Corlay 51:36 - Streamlit - Adrien Treuille 01:10:52 - Discussion Topics Michael #5: sourcepy by Dave Chevell Sourcepy lets you source python scripts natively inside your shell Imagine a Python script with functions in it. This converts those to CLI commands (kind of like entrypoints, but simpler) Type hints can be used to coerce input values into their corresponding types. standard IO type hints can be used to target stdin at different arguments and to receive the sys.stdin Sourcepy has full support for asyncio syntax Pat #6: Xonsh Xonsh Shell Combines the Best of Bash Shell and Python in Linux Terminal Awesome demo video (50 min) https://youtu.be/x85LSyCxiw8 Extras Pat: Donate to the PSF by using https://rewards.microsoft.com Joke: Can you really quit vim? Joke: Forgetting how to count
Oliver und Andreas sprechen darüber, wie die Mitarbeiterausbildung in Self Service Projekten gelingt, welche Methoden besonders gut funktionieren und wie die Motivation dabei hoch gehalten werden kann. Eins können wir vorweg nehmen: Ein Tag Tool-Schulung reicht da nicht! Das könnt ihr aus dieser Folge mitnehmen: - Wie lernen Mitarbeiter nachhaltig, eigene Dashboard zu bauen? - Was ist das Presentation Dashboard und wie hilft es dabei, Skills auf- und auszubauen? - Wie helfen kleine, kontinuierliche Challenges dabei, die Lern-Motivation hoch zu halten? - Wieso sollte der Community-Gedanke unbedingt einen Platz in der Mitarbeiterausbildung haben und wie organisiert man das Ganze? - Braucht man Lernvideos und Co? Lessons Learned: - Einmalige Tool-Schulungen reichen nicht aus, setze auf Kontinuität! - Baue eine Community für den Austausch auf und bestimme jemanden, der das organisiert. - Die Ergebnisse des Lernprozesses sollten präsentiert werden, um gemeinsam daran zu lernen. - Videocontent allein reicht nicht - geht in den persönlichen Austausch. - Lerninhalte & -methoden anpassen, um alle abzuholen - Überflieger vs. 'Null-Bock' - Überflieger können den anderen helfen - nutze vorhandene Resourcen! - Motiviere die Mitarbeiter durch Dashboard Challenges & sichere die Auseinandersetzung mit den Inhalten durch Deadlines.
Oliver und Andreas besprechen, wozu ein Templatekatalog gut ist, aus welchen Bestandteilen er sich zusammensetzt und wie man ihn in der konkreten Umsetzung nutzt. In dieser Folge erfährst du: - Wieso du im Self Service einen Templatekatalog brauchst - Was ein Templatekatalog ist und für welche Tools er derzeit verfügbar ist - Weshalb du Templates beim Prototyping nicht direkt im Tool nutzen solltest - Wie die flächendeckende Einführung im Self Service funktioniert - Wieso du zur Standardisierung den Dashboard Requirement Process brauchst - Welche Vorteile die Inhalte des Templatekatalogs bieten und wie die Umsetzung abläuft Lessons Learned: - Du brauchst neben dem Templatekatalog die passende Methodik, Know How etc. - Die Nutzung von Templates zahlt auf die Standardisierung im Tool ein - Die Frage nach dem Tool sollte nicht zu früh angegangen werden - Vorgefertigte Templates erleichtern den Austausch der Datenbasis innerhalb der Tools enorm - Durch die Nutzung des Templatekatalogs werden Lücken in der Datenbasis schnell ersichtlich - Vorlagen erleichtern die Arbeit für neue oder externe Mitarbeiter:innen - Templates helfen dabei, eine realistische Erwartungshaltung im Fachbereich zu schaffen
Oliver und Andreas stellen euch den Dashboard Requirement Process mit all seinen Benefits vor und erklären, wieso Self Service ohne dokumentierte und etablierte Prozesse nicht gelingen kann. Du kannst aus dieser Folge mitnehmen… - was der Dashboard Requirement Process ist & wieso er essenziell für flächendeckenden Self Service ist. - welches Outcome Dich nach Durchlauf des Dashboard Requirement Process erwartet. - welche Schritte Du dabei durchläufst und wie sie Dir zu einem gewinnbringenden Ergebnis verhelfen. - wieso Motivation, Konzept & Anforderungen Teil deiner Vorbereitung sein sollten. - wie du Dashboards intern am besten vermarkten kannst. Lessons Learned: - Die beste Technik hilft nichts, wenn die Prozesse nicht etabliert & dokumentiert sind - Zuerst die Dashboard Week, dann der Dashboard Requirement Process - Du brauchst einen Dashboard Requirement Process im Self Service - Lerne nicht theoretisch, sondern anhand echter Fälle & produziere direkten Output - Halte deinen Aufwand gering, indem du dich an den Schritten des Dashboard Requirement Process orientierst - Externe Berater sollten dich dabei nur begleiten - Du musst den Prozess selbst durchlaufen - "Verkaufe" Dashboards richtig - argumentiere über den Business Value, nicht über die Funktionen des Tools
Sarah, Dennis und Andreas unterhalten sich über Change in Projekten am Beispiel einer Power BI Einführung im Mittelstand. In dieser Folge: - Was für Arten von Widerständen gibt es? (Individuell, Politisch, Organisational) - Warum sind Widerstände eigentlich immer rational? - Warum Leute oft nicht "einfach nur mitgenommen" werden müssen - Was kann man tun um aus einem "wir gegen die" ein „zusammen“ zu machen? - Messbarkeit von erfolgreichem Change in Power BI Projekten - Warum ist Change so schwer zu messen? Als Change Management Consultant ist Sarah Kisliuk Teil des User - Experience - Teams der amexus Informationstechnik. Ihr Fokus liegt darauf, wie menschliches Verhalten durch Veränderungen in Projekten beeinflusst wird und wie sich Unternehmen und Mitarbeitende in schnell wechselnden Situationen anpassen und entwickeln können. Dabei berät sie Unternehmen, wie sie diese Aspekte in IT-Projekten berücksichtigen und den Change besser (über)lebbar machen. Außerdem liebt sie kognitive Verzerrungen – zum Beispiel, warum wir alle glauben, besser Auto fahren zu können, als der Durchschnitt. Dennis Hoffstädte ist Business Unit Lead Business Intelligence und Analytics und zugleich Impulsgeber und Speaker für analytische Themen. Er unterstützt u.a. Kunden bei der Einführung von Microsoft Power BI und der gesamten Power Platform.
Cette semaine, je reçois David Granjon, développeur R et grand contributeur des packages {bs4dash}, {shinymobile} et bien d'autres encore. Durant l'épisode, David nous parle de l'avantage qu'il tire à créer lui-même les tableaux de bords dans le cadre de projet de management. Après l'écoute de cet épisode, vous serez en mesure de connaître différents packages pour améliorer votre application shiny et l'avantage d'utiliser une base de donnée centralisée plutôt que des fichiers Excels.
I spoke with Jerry Ting, the co-founder and CEO of Evisort, a provider of contract management and artificial intelligence technology solutions. We discussed how organizations leverage dashboarding and redlining for their contract management, ways that law departments can distinguish CLM software providers, the benefits of learning legal tech entrepreneurship in law school, and the Future of Contracting conference.
I spoke with Jerry Ting, the co-founder and CEO of Evisort, a provider of contract management and artificial intelligence technology solutions. We discussed how organizations leverage dashboarding and redlining for their contract management, ways that law departments can distinguish CLM software providers, the benefits of learning legal tech entrepreneurship in law school, and the Future of Contracting conference.
Nick, Viktoria, and Kai talk about practical application, user experience, product character, and the associated change management to achieve sustainable and successful dashboarding initiatives. Nick leads G&K Consulting, a US-based consulting firm that does business across the globe. He is a regular on the international speaking circuit on the topic of analytics adoption as well as having several online courses available on the topic. Nick is the creator of the Dashboard Wireframe Kit and the Dashboard Requirements Kit, boardgame approaches to driving analytics adoption. In our podcast with Nick, here's what you can take away for yourselves: • Insights from data projects around the globe • Key learnings from successful BI initiatives that focus on people and organization • How you can save yourself 20 years of experience with an improved approach • What the Enterprise Dashboard Process is all about • Why not the tool but the methods are crucial • Some C-level experiences from dashboarding projects and why knowing your audience is so important
Alexander und Kai sprechen über die Strategie von SAP rund um #givedatapurpose, der SAC Roadmap und darüber, was ihr vom BI or DIE SAP Month erwarten könnt. Alexander Röckle ist seit Januar 2021 Leiter Platform & Technologies der SAP Deutschland SE & Co. KG und in dieser Rolle Mitglied der Geschäftsleitung. Sein Hauptaugenmerk richtet sich darauf, das Platform & Technologies Geschäft in Deutschland auszubauen und innovative Strategien am Markt zu etablieren. In seiner Rolle ist er auch Markenbotschafter für das Thema intelligente Datennutzung, #GiveDataPurpose. Zuvor leitete er seit 2018 den P&T Discrete Manufacturing Bereich der SAP Deutschland. Röckle ist seit 18 Jahren in der IT-Branche und davon über 12 Jahre im Software-Vertrieb tätig. Bevor er zur SAP kam, war er Vertriebsleiter für Deutschland und die Schweiz bei der Informatica. Davor war er in verschiedenen Software Account Manager Rollen (u.a. Global Account Manager Daimler AG) bei IBM tätig, wo er 2013 und 2014 den Softwarevertrieb für den Industriesektor geleitet hat. Er ist Absolvent der Berufsakademie Stuttgart in Wirtschaftsinformatik. Röckle lebt mit seiner Familie in der Nähe von Stuttgart. Das ist für euch in diesem Podcast drin: • Was #givedatapurpose für die SAP bedeutet • Welche Rolle der CDO in Unternehmen dabei spielen kann • Einblick in die SAP Strategie • Roadmap zur SAP Analytics Cloud und das Zusammenspiel mit der SAP Data Warehouse Cloud • Was euch im BI or DIE SAP Month erwartet und wie ihr euch beteiligen könnt • Wie ihr während des SAP Month eine kostenlose Dashboarding Academy E-Learning Lizenz bekommt
Christoph und Kai sprechen über die Kompetenzentwicklung, Self-Service und Dashboarding aus der Brille des Controllings. Christoph ist Leiter Group Planning and Controlling der Festo SE & Co. KG und verantwortlich für Planung, Forecasting und Reporting. Davor war er bei der Unternehmensberatung A.T. Kearney Projektleiter für CFO-Projekte wie Benchmarking und Effizienzsteigerung. Im Internationalen Controllerverein ist er Mitglied der Arbeitsgruppe 'Agiles Controlling'. Und in seinem Podcast 'On the Way to Effective Finance' geht Christoph der Frage nach, was wirkungsvolle Finanzbereiche auszeichnet. In dieser Folge lernt ihr: - Wie der ideale Controller und CFO der Zukunft aussehen könnte - Ob Dashboards ein Hype oder das Beste seit "geschnitten Brot" sind - Wie Entscheider bei der Entwicklung eines Dashboards beteiligt werden wollen - Wie Kompetenzentwicklung im Team modern gelebt werden kann - Was ein Controller unter Self-Service versteht - Ob Self-Service und Dashboards auch etwas für das C-Level ist - Wofür der Podcast 'On the Way to Effective Finance' steht und warum sich das Hören lohnt
Carsten und Andreas sprechen über Dashboarding, Datenkompetenz und Verbesserungsmöglichkeiten im Reporting von Banken. In dieser Folge lernt ihr: • Wie es um die Datenkompetenz in Banken im Vergleich zu anderen Branchen bestellt ist • Welche Verbesserungsmöglichkeiten wir im Reporting von Banken gegenüber den heute vorherrschenden Lösungen sehen • was schnelle und agile Umsetzungen von Dashboards großen Wasserfallprojekten voraus haben • Wie Standardisierungsmöglichkeiten im Bankreporting aussehen und Individualisierung nicht auf der Strecke bleibt • Einiges darüber, was Wälder und Bäume mit Business Intelligence Projekten zu tu haben • Wie BI und Dashboarding auf digitale Transformationsprojekte einzahlen und den Kulturwandel beeinflussen.
Sublime gets the comic treatment and Apex Legends is doing their best to stop cheaters. Find out about everything in today's #MikeJonesMinuteCon!
Ep. 200 - Join the Dashboarding Generation
Matthias ist seit dem 01.03.2021 als Managing Consultant AI Analytics mit seinem 4 köpfigen Team aus Data Scientisten verantwortlich für die Produkte ThoughtSpot und DataRobot. Sie helfen ihren Kunden bei der Erstellung und Implementierung einer Self-Service Strategie und der Gewinnung von KI-gestützten Erkenntnissen aus ihren Daten. Vorher hat Matthias in über 8 Jahren als Vorreiter im Profifußball die BI Abteilung beim FC Schalke 04 aufgebaut. In dieser Folge lernt ihr: - Wie man mit adhoc Anfragen umgeht - Was Self Service mit Google zu tun hat - Die Abgrenzung von Dashboarding und Reporting - Wie man Wissen konsumiert - Warum Data Literacy wichtig ist
Storytelling als Prozess im Dashboarding? Jens und Kai diskutieren, ob der Begriff Storytelling für Dashboards wirklich gut ist, ob es eher den Prozess des Dashboarding meint und ob wir es am Ende noch ausdrucken sollten. • Was ist Storytelling im Dashboarding? • Was ist der Unterschied zum klassischen Storytelling? • Warum gibt es passendere Begriffe? • Welche Dashboardtypen gibt es und wie können damit Entscheidungen getroffen werden? • Sind Storyfunktionen in Tableau und Qlik Sense das neue Drucken? • Möchte ich als Entscheider:in eher Beifahrer:in oder wirklich selbst Rennfahrer:in sein?
Ute, Dennis und Andreas sprechen über Community, Daten, modernes Controlling und Wissensaustausch. Ute ist die Gründerin von dem Finance Netzwerk in Deutschland dem C4B Team. Führungskräfte aus der Linie für die Linie tauschen sich kontinuierlich und effektiv in kleinen Runden aus. Ziel ist die nachhaltige Verbesserung der eigenen Finance-Strukturen und Strategie durch den Abgleich der eigenen Prozesse mit Best-Practice Beispielen. Dennis Cichowski ist seit über 15 Jahren im Finance Bereich zuhause. Mit seiner Passion für E-Commerce, Retail und Logistik ist er seit 2018 Teil der Geschäftsführung von C4B. Gerade der Blickwinkel aus verschiedenen Rollen im E-Commerce und im StartUp Umfeld hilft bei den gemeinsamen Diskussionen mit den Finance Führungskräften zur Optimierung der eigenen Prozesse oder der Umsetzbarkeit von neuen Geschäftsmodellen in der Unternehmenspraxis. Vor seinem Einstieg bei C4B war Dennis Cichowski in verschiedenen Finance Führungsrollen bei reBuy, Brands4Friends, eBay Deutschland, Schweiz und USA und bei mobile.de tätig. Heute ist er digital Speaker, Moderator, Ideen- und Impulsgeber für internationale Best Practices sowie anerkannter Gesprächspartner und Experte auf Top-Managementebene. In dieser Folge klären wir - Wie Community von Führungskräften funktioniert - Wie Controller:innen sich wandeln - Ob man noch Controlling studieren solltet - Welche Chancen sich Controller:innen bieten - Was IoT damit zu tun hat - Welche Trends das Controlling beschäftigen
Uwe von Grafenstein ist Ehemann, Papa & Unternehmer aus München. Mit 16 Jahren war Uwe das erste Mal selbstständig, mit 21 hat er seine erste Firma in Köln gegründet und mit 26 das zweite Unternehmen in München zu einem der Top 5 Player der unabhängigen deutschen TV-Produktionshäuser entwickelt, mit dem er u.a. für Netflix die größte Game Show der Welt mit Sylvester Stallone mit gestalten durfte. 2017 hat Uwe mit seinem Team den Deutschen Fernsehpreis und den Grimme Preis gewonnen und die Firma erfolgreich verkauft. Nach einem Jahr Auszeit u.a. in Los Angeles hat er seinen Podcast #Happylist gestartet und darüber seinen heutigen Geschäftspartner kennen gelernt. Beide haben mit ihrer neuen Firma Kalhammer & von Grafenstein GmbH ein Ziel: Mit Business Storytelling und Content Marketing Strategien Unternehmer und Führungskräfte noch erfolgreicher machen, als sie es jetzt schon sind. Sie nennen das: "Geschichten, die verkaufen". In dieser Folge lernt ihr: • Was ist Storytelling? • Wie können Daten unterstützen? • Kann ein Controller Storytelling? • Warum Uwe Unternehmer und kein Berater ist • Warum Emotionen und nicht Fakten verkaufen
Johannes ist Gründer und Geschäftsführer von SCALING CHAMPIONS. Sein Team führt jährlich mittlerweile über 80 etablierte IT-Systemhäuser, Digitalagenturen, Softwarehersteller und IT-Dienstleister mit einem 4-stufigen Prozess zu einem stabilen System, das skaliert. Sie entwickeln diese IT-Unternehmen zu SCALING CHAMPIONS mit skalierenden Produkten & Services, exzellenten Strukturen und planbaren Kundengewinnung. Das Ziel: IT-Unternehmen werden zum Rückgrat der neuen Wirtschaft. Johannes ist zudem als CO-Host des Scaling Champions Podcast bekannt - hier bekommen IT-Unternehmern*innen in knackigen Folgen kompaktes Skalierungs-Know-How aus der Praxis. In dieser Folge lernt ihr: • Wie tickt eine mittelständischer Geschäftsführer? • Wie skaliere ich richtig? • Wie werden aus Projekten Produkte? • Warum der Kunde selber auf den Berg muss
Florian leitet das Business Performance Controlling des Geschäftsbereichs Computed Tomography. In seiner vorherigen Rolle war Florian Co-Founder und Leiter des "DigiLabs for Finance". Digitalisierung ist für ihn kein Selbstzweck. Neben technologischen Themen stehen für ihn vor allem strategische Fragestellungen im Mittelpunkt, wie zum Beispiel die "warum?"-Frage oder Themen wie "Messbarkeit" und "Kompetenzmanagement". In dieser Folge lernt ihr: • Erfolgsfaktoren für Karrierewege im Großkonzern • Digi Weg von Siemens Healthineers von "start small" zu "strategic thinking" • "Purpose" der Digitalisierung von Finance für alle Ebenen im Konzern • Wie Erfolg von Digitalisierung gemessen werden kann • Warum Dashboarding, Automation & Data Predictions die Säulen von Digi Finance sind
The reason for collecting, cleaning, and organizing data is to make it usable by the organization. One of the most common and widely used methods of access is through a business intelligence dashboard. Superset is an open source option that has been gaining popularity due to its flexibility and extensible feature set. In this episode Maxime Beauchemin discusses how data engineers can use Superset to provide self service access to data and deliver analytics. He digs into how it integrates with your data stack, how you can extend it to fit your use case, and why open source systems are a good choice for your business intelligence. If you haven't already tried out Superset then this conversation is well worth your time. Give it a listen and then take it for a test drive today.
Olli, Andreas und Kai sprechen über Methoden, mit denen man Mitarbeiter und Führungskräfte für Datenprojekte begeistert. In dieser Folge:
Andreas und Kai sprechen über modernes Dashboarding und wie Ansätze aus alltäglichen Anwendungen wie Netflix und Co. uns dabei helfen! In dieser Folge lernt ihr: • Welche Dashboardtypen es gibt • Was eine einfache und intuitive Navigation in Dashboards ausmacht • Warum Kacheln in keinem Guided Dashboard fehlen dürfen • Wie Storytelling mit dem Ebenenkonzept für Dashboards funktioniert • Warum Netflix und Co. als Inspiration für Business Dashboards so wichtig ist
Topics of today's episode: - Mobile BI - Good Dashboards - Favorite BI Tool - Best time of starting a Dashboarding initiative - Data Scientist - sexiest job of the 21. century?
In this episode Kai brought 5 questions for Viktoria to answer. Topics of today's episode: - Reasons why BI projects fail - Agile vs. waterfall - best project management method for BI projects - Who should lead a BI project - Business department or IT? - How do companies find the right BI software? - BI-Consultant, Founder, Mother of two - how to fit everything under one hat? ___ Viktoria Hell is a founder, mother and successful BI consultant with more than 10 years of experience. Her company Transform8 supports its clients in wholistic BI and transformation projects – from conception to implementation to maintenance. In these projects, Viktoria sits at the interface of the business and IT departments, assisting with requirement elicitation, tool selection and the coordination of larger digitalization projects. Her goal is using innovative technological and organizational approaches to improve the work environments of both, her clients and her colleagues. Kai-Uwe Stahl is a keynote speaker, author and editor of numerous books on the topics of visual analytics, usability and storytelling. With over 5 years of project experience and more than 500 workshops held, he reports in his talks on numerous best practices of his well-known customers. In addition to Andreas Wiener, he is also one moderator of this podcast.
Deze uitzending van de Dataloog is een special van de Data Insightsweek georganiseerd door Big Data Expo. kijk op: https://datainsightsweek.bigdata-expo.nl/ voor meer informatie Een data platform en data science gaan hand-in-hand en zijn complementair aan elkaar. In deze podcast scheppen Melvin Agten en Michiel Brunt van Inergy duidelijkheid in de (essentiële) relatie tussen een data platform, data science en andere “buzz-words" zoals cloud, Dashboarding, AI en machine learning. De heren nemen de illusie weg dat data science oplossingen voortkomen uit een toverdoos: een essentieel onderdeel van die toverdoos is namelijk een robuust data platform. Er is eigenlijk weinig leeftijdsverschil tussen BI en data science, het verschil zit hem vooral in het ontwikkelpad. Technologische ontwikkeling hebben de afgelopen jaren gezorgd voor een exponentiele groei van data opslag (van kleine datasets naar omgevingen van vele terabytes) en beschikbare rekenkracht. Impact maken met interactieve dashboarding, AI en data science is pas later mogelijk geworden door deze ontwikkeling. En dat komt allemaal weer samen in een data platform en faciliterende cloud oplossingen.
Zase na Skajpu (00:00:00) Dashboarding (00:56:27) Auta a Cyberpunk (01:21:19) Dotazy letitého fanouška (01:41:34) Závěr pod zámkem - PROMOŘENÍ V OBCHOĎÁKU (02:25:26)
Zase na Skajpu (00:00:00) Dashboarding (00:56:27) Auta a Cyberpunk (01:21:19) Dotazy letitého fanouška (01:41:34) Závěr pod zámkem - PROMOŘENÍ V OBCHOĎÁKU (02:25:26)
Zase na Skajpu (00:00:00) Dashboarding (00:56:27) Auta a Cyberpunk (01:21:19) Dotazy letitého fanouška (01:41:34) Závěr pod zámkem - PROMOŘENÍ V OBCHOĎÁKU (02:25:26)
"If I wait for the energy bills to come in to make adjustments, its like driving a battleship by its wake." In this podcast episode we dive into this quote and its relevance to energy dashboarding. The energy dashboard can be a very valuable tool but requires proper design, implementation, and training to stay relevant and functional. Mark, Clay, and Nick discuss all aspects of the energy dashboard and give professional insight and opinions in the design, implementation, and uses of energy dashboards in facilities. Tune in for a great discussion! For more information on VS Energy or Applied Facility Science check out our websites https://www.vsenergy.us/ (https://www.vsenergy.us/) and https://www.appliedfacilityscience.com/ (https://www.appliedfacilityscience.com/).
Career Insights - The Psychology Behind Work [formerly The Project Box]
Host and Industrial Psychologist, Bernardo Tirado PMP, interviews Gail Kreitzer a Mind Organizer. Gail is the creator of Dashboarding®, an intuitive approach to prioritization and time management that helps her clients streamline everything that is competing for their valuable time, attention, and energy and pursue their best life. Gail’s company, Dashboarding Minds helps high-achieving professionals declutter their busy minds and live with greater intention. Her training programs focus on elevating productivity and work/life balance by leveraging the power of mindful organization and energy leadership. Prior to running her company, Gail worked as an HR professional for the marketing/advertising industry in Boston and NJ. Visit www.dashboardingminds.com to learn about the new Dashboarding® Academy! ✅ Follow us on: PsychologyToday Twitter Facebook Instagram Linkedin ✅ For business inquiries, send us a message at hello@welbeckadvisors.com #careers #mind #organizer #interviews
Heute haben wir eine besondere Folge für euch aufgezeichnet. Sie ist auf nachdrücklichen Wunsch einiger unserer Hörer entstanden. Denn unsere Podcast-Hörer wollten gerne einmal wissen, was reportingimpulse genau im Portfolio anzubieten hat. Ganz grob gesagt bietet unser Angebotskatalog Beratung und Ausbildung (digital & Präsenz) zu den Themen Information Design, Dashboarding & Visual Analytics. Also mal in diese Folge reinhören und Folgendes erfahren: - warum das Visual Data Analytics Modell aus unserem ersten Buch die thematische Grundlage für unser Vorgehen ist - warum die reportingimpulse Dashboard Week oft der Start in unsere Zusammenarbeit ist und was die Week beinhaltet - welche Ideen wir für eine Zusammenarbeit über die Dashboard Week hinaus haben - was sich hinter dem Capability Modell verbirgt - welchen kostenlosen Content wir im reportingimpulse Competence Center (RICC) anbieten - warum wir unseren Podcast-Hörern eine kostenfreie, virtuelle Impulssession zum Kennenlernen anbieten
André Petras ist Senior Data Scientist bei Telefónica Germany. Seit 2001 ist er in diversen Rollen im Business Intelligence und Data Science Umfeld mit den Schwerpunkten Reporting, Analyse und Datenvisualisierung tätig. Privat betreibt er ein Blog zu den Themen unter der Adresse stylingdata.com. In dieser Folge erzählt uns André, was die Motivation zu Beginn war, Dashboard- & Reporting-Guidelines durchzusetzen und welche Erfahrungen er in der täglichen Praxis sammeln konnte. Neben den Highend-Komponente ist es ja Mehrwert sich im Unternehmen in der Breite in der visuellen Kommunikation zu verbessern. Wir fragen André, was er seinen Kollegen in internen Trainings vermittelt und was er von mobilen Dashboards für Tablets und Smartphones hält. Außerdem verrät er uns, welches für seine Arbeit das beste Tool ist und auch in der Schnellfragerunde lernen wir André noch ein bisschen besser kennen!
Cary ist Senior Consultant bei Information Builders. Der gebürtige Waliser hat seine Kernkompetenz in der Implementierung von anspruchsvollen BI Lösungen sowie der Steuerung komplexer BI Projekte. Carys besonderes Interesse liegt zudem bei der Verfolgung neuster Trends und Technologien. Mit Kai spricht er unter anderem über die größten Herausforderungen beim Dashboarding-Bau und das Vorgehen in der Anforderungsphase von Projekten. In der Schnellfragerunde lernen wir Cary genauer kennen und erfahren, was Information Builders so besonders macht. Außerdem wollen wir mehr über die besten Projekte wissen und wie ein ideales Projektvorgehen in Carys Augen aussieht. Für alle die wissen wollen, warum BI Projekte scheitern gibt es einen Webtalk-Experten-Specialmit Kai-Uwe Stahl, Andreas Wiener, Cary Edwards und Thomas Tibcken - am 26. Mai 2020, ab 10 Uhr.
Marc Bäuerle ist Co-Gründer und Geschäftsführer der Tableau-Beratung M2 Data GmbH. Er ist seit 9 Jahren im Bereich Business Intelligence und Daten Visualisierung mit Tableau aktiv und ist nach wie vor auf den „Aha“-Moment beim Kunden gespannt, wenn man ein gelungenes Dashboard vorstellt. Mit ihm sprechen wir über den Einstieg in die Tableau-Welt, wie er selbst zu Tableau gekommen ist und ob es das beste BI-Tool ist. Wir analysieren die möglichen Entwicklungen, die nach der Übernahme von Salesforce auf Tableau zukommen und Marc erzählt uns, welches das beste Dashboard ist, das er je gesehen, benutzt und gebaut hat. Außerdem lernen wir ihn in unserer Schnellfragerunde etwas genauer kennen und erfahren, warum er gern eine Woche mit Bill Gates tauschen würde.
Sponsored by DigitalOcean: pythonbytes.fm/digitalocean - $100 credit for new users to build something awesome. Michael #1: Python visualization graph via Prayson Daniel The PyViz.org website is an open platform for helping users decide on the best open-source (OSS) Python data visualization tools for their purposes, with links, overviews, comparisons, and examples. Overviews of the OSS visualization packages High-level tools for getting started A live table for comparing maturity, popularity, and support. Dashboarding tools SciVis tools for rendering data embedded in three-dimensional space. Tutorials Topic examples of using Python viz tools to analyze or describe specific datasets Brian #2: Awesome Zen of Python A Rabbit Hole lot of Zen yes, I know, that’s a terrible mixed metaphor List of articles on “the Zen of Python” Well, articles, talks, tools, and “other?” Al Sweigart: The Zen of Python, Explained is a nice quick reference. Moshe Zadka: Meditations on the Zen of Python is slightly longer, but good and still a quick read. One line (“There should be one-- and preferably only one --obvious way to do it.”) is a joke making fun of pre-decrement, post-decrement in C. Abdur-Rahmaan Janhangeer: The Zen Of Python Is A Joke And Here Is Why is a must read. Michael #3: Jupytext via Matt Harrison Jupyter Notebooks as Markdown Documents, Julia, Python or R scripts Wished Jupyter notebooks were plain text documents? Wished you could edit them in your favorite IDE? And get clear and meaningful diffs when doing version control? Then... Jupytext may well be the tool you're looking for! Jupytext can save Jupyter notebooks as Markdown and R Markdown documents Scripts in many languages. The languages that are currently supported by Jupytext are: Julia, Python, R, Bash, Scheme, Clojure, Matlab, Octave, C++, q/kdb+, IDL, TypeScript, Javascript, Scala, Rust/Evxcr, PowerShell, C#, F#, and Robot Framework. Brian #4: Tour of Python Itertools Martin Heinz Very cool quick look at some of the cool-ness to be found in itertools and more_itertools. itertools compress - one iterator to another eliminating elements that fail a bool expression accumulate - like functools.reduce but returns all intermediate values cycle - so cool, create a never ending repeating iterable tee - multiple references to one iterable more_itertools divide - divides iterable into sub-iterables partition - split into two based on a predicate bool expression side_effect - attach a side effect function to an iterable that gets called with each element collapse - like flatten split_at - multiple iterables splitting at divider items, specified with predicate bucket - multiple iterables based on multi-return-value expression map_reduce - specify 3 functions: key function (for categorizing), value function (for transforming) and finally reduce function (for reducing). sort_together seekable filter_except unique_to_each Michael #5: justpy.io JustPy is an object-oriented, component based, high-level Python Web Framework that requires no front-end programming. JustPy has no front-end/back-end distinction. All programming is done on the back-end allowing a simpler, more productive, and more Pythonic web development experience. JustPy removes the front-end/back-end distinction by intercepting the relevant events on the front-end and sending them to the back-end to be processed. Elements on the web page are instances of component classes. A component in JustPy is a Python class that allows you to instantiate reusable custom elements whose functionality and design is encapsulated away from the rest of your code. Custom components can be created using other components as building blocks. Out of the box, JustPy comes with support for HTML and SVG components as well as more complex components such as charts and grids. Supports most of the components and the functionality of the Quasar library Based on solid libraries: Starlette, uvicorn, and Vue.js. Brian #6: Modularity for Maintenance Glyph A list of many automation tools you can use to help with the maintenance of open source projects. CI, tox, linting, type checking, dependencies, security, coverage, formatting, releasing with lots of options and links A request for some kind of tool to help automate all the automation when starting new projects. Maybe a cookie-cutter thing…. That would be cool. But frankly, the list is super helpful also. Extras: Brian: Sentry helping fund some OSS projects. black, pypi, pytest, structlog, gimli (last one is a Rust thing). Michael: Just launched a new 7.2 hour course: Python for absolute beginners Talk Python Training now streaming newest courses in HiDPI (nearly 4K) and it’s super crisp. More details here. AWS Cloud has decided to no longer publish awscli to #pypi pulling a 700M+ download package (via Anthony Sottile) The podcast RSS feed is a little smaller now. Joke: First law of software quality: e = mc^2 → errors = (more code)^2.
In this episode of In-Ear Insights, Katie and Chris discuss the basics of reporting and dashboarding best practices. What should a good report or dashboard look like? What does a dashboard report have in common with the cockpit of an Airbus A321? Listen in and get some tips to bring to your next reporting meeting. [...]Read More... from {PODCAST} In-Ear Insights: Reporting and Dashboarding Basics
In dieser Folge hatte Kai wieder 5 Fragen für Andreas vorbereitet. Und sie haben es tatsächlich auch mal geschafft gemeinsam an einem Ort den Podcast aufzuzeichnen. Sie beginnen mit einem Einblick in ihr klassisches Projektvorgehen, um Dashboards schnell und nachhaltigen im Unternehmen zu positionieren. Eine etwas fiese Frage zu den Möglichkeiten von Business Intelligence, und wie sie es dem Fachbereich erklären würden, folgte. Immer wieder ist auch das Thema Kommentierung in Dashboards ein Grund für Diskussionen - hier geben sie euch unsere klare Meinung dazu. Zum coolsten Dashboard musste Andreas tatsächlich etwas länger überlegen. Dann wollte er aber gefühlt gar nicht mehr aufhören darüber zu sprechen. Und abschließend haben sie noch die prägendsten Persönlichkeiten aus ihrem Themenfeldern diskutiert.
This session provides detailed guidance on how to use the new dashboard framework into Splunk apps. It first goes over the basic get started tutorial, which helps developers to build a dashboard in just a few minutes. Then it dives deep into the overall architecture, technology stacks, and individual components that can be customized, including layouts, visualizations, data sources, inputs, event handlers. By attending this session, Splunk app developers will be able to integrate dashboards into the apps flexibly and reliably. This session will also walk through the best practices that can help developers to build the optimal dashboards. This session is targeted to both new Splunk app developers and existing Splunk app developers. For people who already know about the existing Splunk technology stack such as Backbone, SimpleXML, SplunkJS, this session will also go through how to migrate to the new framework. As a bonus, this session will also talk about how to export dashboards as beautiful images and PDFs that 100% matches the original ones! Speaker(s) Yuxiang Kou, Senior Software Engineer, Splunk Michael Luo, Principal Software Engineer, Splunk Slides PDF link - https://conf.splunk.com/files/2019/slides/DEV2165.pdf?podcast=1577146192 Product: Splunk Enterprise, Splunk Cloud, Splunk Developer Cloud Track: Developer Level: Intermediate
This session provides detailed guidance on how to use the new dashboard framework into Splunk apps. It first goes over the basic get started tutorial, which helps developers to build a dashboard in just a few minutes. Then it dives deep into the overall architecture, technology stacks, and individual components that can be customized, including layouts, visualizations, data sources, inputs, event handlers. By attending this session, Splunk app developers will be able to integrate dashboards into the apps flexibly and reliably. This session will also walk through the best practices that can help developers to build the optimal dashboards. This session is targeted to both new Splunk app developers and existing Splunk app developers. For people who already know about the existing Splunk technology stack such as Backbone, SimpleXML, SplunkJS, this session will also go through how to migrate to the new framework. As a bonus, this session will also talk about how to export dashboards as beautiful images and PDFs that 100% matches the original ones! Speaker(s) Yuxiang Kou, Senior Software Engineer, Splunk Michael Luo, Principal Software Engineer, Splunk Slides PDF link - https://conf.splunk.com/files/2019/slides/DEV2165.pdf?podcast=1577146224 Product: Splunk Enterprise, Splunk Cloud, Splunk Developer Cloud Track: Developer Level: Intermediate
Splunk [Enterprise Cloud and Splunk Cloud Services] 2019 .conf Videos w/ Slides
So you saw the new Splunk Dashboards framework and PNG export on the main stage and want to know more? You want to understand what this will mean for your Enterprise, Cloud, ITSI, ES and/or IAI deployments? You've come to the right place. In this session, we'll provide an overview and extended demo of the new dashboarding framework and context export service. We'll cover what's different about this new framework in comparison to both SimpleXML and Glass Tables. We'll also cover the support roadmap for Simple XML and Glass Tables as well as what you need to know in order to migrate. If you're planning to attend any of the other dashboard deep dive sessions, we recommend attending this one first. Speaker(s) Nachi Mistry, Sr. Engineering Manager, Splunk Miranda Luna, Product Management, Splunk Slides PDF link - https://conf.splunk.com/files/2019/slides/FN1815.pdf?podcast=1577146254 Product: Splunk Enterprise, Splunk IT Service Intelligence, Splunk Developer Cloud Track: Foundations/Platform Level: Intermediate
So you saw the new Splunk Dashboards framework and PNG export on the main stage and want to know more? You want to understand what this will mean for your Enterprise, Cloud, ITSI, ES and/or IAI deployments? You've come to the right place. In this session, we'll provide an overview and extended demo of the new dashboarding framework and context export service. We'll cover what's different about this new framework in comparison to both SimpleXML and Glass Tables. We'll also cover the support roadmap for Simple XML and Glass Tables as well as what you need to know in order to migrate. If you're planning to attend any of the other dashboard deep dive sessions, we recommend attending this one first. Speaker(s) Nachi Mistry, Sr. Engineering Manager, Splunk Miranda Luna, Product Management, Splunk Slides PDF link - https://conf.splunk.com/files/2019/slides/FN1815.pdf?podcast=1577146225 Product: Splunk Enterprise, Splunk IT Service Intelligence, Splunk Developer Cloud Track: Foundations/Platform Level: Intermediate
So you saw the new Splunk Dashboards framework and PNG export on the main stage and want to know more? You want to understand what this will mean for your Enterprise, Cloud, ITSI, ES and/or IAI deployments? You've come to the right place. In this session, we'll provide an overview and extended demo of the new dashboarding framework and context export service. We'll cover what's different about this new framework in comparison to both SimpleXML and Glass Tables. We'll also cover the support roadmap for Simple XML and Glass Tables as well as what you need to know in order to migrate. If you're planning to attend any of the other dashboard deep dive sessions, we recommend attending this one first. Speaker(s) Nachi Mistry, Sr. Engineering Manager, Splunk Miranda Luna, Product Management, Splunk Slides PDF link - https://conf.splunk.com/files/2019/slides/FN1815.pdf?podcast=1577146230 Product: Splunk Enterprise, Splunk IT Service Intelligence, Splunk Developer Cloud Track: Foundations/Platform Level: Intermediate
This session provides detailed guidance on how to use the new dashboard framework into Splunk apps. It first goes over the basic get started tutorial, which helps developers to build a dashboard in just a few minutes. Then it dives deep into the overall architecture, technology stacks, and individual components that can be customized, including layouts, visualizations, data sources, inputs, event handlers. By attending this session, Splunk app developers will be able to integrate dashboards into the apps flexibly and reliably. This session will also walk through the best practices that can help developers to build the optimal dashboards. This session is targeted to both new Splunk app developers and existing Splunk app developers. For people who already know about the existing Splunk technology stack such as Backbone, SimpleXML, SplunkJS, this session will also go through how to migrate to the new framework. As a bonus, this session will also talk about how to export dashboards as beautiful images and PDFs that 100% matches the original ones! Speaker(s) Yuxiang Kou, Senior Software Engineer, Splunk Michael Luo, Principal Software Engineer, Splunk Slides PDF link - https://conf.splunk.com/files/2019/slides/DEV2165.pdf?podcast=1577146228 Product: Splunk Enterprise, Splunk Cloud, Splunk Developer Cloud Track: Developer Level: Intermediate
Splunk [Enterprise Cloud and Splunk Cloud Services] 2019 .conf Videos w/ Slides
This session provides detailed guidance on how to use the new dashboard framework into Splunk apps. It first goes over the basic get started tutorial, which helps developers to build a dashboard in just a few minutes. Then it dives deep into the overall architecture, technology stacks, and individual components that can be customized, including layouts, visualizations, data sources, inputs, event handlers. By attending this session, Splunk app developers will be able to integrate dashboards into the apps flexibly and reliably. This session will also walk through the best practices that can help developers to build the optimal dashboards. This session is targeted to both new Splunk app developers and existing Splunk app developers. For people who already know about the existing Splunk technology stack such as Backbone, SimpleXML, SplunkJS, this session will also go through how to migrate to the new framework. As a bonus, this session will also talk about how to export dashboards as beautiful images and PDFs that 100% matches the original ones! Speaker(s) Yuxiang Kou, Senior Software Engineer, Splunk Michael Luo, Principal Software Engineer, Splunk Slides PDF link - https://conf.splunk.com/files/2019/slides/DEV2165.pdf?podcast=1577146252 Product: Splunk Enterprise, Splunk Cloud, Splunk Developer Cloud Track: Developer Level: Intermediate
Splunk [IT Service Intelligence] 2019 .conf Videos w/ Slides
So you saw the new Splunk Dashboards framework and PNG export on the main stage and want to know more? You want to understand what this will mean for your Enterprise, Cloud, ITSI, ES and/or IAI deployments? You've come to the right place. In this session, we'll provide an overview and extended demo of the new dashboarding framework and context export service. We'll cover what's different about this new framework in comparison to both SimpleXML and Glass Tables. We'll also cover the support roadmap for Simple XML and Glass Tables as well as what you need to know in order to migrate. If you're planning to attend any of the other dashboard deep dive sessions, we recommend attending this one first. Speaker(s) Nachi Mistry, Sr. Engineering Manager, Splunk Miranda Luna, Product Management, Splunk Slides PDF link - https://conf.splunk.com/files/2019/slides/FN1815.pdf?podcast=1577146244 Product: Splunk Enterprise, Splunk IT Service Intelligence, Splunk Developer Cloud Track: Foundations/Platform Level: Intermediate
Splunk [Foundations/Platform Track] 2019 .conf Videos w/ Slides
So you saw the new Splunk Dashboards framework and PNG export on the main stage and want to know more? You want to understand what this will mean for your Enterprise, Cloud, ITSI, ES and/or IAI deployments? You've come to the right place. In this session, we'll provide an overview and extended demo of the new dashboarding framework and context export service. We'll cover what's different about this new framework in comparison to both SimpleXML and Glass Tables. We'll also cover the support roadmap for Simple XML and Glass Tables as well as what you need to know in order to migrate. If you're planning to attend any of the other dashboard deep dive sessions, we recommend attending this one first. Speaker(s) Nachi Mistry, Sr. Engineering Manager, Splunk Miranda Luna, Product Management, Splunk Slides PDF link - https://conf.splunk.com/files/2019/slides/FN1815.pdf?podcast=1577146203 Product: Splunk Enterprise, Splunk IT Service Intelligence, Splunk Developer Cloud Track: Foundations/Platform Level: Intermediate
Show Summary Managing Partner Mark Meersman and his team at IPC Global help companies gather their various collections of data, apply insightful analytics to that data, and makes those analytics easily accessible through cloud technology. He tells the IPC Global story on this edition of Frazier & Deeter’s “Business Beat,” presented by Alpharetta CPA firm […] The post Frazier and Deeter’s Business Beat: Mark Meersman, IPC Global appeared first on Business RadioX ®.
Conversation with Ben Rushlo, the Vice President of Services for Dynatrace.
Conversation with Ben Rushlo, VP of Services at Dynatrace, talks to us about dashboarding in Dynatrace
Conversation with Ben Rushlo, the Vice President of Services for Dynatrace.
Conversation with Ben Rushlo, VP of Services at Dynatrace, talks to us about dashboarding in Dynatrace
When Life Interferes With Your Design Business Running a home-based design business is the best thing any designer could do. At least that’s my opinion, but I could be biased since I’ve been doing it for over 13 years now and I love what I do. But running a home-based design business does have its drawbacks. Such as when life interferes with your plans. Running a home-based design business is great. You can set your hours and work as much or as little as you want. You decide how much you want to charge and if you wish to charge by the hour or by the job. You also get to choose what clients you want to work with or not. Meaning you have the option of turning down any jobs that don't interest you. Plus, you have nobody to answer to since you work from home all by yourself. OK, you have to answer to your clients. But at least you don’t have a boss breathing down your neck to get the job out, or else. Yup, being a home-based designer is great. However, there is one major drawback to running a home-based design business. And that’s when life interferes. Life has a way of messing with you in unexpected ways. Some days are good, some are bad, and some can send you into a panic. I'm talking about the latter one. When life throws something in your path that grinds your design business to a halt. I'm talking about sickness, accidents, family emergencies, even death. There are also grand scale emergencies like natural disasters such as floods, hurricanes or earthquakes. And don't forget uncontrolled events such as power outages or having your equipment stolen. All of these can have a negative impact on your design business. Don’t get me wrong, not everything that affects your business is a bad thing. Marriages, births, vacations, etc. also affect your business. Life interferes, and the status quo of your business changes. So what can you do when life interferes with your design business? Prepare for expected breaks In some cases, such as vacations, marriages, births (to some extent) and even things like surgeries can all be scheduled. Advanced knowledge of these events gives you an opportunity to prepare for the time your business is affected. In some cases, your business may be shut down for a few days, but it could also be affected for several weeks or months. When you know a break is coming, you should warn your clients well in advance of these shutdowns. To help ease the pressure, you can try to get things done before your time off. Or you can tell your clients you cannot work on their project until after a specific date. I never start any new projects during the two weeks leading up to a break. This buffer could cause problems for some clients, but you'll have to live with your choice. Yes, you may lose some work because of it. But that’s life. Prepare for unexpected breaks What do you do when life interferes with your business in unexpected ways? First things first, when life interferes in an unexpected way, notify your clients. They will understand. No client will respond with “sorry about the death in your family, but I have this job I need you to finish by Thursday, can you handle it?”. Your clients knew you were a home-based designer when they hired you. They knew the benefits of working with you also came with some risks. One of those risks is the possibility of you needing unexpected time off. There may be deadlines, and yes, you may feel bad about missing them, but you might be surprised how many deadlines you can miss without any ill effects. Unless there’s a firm date in place, such as for scheduled events most deadlines have flexibility built into them. Once you’ve notified your clients, try to figure out if there’s anything you can do. Maybe it’s providing a list of compatible designers your clients can use in your absence. In cases of natural disasters or equipment failure, you could try and find ways to get back up and running while trying to minimise your time away. Even if it’s merely so you can get the most pressing things done? Get Help from other designers If you are running a studio as I talked about in episode 125, you may have people on your team that can handle the work for you. If you don’t have contractors in place, you may need to turn to a friend or colleague and see if they can take on some of your work while you are incapable. There’s always a risk any time you direct a client to a new designer. The client may like the other designer and decide to stick with them. You’ll have to take that risk and rely on the relationship you’ve built up with your client to bring them back. If you are worried, you could try to minimise the risk with a contract between you and the other designer saying they will not poach your clients. But if you’re in a pinch due to some emergency situation, worrying about a contract is the last thing you want to be doing. Besides, chances are if your client realises they like working with a different designer better than you, there’s not much you can do about it. Long-term hiatuses In the worst scenarios, you may have to scale back or shut down your design business for an indefinite amount of time. Sometimes, when life interferes, the only option is to accept it. There’s nothing wrong with shutting down your business and wishing all your clients well. If your situation eventually changes you can always start up again. You built up your design business once. There’s nothing stopping you from doing it again. Life is unpredictable. I don’t want to sound negative, but part of life is dealing with things outside our control. How you deal with those situations, and how you come out the other side will determine your success in life. Don’t worry if you have to shut down your design business for a few days, weeks, months or even longer when life interferes. You’re a designer; I’m sure you’ll find creative ways to make it through. Have you ever had to close your business unexpectedly? Let me know by leaving a comment for this episode. Questions of the Week Submit your question to be featured in a future episode of the podcast by visiting the feedback page. This week’s question comes from Ken I love listening to your podcast on my way to work, a lot of the topics have been really intriguing. I have always had an interest in the arts and I recently started my own design business in December designing Print Templates. I love the idea of design consulting and helping people not just make pretty designs but help their entire business using design but I'm not even sure how to really get started with finding clients. Also, in yours and other podcasts I always hear that you have to educate your clients on the importance of design, but just getting started in this kind of business I'm not sure everything to say. Can you give me some kind of idea what some of these conversations look like? Thank you for your time! To find out what I told Ken you’ll have to listen to the podcast. Resource of the week Google Data Studio (beta) Google Data Studio (beta) turns your analytics data into informative dashboards and reports that are easy to read, easy to share, and fully customizable. Dashboarding allows you to tell great data stories to support better business decisions. Create unlimited Data Studio custom reports with full editing and sharing. Listen to the podcast on the go. Listen on Apple PodcastsListen on Spotify Listen on StitcherListen on AndroidListen on Google Play MusicListen on iHeartRadio Contact me I would love to hear from you. You can send me questions and feedback using my feedback form. Follow me on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram I want to help you. Running a graphic design or web design business all by yourself isn't easy. If there are any struggles you face running your design business, please reach out to me. I'll do my best to help you by addressing your issues in a future blog post or podcast episode here at Resourceful Designer. You can reach me at feedback@resourcefuldesigner.com
Peter Zahrer ( https://www.linkedin.com/in/peter-zahrer-5b4a7b107/ ) and Roman Windischhofer ( https://www.linkedin.com/in/romanlw/ ), two Technical Dynatrace Product Managers, give us insights into how they are redefining Dashboarding, how the feedback process works that influences the product roadmap and give us an outlook on what is coming up soon when we talk about Dashboarding in Dynatrace. The best way to get in touch with them is through their sticky note on our Dynatrace Community: http://bit.ly/dashboard-roadmap . Also keep an eye on their What’s New blog posts and Performance Clinics such as AI-Powered Dashboarding with Dynatrace.https://www.dynatrace.com/news/blog/author/roman-windischhofer/https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O0AkSVHyO_I
Peter Zahrer ( https://www.linkedin.com/in/peter-zahrer-5b4a7b107/ ) and Roman Windischhofer ( https://www.linkedin.com/in/romanlw/ ), two Technical Dynatrace Product Managers, give us insights into how they are redefining Dashboarding, how the feedback process works that influences the product roadmap and give us an outlook on what is coming up soon when we talk about Dashboarding in Dynatrace. The best way to get in touch with them is through their sticky note on our Dynatrace Community: http://bit.ly/dashboard-roadmap . Also keep an eye on their What’s New blog posts and Performance Clinics such as AI-Powered Dashboarding with Dynatrace.https://www.dynatrace.com/news/blog/author/roman-windischhofer/https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O0AkSVHyO_I
Google News and Updates During episode 24 Matt and Kasey made it known that sometimes there just aren't many if any updates to speak of. No sooner did they utter those words and Google went crazy with a number updates! Expeditions on iOS with Self-Guided Tours and Annotations Google Classroom: Import Google Forms quiz grades—Teachers can assign a Google Forms quiz and automatically import grades to the Student Work page. Google Data Studio Google Data Studio (beta) turns your data into informative dashboards and reports that are easy to read, easy to share, and fully customizable. Dashboarding allows you to tell great data stories to support better business decisions. New Google Hardware Featured Content Google Slides is a cornerstone application of G Suite and recently Google added a number of features to improve functionality and usability. Some of the features mentioned were long-time requests by users like you and others were bonus add-ons that were unexpected. Slides now features Google Keep integration New Add-ons... Unsplash - Every Unsplash photo is high-res and completely free to use for commercial and personal purposes. Adobe Stock Shutter Stock the Noun Project Pear Deck Features... Linked Slides Slide Sorter Insert Diagrams Skip Slides (during presentation) Apps Scripts Resources Official Google blog post announcing Slides updates Google Teacher Tribe Mailbag Dena Dellere (@DDellere) tweeted about her use of Google Classroom for a recent technology-related in-service at her school in Oklahoma. "Each topic is a Session." Using GC for 17-18 Tech Inservice. Each topic is a Session. Genius idea from our Business T to clear GC clutter. #gttribe #OklaEd — Dena Dellere (@DDellere) October 5, 2017 Sam Mora, via SpeakPipe, from Arizona, uses Screencastify and is looking for a way to blur sensitive information in the videos she creates. Christina Smith Rivera, from Colorado, works with teams of Student TechXperts. Her students provide PD for students and staff members at the school. She is looking for ways to connect her student tech leaders with other groups throughout the United States. On The Blogs Matt - Classroom video calls. You can do this. Here’s how. Kasey - How to Create Screencast GIFs [shortcode-variables slug="signature"]
In this marketing technology podcast we have an interview with Igor Jurgens on realtime dashboarding. Igors works at Klipfolio. During Marketing Technology Day 2017 in Amersfoort (The Netherlands) he will give a realtime demonstration on how to build lead generation dashboards.
Dashboarding & KPIs for Nonprofits by AAFCPAs
## Key Quote “Generally speaking, you're not going to be looking at ordered-in food as your source of micronutrients….” ## Time-Stamped Notes - 00:10 – The second Less Doing podcast, “Optimize, Automate, Outsource,” starting September 7 - 01:05 – [Multiply Labs](http://www.multiplylabs.com/?ref=producthunt#/) - 01:15 – A customized supplement pill - 02:00 – One pill with everything you want throughout the day - 02:20 – A survey lets you know what supplements you might want to take - 03:05 – Great for someone who doesn't like to take supplements - 03:40 – How many pills do Ari and Nick take? - 06:00 – Why you should take Vitamin D - 07:20 – [Cronometer](https://cronometer.com) - 07:40 – The most detailed application to track your food and overall health - 07:55 – A micronutrient break down - 08:30 – You can determine from your food what nutrients you are lacking - 09:00 – The accuracy of food trackers - 09:25 – This app lets you get really specific with what foods you are eating - 10:30 – How to record Nick's Oxtail Stew - 11:40 – [Editorr](https://www.editorr.com/?ref=producthunt) - 12:00 – An app for an on-demand editing service - 12:25 -- $5 for 150 words - 12:45 – Average pickup time is one minute - 14:00 – [Pana](https://pana.com/), a travel agency service - 14:15 – Dashboarding tools, like [Datadeck](https://www.datadeck.com/) and [Geckoboard](https://www.geckoboard.com/) - 14:40 – [Hotjar](https://www.hotjar.com/) and [Ptengine](https://www.ptengine.com/) ------- [Get the FREE Optimize, Automate, Outsource Blueprint here.](https://go.lessdoing.com/blueprint?utm_campaign=blueprint-ari&utm_medium=link&utm_source=podcast) --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/lessdoing/message
## Key Quote “I had a chicken bone broth with a raw egg and butter, and then they put it in a blender. And it was absolutely delicious.” ## Time-Stamped Notes - 00:05 – Ari introduces the new format of the podcast - 00:20 -- Get on the newsletter at [com](http://www.lessdoing.com/) - 00:40 – Does Nick like cold brew coffee? - 00:50 – Cold brew coffee is 75% less acidic than regularly brewed coffee. - 01:00 – It is also a lot stronger. - 01:25 – [Eze Cold Brew Coffee Bottle](https://www.fatherly.com/gear/eze-cold-brew-coffee-bottle/) - 01:45 – Make your coffee the night before, and you can grab it on the go the next morning. - 02:20 – Ari's minivan is getting fixed, and he is using his mother's Mini Cooper - 02:45 – [Multimac](https://multimac.co.uk/p/multimac_930_3_seater_) makes units to add more seats to small cars - 03:10 – You can have a small car but still carry around multiple kids safely. - 03:50 – [Screenful](http://screenful.com/trello/power-up?ref=producthunt) on Trello - 04:05 – Visual analytics for Trello boards - 04:30 – Automated reports - 05:05 – [Leaf](http://www.getleaf.co/?ref=producthunt) - 05:12 – Automated device to grow your own marijuana at home. - 05:35 – It is only referred to as “medicine” on the product. - 05:50 – It does all the work for you to grow your marijuana. - 06:30 – Different types of growing systems depending on what variety of plant you want. - 07:00 – An article in Tech Insider - 07:15 – [“The Two Exercises That Will Keep You Fit for Life”](http://www.techinsider.io/why-burpees-and-jumping-rope-are-best-workouts-2016-7) - 07:30 – Burpees and jump roping - 08:15 – [The Altitude Mask](https://www.amazon.com/Training-Mask-Elevation-Breathing-Resistance/dp/B008B92FLO) - 08:30 – “It's trained me to calm myself and steadily breath through my nose.” - 08:50 – [“The Biggest Productivity Myth Is That Rigid Rules Like the Pomodoro Technique Are for Everyone”](http://qz.com/740607/the-biggest-productivity-myth-is-that-rigid-rules-like-the-pomodoro-technique-are-for-everyone/) Article - 09:18 – Don't confuse productivity with effectiveness - 09:35 – Producing more in sprints doesn't mean you're more effective. - 10:55 – [Springbone Kitchen](http://springbone.com/) - 11:16 – Blended soups in New York - 12:00 – [GeckoBoard](https://www.geckoboard.com/) - 12:08 – Dashboarding tool to connect analytics from different platforms - 12:30 – [Hotjar](https://www.hotjar.com/) - 12:40 – See how people interact with your website - 13:00 – Provides useful insight and an outside perspective 13:20 – Go to [lessdoing.com](http://www.lessdoing.com/) ------- [Get the FREE Optimize, Automate, Outsource Blueprint here.](https://go.lessdoing.com/blueprint?utm_campaign=blueprint-ari&utm_medium=link&utm_source=podcast) --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/lessdoing/message
Dashboarding, Pioneering and Taking the Brunt by Justin-Finkelstein