The Art & Beauty of Data Visualization

Believe it or not, the Life & Culture section of the WSJ is expounding on the virtue of data visualization for practical (communication) and aesthetic purposes:

At companies and universities, and far beyond, the goal of data-driven digital artists is clear, not cynical: convey complex concepts quickly and crisply. They want to generate not Art-with-a-capital-A, necessarily, but understanding. They take stone-cold data—units of information—and turn them into something warmly communicative. Beautiful, too.

via The Art of Data Visualization | Marvels – WSJ.com.

Related, I recently watched a good TED Talk by David McCandless on the Beauty of Data Visualization:

After watching, I picked up McCandless’ Visual Miscellaneum, not because I have any interest in miscellany. Rather, I wanted to see the different mechanisms, formats and patterns used to bring that data to life.
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A Framework for Evaluating the Modern CIO – The CIO Report – WSJ

The WSJ has a new CIO Journal. The first few days were predictable, but this guest article by Irving WB has me looking forward to true CIO level content.

Try plotting your CIO and/or IT org in the 2 x 2 matrix that Wladawsky-Berger describes: Internal & Operational, Internal & Strategic, External & Operational, External & Strategic.

“To discuss something as complex as the evolving role of the CIO, I would like to offer a simple and hopefully comprehensive framework based primarily on my own experience working with CIOs over the past several decades, as well as on various excellent studies on the future of the CIO.

Two major dimensions stand out along which to develop such a framework. One dimension focuses on whether the activities are more operational versus strategic, that is, oriented more toward the near term or the longer term. The second dimension focuses on whether the activities are more internal versus external, that is, primarily aimed at supporting the business functions or at growing the business in the marketplace.

While each of these dimensions is more of a continuous spectrum than just two discrete roles, it is helpful to discuss each of the four roles resulting from such a 2 x 2 framework.”

keep reading: A Framework for Evaluating the Modern CIO – The CIO Report – WSJ.

Its Not What You Sell, Its What You Believe – Bill Taylor – Harvard Business Review

“Cook did not respond with a detailed review of the products Apple made or the retail environments in which it sold them. Instead, he offered an impromptu, unscripted statement of what he and everyone at Apple believed — “as if reciting a creed he had learned as a child” in Sunday School.

“We believe that we are on the face of the earth to make great products, and thats not changing,” Cook declared.”We believe in the simple not the complex…We believe in saying no to thousands of products, so that we can really focus on the few that are truly important and meaningful to us,” he added.

“We believe in deep collaboration and cross-pollination of our groups, which allow us to innovate in ways other cannot…And I think that regardless of who is in what job those values are so embedded in this company that Apple will do extremely well,” he concluded.Its not what you sell its what you believe.”

“In a provocative and saucy book, It’s Not What You Sell, It’s What You Stand For, Spence explains the unique beliefs behind many of the one-of-a-kind organizations he has studied or worked with over the years, from BMW to Whole Foods Market to Southwest Airlines. Sure, these and other organizations are built around strong business models, stellar products and services, and (of course) clever advertising. But Spence is adamant that behind every great company is an authentic sense of purpose — “a definitive statement about the difference you are trying to make in the world” — and a workplace with the “energy and vitality” to bring that purpose to life.”

via Its Not What You Sell, Its What You Believe – Bill Taylor – Harvard Business Review.
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8 Rules for Big Data – Active Information

My latest active information post:

While researching big data innovation at Walmart, via its @WalmartLabs start-up, I stumbled upon Andreas Weigend’s 8 Rules for Big Data…

via 8 Rules for Big Data – Input Output.
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This Is Generation Flux: Meet The Pioneers Of The New (And Chaotic) Frontier Of Business | Fast Company

“In a big company, you never feel you’re fast enough.” Beth Comstock, the chief marketing officer of GE, is talking to me by phone from the Rosewood Hotel in Menlo Park, California, where she’s visiting entrepreneurs in Silicon Valley. She gets a charge out of the Valley, but her trips also remind her how perilous the business climate is right now. “Business-model innovation is constant in this economy,” she says. “You start with a vision of a platform. For a while, you think there’s a line of sight, and then it’s gone. There’s suddenly a new angle.”

Within GE, she says, “our traditional teams are too slow. We’re not innovating fast enough. We need to systematize change.”

“The business community focuses on managing uncertainty,” says Dev Patnaik, cofounder and CEO of strategy firm Jump Associates, which has advised GE, Target, and PepsiCo, among others. “That’s actually a bit of a canard.” The true challenge lies elsewhere, he explains: “In an increasingly turbulent and interconnected world, ambiguity is rising to unprecedented levels. That’s something our current systems can’t handle.

“There’s a difference between the kind of problems that companies, institutions, and governments are able to solve and the ones that they need to solve,” Patnaik continues. “Most big organizations are good at solving clear but complicated problems. They’re absolutely horrible at solving ambiguous problems–when you don’t know what you don’t know. Faced with ambiguity, their gears grind to a halt.

“Uncertainty is when you’ve defined the variable but don’t know its value. Like when you roll a die and you don’t know if it will be a 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, or 6. But ambiguity is when you’re not even sure what the variables are. You don’t know how many dice are even being rolled or how many sides they have or which dice actually count for anything.” Businesses that focus on uncertainty, says Patnaik, “actually delude themselves into thinking that they have a handle on things. Ah, ambiguity; it can be such a bitch.”

“Technology forces disruption, and not all of the change will be good. Optimists look to all the excitement. Pessimists look to all that gets lost. They’re both right. How you react depends on what you have to gain versus what you have to lose.”

Yet while pessimists may be emotionally calmed by their fretting, it will not aid them practically. The pragmatic course is not to hide from the change, but to approach it head-on. Thurston offers this vision: “Imagine a future where people are resistant to stasis, where they’re used to speed. A world that slows down if there are fewer options–that’s old thinking and frustrating. Stimulus becomes the new normal.”

via This Is Generation Flux: Meet The Pioneers Of The New (And Chaotic) Frontier Of Business | Fast Company.

Link Collection — April 1, 2012

  • Wonkbook: Absolutely everything you need to know about health-reform Supreme Court debut – The Washington Post

    I’m working on a healthcare exchange related project. Well, at least for now…

    “Today’s the day. The Supreme Court will begin hearing oral arguments as to the constitutionality of various provisions of the Affordable Care Act. Note that phrase: “Various provisions.” The Supreme Court is not looking at the act as a whole. Rather, it’s considering four separate questions related to separate parts of the law. Here’s my colleague Sarah Kliff with a primer of what they are, and why they matter.”

    tags: scotus healthcare

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

Related posts:

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Link Collection — March 18, 2012

  • Amazon.com: Real Business of IT: How CIOs Create and Communicate Value (9781422147610): Richard Hunter, George Westerman: Books

    Referencing in advice to client. Good book.

    tags: cio

  • Give it five minutes – (37signals)

    “Ideas are fragile. They often start powerless. They’re barely there, so easy to ignore or skip or miss.

    There are two things in this world that take no skill: 1. Spending other people’s money and 2. Dismissing an idea.

    Dismissing an idea is so easy because it doesn’t involve any work. You can scoff at it. You can ignore it. You can puff some smoke at it. That’s easy. The hard thing to do is protect it, think about it, let it marinate, explore it, riff on it, and try it. The right idea could start out life as the wrong idea.

    So next time you hear something, or someone, talk about an idea, pitch an idea, or suggest an idea, give it five minutes.”

    tags: ideas mentoring

  • Sunni Brown: Doodlers, unite! | Video on TED.com

    Doodler vindication!

    “Studies show that sketching and doodling improve our comprehension — and our creative thinking. So why do we still feel embarrassed when we’re caught doodling in a meeting? Sunni Brown says: Doodlers, unite! She makes the case for unlocking your brain via pad and pen.”

    tags: TED creativity doodling

  • Conway’s law – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    “Conway’s law is an adage named after computer programmer Melvin Conway, who introduced the idea in 1968:

    …organizations which design systems … are constrained to produce designs which are copies of the communication structures of these organizations.”

    tags: organization systems

  • How Sara Blakely of Spanx Turned $5,000 into $1 billion – Forbes.com

    Good self-made woman entrepreneur story: 

    “Sara Blakely is the youngest self-made woman to join this year’s billionaires’ club–turning $5,000 in savings into a new retail category”

    tags: forbes spanx

  • Self-tracking for health, fun and profit? – Input Output

    My latest on Active Information:

    “About a decade ago, I was working with my favorite co-conspirator on a universal task viewer service, which was an adjunct to our event-driven architecture. In order for something to appear in the task viewer, it had to be “trackable” (include the proper interface).
    Over the course of our design sessions, and throughout the next few months, we kept identifying business and system actions that should be trackable. It became apparent to us that nearly every business and system action could be trackable, following an interface pattern similar to making document objects printable.
    I hadn’t thought of “trackable” — and the running “hey that’s trackable” joke — in years. However, reading Counting Every Moment on self-tracking in the recent Economist Technology Quarterly bounced trackable up my memory stack.”

    tags: active-information self-tracking hpio

  • Kanban development oversimplified: a simple explanation of how Kanban adds to the ever-growing Agile toolkit

    Jump to Kanban in Lean manufacturing distilled section

    tags: kanban agile

  • Kanban is the New Scrum « The Hacker Chick Blog

    “The thing I’ve grown to dislike about Scrum are it’s time-boxed sprints.

    Working with startups, Scrum sprints are almost always way too long. When your sprints are too long then releases are infrequent (deferring revenue) and the team is forced to wait too long before being able to adapt to changing customer needs. This is wasteful because it means you’re continuing to move forward with outdated information.

    On the other hand, if sprints are too short, big features need to be arbitrarily chunked into smaller tasks, which aren’t useful to the customer on their own & can obfuscate what the team is trying to achieve”

    tags: agile scrum kanban

  • 10 Tips on Writing from David Ogilvy | Brain Pickings

    “People who think well, write well.”

    tags: writing ogilvy

  • Why I Am Leaving Goldman Sachs – NYTimes.com

    “It astounds me how little senior management gets a basic truth: If clients don’t trust you they will eventually stop doing business with you. It doesn’t matter how smart you are.”

    tags: nytimes goldman leadership

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

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Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

Link Collection — February 26, 2012

  • Amazon queues up new workflow service — Cloud Computing News

    This is very interesting. Amazon brings cross-border orchestration to cloud(s) and enterprises; and presumably between business partners. Use for scale, flexibility and potentially integration.

    “Amazon Web Services says its new Simple Workflow Service (SWS) will run applications that are distributed between customer sites and Amazon’s cloud infrastructure, further blurring the line between the customer’s data center and their chosen cloud.”

    tags: amazon workflow cloud computing SWS SQS

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

Link Collection — February 19, 2012

  • What’s Your Mental Model Of Innovation? – Forbes

    “Achieving continuous innovation, Hamel stresses, “lies outside the performance envelope of today’s bureaucracy-infused management practices.” It will require major changes in mind and heart. It will need, Hamel writes, new values, new processes for innovation, a greater adaptability, the infusion of passion in the workplace and a new belief system or ideology.”

    tags: Innovation Hamel

  • Big Data’s Impact in the World – NYTimes.com

    An excellent piece in the NYT on all things big data.

    “GOOD with numbers? Fascinated by data? The sound you hear is opportunity knocking…”

    tags: bigdata nytimes

  • The RedMonk Programming Language Rankings: February 2012 – tecosystems

    “For years now, it has been self-evident to us at RedMonk that programming language usage and adoption has been fragmenting at an accelerating rate [coverage]. As traditional barriers to technology procurement have eroded [coverage], developers have been empowered to leverage the runtimes they chose rather than those that were chosen for them. This has led to a sea change in the programming language landscape, with traditional language choices increasingly competing for attention with newer, more dynamic competitors.

    The natural consequence of this tectonic shift has been uncertainty. Vendors for whom supporting Java and Microsoft based stacks was once sufficient are being forced to evaluate the array of alternatives in an effort to maximize their addressable audience. Platform-as-a-Service (PaaS) stacks like Cloud Foundry and OpenShift are perhaps the best example of this; the differentiation for each at launch was in part their support for multiple independent runtimes from JavaScript to Ruby.

    While the question is obvious – which languages should I support? – the answer, and mechanisms for determining an answer, have been considerably less so….”

    tags: programming language sogrady redmonk

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.