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Editorial Team

Tell Your Story With Data

March 31, 2019 by Editorial Team

Summary: Everybody’s using data to improve their business and internal operations. So should you

“What do you want to measure?”

That’s the question I asked my friend during a conversation last week. She is running project management at an entertainment company in New York City, and she’s starting research into potential project management systems. Leadership has made it clear that analytics and metrics are important to them.

What should she try to measure?

Well, if it were me, I’d start at the top — is leadership just interested in time and money, or something more? Then I’d layer on my own wish list for data analysis about the workflow and the team. I would add all these needs to my Requirements Doc and start scouting for a system.

That’s what I’d do, if I had a clean slate.

But life is often more complicated — sometimes you’ve got to play the hand you’re dealt. This was the scenario when I came into my current role at AT&T. A task management system was already running much of the company’s digital workflow, crossing over many teams. The creative group had recently joined on, but the job ticket wasn’t very friendly for their needs.

Modernizing the job ticket was a project that lasted several months. But once the configuration was complete and the new ticketing system adopted by the group, work began flowing and data came pouring out. Some beautiful patterns emerged.

What’s Behind This Obsession with Data, Anyway?

Here’s an easy assignment: Do a web search for “data-driven decision making”. It’s a hot topic, right? And for good reason. Gut instinct isn’t enough for companies to remain competitive. The collection and analysis of data leads businesses to insights about their products, customers, and competitive landscape. Data also helps them look inward to find ways to improve or optimize operations. There are many related approaches, including Six Sigma and kaizen.

When it comes to Creative Operations — here on the business side of Creative and Marketing teams and organizations — data is super-crucial for continuous improvement.

How might data help creative teams do a better job?

  • Identifying bottlenecks
  • Bandwidth & capacity tracking
  • Time tracking
  • Cost management
  • Scheduling and planning

Last year my friend Carrie Roberts helped roll out a new workflow management tool for her employer Johnson & Johnson. As manager of global talent operations, Carrie needed to harvest some “people” data pertaining to staffing and talent consistent with the data-driven nature of the company.

She’s measuring everything but the kitchen sink, especially anything relating to time and money:

  • Hours — actual vs estimated
  • Hours — billable vs non-billable
  • Cost — actual vs estimated
  • Utilization — where the team is putting their time (by project or sector)

Says Carrie: “We’re taking complex data and information and trying to present that in an understandable, creative-friendly way. We identify trends and start to ask questions that help leadership make informed decisions.” She lets the data tell the story, and it’s a powerful approach.

At AT&T, I benchmarked and reported on two KPI’s: (1) Total number of projects; and (2) our Backlog of jobs-accepted-but-not-started. These measures track our volume of work and the health of our pipeline.

With two stats I could measure the health of our pipeline: Total number of jobs, and of those jobs how many were waiting for work to begin.

Total Projects:

Total Projects is highly variable depending on many many factors. For example, our active projects can easily spike by 30% leading up to a product launch (such as Apple announcing their new iPhones), or for one of the company’s quarterly initiatives. (Total projects are normally in the 90-140 range.)

Backlog:

Our Backlog is the jobs that are in the queue pending design to start. Projects sometimes linger in in Pending-vs-Active status when there’s too much work and not enough designers (a classic supply-and-demand imbalance), or when something gets placed on hold due to an incomplete brief or is frozen for some business reason. (Pending projects are normally in the 20-30% range.)

Backlog tells me about the health of our pipeline — but it’s a lagging indicator. For example, if new jobs spike one week, it takes several days for the backlog to rise. The opposite is also true. Once we deliver everything for a tentpole quarterly offer, it takes a couple of weeks for our backlog to simmer down and start trending south toward the mean.

Together, Total Jobs and the Pending/Active ratio help me red-flag trouble spots and predict when my team will start to feel the strain. Stress shows up in missed deadlines, poor communications, and slippage in quality. This is normal and human, but as a manager I need to help mitigate these issues and keep up the high standards that our partners and stakeholders rightly expect.

But what about my report?

Raw data just makes peoples’ eyes glaze over. This is where charts and graphs come in. I developed a visualization format to help tell my story. I also add some analysis and observations as a sidebar:

  • Highlights from last week
  • Intake vs capacity
  • How many projects are over with our partner agency?
  • Staffing forecast, looming bottlenecks, etc.
  • Conclusions — trends up or down? Any red flags?

Two examples:

My conclusions avoid being prescriptive. I’m really not telling anyone what to do — I want the data to do most of the talking.

The goal is to help colleagues and teammates to use data for capacity planning, triage, or even if just to push back if all our “clients” happen to show up at once with their rush jobs. It’s a conversation starter that helps us chart a course around the daily challenges and obstacles that we face together.

Bottom Line: Data is your friend. Configure your Project or Task Management tool to capture good data — then visualize it in persuasive a way to tell your story and enable your partners and leaders to make better decisions. If your leadership isn’t asking for data, you should be giving it to them anyway. There are lots of tools to help do this.

Workshop: Hunting for Hidden Factories

March 25, 2019 by Editorial Team

In about a month Henry Stewart Events brings its annual conference to New York — co-hosting two events focused on Digital Asset Management, and Creative Operations (May 2-3, 2019).

As a Creative Operations leader trying to get the most out of your team, you need to look no further than the intersection of people and process. That’s where you’ll find the “Hidden Factories” of wasted effort.

Hidden Factories are those invisible bottlenecks and ineffective processes in your content supply chain. A flurry of work can happen with nothing to show for it. There are hundreds of ways you can find invisible waste in your department, in every process and action. But although hidden, these are right in front of your eyes, and can be seen by those who look for it.

I’ll be holding an afternoon interactive workshop looking at a few inspirational real-life examples of common Hidden Factories that affect creative operations — and how they were resolved.

This will set the stage for a lively conversation, co-led by Lauren Dohr, by participants bout the invisible frictions that drag the work down in your own workplace. As a community, we’ll share our own challenges and the solutions that worked… and some that didn’t.

You will come away with inspiration and ideas for how to identify waste areas and take action to foster a better workflow.

Bottom line: Come network and learn how to find your superpowers at the intersection of People, Process and Technology.

See you there!

Register Here:

  • Creative Operations – May 2, 2019
  • DAM NY – May 2-3, 2019

I automated Hidden Factories out of existence, but no jobs were lost

February 8, 2019 by Editorial Team

Automating Hidden Factories into Oblivion

It all started with some grunt work that landed on my team, in the downdraft of a corporate downsizing that wiped out the old group doing the work. Suddenly, I was responsible for producing masses of product images (think: cellphones and their accessories) for AT&T’s e-commerce website. To deliver the work, I had to take three designers away from high-priority work… at the worst possible time.

[Read more…] about I automated Hidden Factories out of existence, but no jobs were lost

The State of Artificial Intelligence: 2018 edition

December 19, 2018 by Editorial Team

It was a busy week for Artificial Intelligence.

The headliner was the AI Summit at New York City’s Javits Center— offering something for everyone at a packed event, Dec. 5-6. Meanwhile, uptown at the 92nd Street Y, former Ambassador Wendy Sherman — while discussing the future of diplomacy with Madeline Albright and the Financial Times’s Gillian Tett — sounded the alarm… describing AI as a threat to world politics and global stability.

Then Google broke up the AI-isn’t-creative party by announcing that AlphaZero had mastered the intricacies of chess — from scratch — in about as long as it takes to drive from New York City to Washington, DC. It then proceeded to trounce all competition.

This all came into sharp focus at the Summit, with more than 3,000 attendees, 300 speakers, and 150 sessions cutting across an arc of case studies, academia, business insights, and technical solutions from virtually every industry sector.

[Read more…] about The State of Artificial Intelligence: 2018 edition

Improvising with Digital Tools is not a Strategy

November 12, 2018 by Editorial Team

Brilliant creative work starts with the germ of an idea, built out by a great design team.

But ideas don’t just emerge, fully expressed, into a welcoming world. Success hinges on brilliant execution— a good battle plan… how the great work gets produced, to ensure top-quality execution and a smooth landing.

I love the creative process, and I love seeing ideas being brought to life. But what I’m truly obsessed with is the middle part — how the work-in-progress happens. To be sure, success in this realm depends a great deal on a talented and dedicated team, and also discipline and good processes.

But a major facet of execution is also the tech — the tools used in the process of producing the work, and how they enable the flow of ideas and design and content iterations during the creative development process.

[Read more…] about Improvising with Digital Tools is not a Strategy

The “Tech Stack” Trap

September 20, 2018 by Editorial Team

Summary: There are many reasons why today’s digital workforce don’t always have the right tools or systems for their jobs. But in the end, it’s the work that suffers. Baked-in friction makes tasks harder, not easier. And there’s lost opportunity along every step of the way — distorting not only the process, but also the outcome.

I’ve been the dismayed observer of workgroups being gifted digital tools that are totally wrong for their jobs… and I’ve watched in amazement at the lengths these same users will go — out of frustration — to create clever hacks and workarounds.

My perspective comes from a career in the creative industry (here, and here) prior to moving over to tech/telecomm — but the problem pervades every industry.

One cause is a lack of structure… actually, no structure at all. Users confront a mess of scattered applications (email, spreadsheets, files on a network drive) that evolved and mutated over the ages. I jokingly call this a grassroots tech stack — cobbled together by people just trying to get through the day. Definitely not the result of any systematic approach.

Another cause might be a tool that simply has the wrong focus. Software systems acquired for some specific original purpose are then deployed across the enterprise in ways that would make even the creators of the system cringe.

At my place of work, we use an industry-standard software bug tracking system to manage our creative projects — from intake, project management, and task assignment, through creative development to stakeholder approvals and delivery to the offshore content integration team. Across town at one of New York City’s most esteemed museums, my friend there tells me that the exact same software is used for all kinds of amazing things including… when you need to ask for a new light bulb. And also sometimes for bug reporting.

(Check out my post on configuring Jira for creatives.)

I witnessed an accounting system that was designed for tracking inventory in a factory environment dropped onto an entertainment organization where nothing happens in a straight line — and especially not in the content production arm of the business where chaos reigns. The system didn’t just land with a thud. Howls of rage were registered on the far side of the Hudson River. Peace was eventually restored once Stockholm Syndrome set in.

We got here… how, exactly?

The reasons for a mismatch between whatever digital tools a company takes on, versus actual user needs, are many and varied.

Legacy systems: Software systems or tools have been in use for so long that the working teams accept it as normal or even think it’s great. While the business changes around them, the downtrodden users clack away at these legacy systems, falling farther and farther behind the times.

The False God of Standardization: Desktop software is sometimes viewed as a fixed one-size-fits-all tool or suite of tools. In reality, software designed for one business purposes might not be so awesome for other specialized tasks. Isn’t it obvious that there’s virtually zero overlap between the power users of Microsoft Office and the power users of Adobe Creative Cloud? Meanwhile, the organization erects obstacles against anyone who might want to explore alternative tools to find different and possibly better ways of working.

When IT and Biz Go Shopping: The groups in charge of technology or budgets can be isolated from the front lines of the business. As a result, they don’t understand the users’ unique needs or idiosyncrasies of the working groups. In the name of “single platform” or whatever, they’ll deploy a system that’s 80 percent good enough. But totally miss the 20 percent causing all the headaches for the end users. 

Scope Creep: Tech systems can be acquired for one specific initial purpose and then spread across the company becoming adopted by unrelated teams. The new teams have to adapt their processes, and hack the tool, just to make it barely functional. 

My grandfather, a master craftsman and cabinetmaker, said: “Never use a wrench if you need a hammer.” 

The right tool for the job

Digital tools, whether desktop or server-based software, need to be purposefully designed for the activities and needs of the business units and working groups.

This reminds me of a bit of advice from my grandfather “Mac” Gepford — master craftsman and cabinetmaker: “Never use a wrench when you need a hammer.” (And he always took care of his tools, carefully brushing and oiling each one before putting them away at the end of every day in his workshop.)

In other words, if the tools don’t help… they hurt — dragging the work down and adding friction and distortion to every process. This was true in cabinetmaking. And it’s doubly true of modern digital tools.

End-users, rise up!

Business units and working groups must learn to exert their influence when it comes to the digital tools they use. They need a seat at the table during the discovery and evaluation phases, before the software or systems are purchased. In a better world, they would be able to go out and acquire their own tools. But the best way to make this shake out in your favor is if you have the means and the fortitude to develop tools of your own. This is the hard but also the glorious road.

(By the way, I’m a big champion for building such tools — because so often the use case is unique, or the available vendor solutions just haven’t caught up to the needs.)

Do you want a fighting chance at getting the tech you deserve? Then you’ve got to understand the players within your organization — find out who acquires the technology, and why. I’ll be sharing a few thoughts about the dynamics in this space, in an upcoming post.

Bottom Line: Technology that’s foisted on users can lead to a culture of disempowerment and acceptance of baked-in friction. Hacks are invented just to get the work done — but it distorts the process. Do I have to say it? This is not good.

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