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B I G D A T A , B I G I N N O V A T I O N
only where the organization
is but also where it needs to be. For most,
building this understanding only comes with experience.
For someone with a deadline, that ’s probably somewhat disheart-
ening. However, there ’s a shortcut.
By learning from others, it ’s pos-
sible to bypass many of the dead ends that create delays. Why guess,
when there are so many great examples out there?
Part Two describes two models to frame organizational transfor-
mation. Everything starts with culture and capability. Without the
right capability, even the easiest things are impossible. Vision without
the ability to execute is simply a good idea.
Without the right culture,
however, capability is meaningless. Being able to do something doesn ’t
mean much if there ’s no interest in doing it.
Achieving real differentiation is impossible without both. As
such, these models form the framework that describes how organiza-
tions harness their capabilities and use them to innovate. As shown
in Figure P2.1 , they affect how organizations create value from infor-
mation. They affect how organizations create value from business
analytics through
the value of business analytics , as covered in Chapter
6. They affect how organizations treat their human capital through
the SMART model , as covered in Chapter 7. And, they affect how
organizations innovate through
the innovation engine , as covered in
Chapter 8.
The cultural imperative , covered in Chapter 3, focuses on the behav-
iors and attitudes of high-performing organizations. It outlines the fi ve
perspectives organizations go through on their way to differentiation
through business analytics. At a minimum,
every organization should
aim to achieve at least the third level within this model. Anything less
leads to ineffi ciencies, delays, and unacceptable risk.
The intelligent enterprise , covered in Chapter 4, focuses on the tech-
nical characteristics of organizations as they transition from chaos to
the intelligent enterprise. It applies more to larger organizations, ones
that are big enough to justify centralized technology infrastructure.
For
these organizations, anything less than the top level should be
seen as underperforming.
3
Together, they refl ect an organization ’s ability to treat information
as an active competitive differentiator rather than just a passive driver
for better decision making.