• Home
  • About
  • The Good Strategy Blog
  • Strategy
    • Data Warehousing
    • Ask Martyn

GOOD STRATEGY

~ for every significant challenge

GOOD STRATEGY

Tag Archives: technologist

The Leader, the Technologist and Their Accountability: Ten Lines of Enquiry

13 Monday Oct 2014

Posted by Martyn Jones in accountability, Ask Martyn, awareness, Best principles, governance, leadership, public, technology

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

accountability, IT Strategy, leadership, Politics, Strategy, technologist

My sister Liz was part of a group that offered support to the striking miners of Wales, Scotland and England.

They organized a public fund raiser and invited the politician Tony Benn to speak.

The trouble was that none of the support group were Labour people, and they weren’t the greatest admirers of British parliamentary democracy and the Labour party.

So they sort of moved the problem up-stream.

They asked me if I would be Tony’s minder for the night.

They didn’t actually use the word minder, but that what it was mainly about.

Because they probably reckoned that as a long time Labour member myself with an unquestioning belief in Westminster democracy, we might actually be able to talk the same language.

I had dinner with Tony that day, just before he was due to speak.

The conversation came around to Tony’s book, Arguments for Democracy.

Well, actually I had pushed the conversation in that direction.

I mentioned that I had read it at least three times, and that I used some of the examples from the book in my work.

In particular the part dealing with the questions that an elected politician and Minister of State must ask any technologist who is proposing a new projects or programme.

I told him that I had applied these principles in a large US multi-national corporation called Sperry, notorious for its Republican hue, its affinity to the Department of Defense, intelligence agencies and Federal Government, and its alleged hire and fire culture – which somehow I managed to evade for almost thirteen years.

He found that quite funny, in a surreal way.

I said “over the last eighteen years I have often used the following questions, which you designed to indicate that the role of the elected representative and minister is not to seek to reproduce the expertise, which he or she could not do, but to see that the expert is subjected to rigorous cross-examination on behalf of the people”.

 Anyway, to cut a long story short, I shall now move on to the crux of the matter. 

But before then, a final comment. 

Because I have been using these lines of enquiry primarily in business I have replaced the role of the government minister with that of the Project Board and project stakeholders, and the role of the “people” with the role of the organisational stakeholders and the business community.

So here you have it. The leader must ask the technologist:

First, would your project, if carried through, promise benefits to the organisation, and if so, what are the benefits, how will they be distributed and to whom and when will they accrue?

Second, what disadvantages would you expect might flow from your work? Who would experience them? What, if any, remedies would correct them? Is the technology for correcting them sufficiently advanced for the remedies to be available when the disadvantages begin to accrue? 

Third, what demands would the development of your project make upon our resources of skilled manpower [I would include demands on all organizational resources in this context, and would also ensure to enquire about the availability of those resources]

Fourth, is there a cheaper, a simpler, and a less sophisticated way of achieving at least part of your objective and if so, what would it be, and what proportion of your total objective would have to be sacrificed if we adopted it?

Fifth, what new skills would have to be acquired by people who would be called upon to use the product or project which you are recommending, and how could these skills be created? 

Sixth, what skills would be rendered obsolete by the development that your propose, and how serious a problem would the obsolescence of these skills create for the people who have them?

Seventh, is the work upon which you are engaged being done, or has it been done, or has it been started and stopped in other parts of the world, and what experience is available from abroad [elsewhere] that might help us to assess your own proposal?

Eighth, if what you propose is not done, what disadvantages or penalties do you believe will accrue to the organisation, and what alternative projects might be considered 

Ninth, if your proposition is accepted, what other work in the form of supporting systems should be set in hand simultaneously, either to cope with the consequences or to prepare for the next stage and what would the next stage be?

Tenth, a final and very important question. If an initial decision to proceed is made, how long will the option to stop remain open, and how reversible will this decision be at progressive stages beyond there?

Later that evening I had to drive Tony to the station to catch his train to Oxford.

We were late, it looked like we would miss the train.

In the car I asked Tony if he would care to sign my copy of Arguments for Democracy.

He did.

Trouble was, in the rush he didn’t pick up anything to read on the train and he hadn’t brought anything with him.

So I gave him The Chomsky Reader. Which just happened to be on the back seat of the car.

As one would.

Anyway, off we rushed. Hell for leather through the empty streets of Worcester.

We arrived at the station in time to catch the train.

Job done.

Follow GOOD STRATEGY on WordPress.com

Top posts

  • Heaven help us! Have you seen the latest Virtual Data Warehouse bullshit?
  • Data Warehousing and Sources of Truth: Rarely Pure, Never Simple
  • The World's Best Data Quotes... Including Big Data quotes
  • Become an Instant Big Data Rock Star with 10 Insider Tips from the Top
  • Agile at Scale is bullshit by design
  • Bullshit at the Data Lakehouse
  • Head Over Heels - The many colours, hues and tones of poems, lyrics and words

Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 2,439 other subscribers

Names in the cloud

4th generation Data Warehousing All Data Ask Martyn Big Data Big Data 7s Big Data Analytics Business Intelligence business strategy Consider this dark data data architecture Data governance Data Lake data management data science Data Supply Framework Data Warehouse Data Warehousing Good Strat goodstrat Good Strategy IT strategy Martyn does Martyn Jones Martyn Richard Jones pig data Politics Strategy The Amazing Big Data Challenge The Big Data Contrarians

The Good Strat Archives

  • March 2023
  • January 2022
  • December 2021
  • November 2021
  • June 2020
  • May 2020
  • April 2020
  • March 2020
  • July 2019
  • June 2019
  • May 2019
  • December 2018
  • January 2018
  • December 2017
  • October 2017
  • August 2017
  • July 2017
  • June 2017
  • May 2017
  • April 2017
  • March 2017
  • February 2017
  • January 2017
  • December 2016
  • September 2016
  • August 2016
  • May 2016
  • March 2016
  • February 2016
  • January 2016
  • December 2015
  • November 2015
  • August 2015
  • July 2015
  • June 2015
  • May 2015
  • April 2015
  • March 2015
  • February 2015
  • January 2015
  • December 2014
  • November 2014
  • October 2014
  • September 2014

The Stats

  • 99,717 hits

Recent posts

  • You don’t need a data warehouse to do data warehousing March 22, 2023
  • Data Warehousing means having thousands of ETL jobs March 21, 2023
  • The data warehouse is the repository for the post-transactional data March 20, 2023
  • Does your way of providing data have business value? March 19, 2023
  • Data warehousing stands in the way of progress March 18, 2023
  • Data Trailblazers: 2022 Vision January 2, 2022
  • Tea with The Data Contrarian: Afilonius Rex December 10, 2021
  • Reality Check: Data Mesh and Data Warehousing   December 5, 2021
  • Myth-busting: Data Mesh and Data Warehousing – Revisited November 25, 2021
  • Heaven help us! Have you seen the latest Virtual Data Warehouse bullshit? June 26, 2020

Hours & Info

Martyn Richard Jones
Madrid, Spain
+33 767 120 160
10:00 - 17:00
Follow GOOD STRATEGY on WordPress.com

Follow me on Twitter

My Tweets

Top Good Strat Posts & Pages

  • The Good Strategy Company
  • Heaven help us! Have you seen the latest Virtual Data Warehouse bullshit?
  • About
  • Data Warehousing and Sources of Truth: Rarely Pure, Never Simple
  • The World's Best Data Quotes... Including Big Data quotes
  • Become an Instant Big Data Rock Star with 10 Insider Tips from the Top
  • Agile at Scale is bullshit by design
  • Bullshit at the Data Lakehouse
  • Head Over Heels - The many colours, hues and tones of poems, lyrics and words

Good strat tag cloud

accountability advertising All Data Analytics aspiring tendencies in IM awareness Banking Behavioural Economics BI Big Data Bill Inmon Brexit BS Business business analysis Business Enablement business intelligence Business Management business strategy Challenges Commercial IT Consider this corporate assets Corporate IT Creativity data data analytics data architecture data integration data management Data Marts data science Data Warehouse Demagogism Dogma DW 3.0 Economics enterprise data warehousing EU Financial Goal Setting goodstart good start Good Strat goodstrat Good Strategy hadoop Information and Technology information management Information Technology IT business IT Strategy knowledge management leadership marketforces Marketing Martyn Jones Martyn Richard Jones MDM Offshoring operationalwareness Organisational Autism organisational awareness Outsourcing Pimps Politics project management Requirements management Risk Risk Management statistics Strategy trading traditional assets UK

Categories

  • 4th generation Data Warehousing
  • accountability
  • advertising
  • agile
  • agile way of working
  • agile@scale
  • AI
  • All Data
  • Analytics
  • anthropology
  • Architecture
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Ask Martyn
  • Assets
  • awareness
  • bad strategy
  • Banking
  • behaviour
  • Best principles
  • Big Data
  • Big Data 7s
  • Big Data Analytics
  • blockchain
  • Books with influence
  • Brexit
  • BS
  • business
  • Business Intelligence
  • business strategy
  • Cambriano
  • Cambridge Analytica
  • China
  • Climate Change
  • Cloud
  • code of conduct
  • Commercial Analytics
  • community
  • Condiser this
  • Conservative Party
  • consider
  • Consider this
  • Consultation
  • Creativity
  • dark data
  • data
  • data architecture
  • Data governance
  • data hub
  • Data Lake
  • data management
  • Data Mart
  • data mesh
  • data science
  • Data Supply Framework
  • Data Warehouse
  • Data Warehousing
  • deceit
  • deep learning
  • Democracy
  • digital transformation
  • Diplomacy
  • disinformation
  • Dogma
  • Duties
  • DW 3.0
  • ECM
  • Economics
  • EDW
  • England
  • enterprise content management
  • ethics
  • EU
  • Europe
  • European Union
  • Excellence
  • Excerpt
  • Executive
  • Extract
  • Federalism
  • Financial Industry
  • fraud
  • Freedoms
  • Globalisation
  • good start
  • Good Strat
  • Good Strategy
  • Good Strategy Radio
  • goodstart
  • goodstartegy
  • goodstrat
  • goostart
  • governance
  • hadoop
  • hdfs
  • HR
  • humour
  • India
  • influencers
  • informatio Supply Framework
  • information
  • Information Management
  • Information Supply Frameowrk
  • Information Supply Framework
  • Infotrends
  • Inmon
  • instruments
  • IoT
  • IT Circus
  • IT fraud
  • IT strategy
  • IT World
  • iterations
  • java
  • Knowledge
  • knowledge management
  • Labour Party
  • leadership
  • Leadership 7s
  • life
  • listening
  • literature
  • LSE
  • machine learning
  • Management
  • market forces
  • Marketing
  • Marty does
  • Martyn does
  • Martyn Jones
  • Martyn Richard Jones
  • media
  • Memory lane
  • Methodology
  • nationalism
  • nine competitive forces
  • no limits
  • Northern Ireland
  • obituary
  • Obligations
  • offshore
  • Offshoring
  • operational
  • Outsourcing
  • Oxford
  • pain
  • Parliament
  • Peeves
  • Personal Integrity Key
  • Philosophy
  • pig data
  • PIK
  • PIR
  • Plaid Cymru
  • Planning
  • poem
  • poems
  • Poetry
  • Polemic
  • political science
  • Politics
  • pomo
  • postmodern
  • POTUS
  • Process
  • Professional Networking
  • professionalism
  • project management
  • Project to Excel
  • prose
  • public
  • Public Integrity Record
  • Quiz
  • Rant
  • Referendum
  • Remain
  • RIghts
  • Risk
  • Rivalry
  • Russia
  • Ruth Davidson
  • Sales
  • satire
  • Scotland
  • Scottish National Party
  • scrum
  • sentiment analysis
  • SMILES
  • Snippet
  • SNP
  • Social
  • Social Media
  • Sociology
  • spoof
  • statistics
  • Stories
  • Strategy
  • structured intellectual capital
  • supply chain management
  • tactics
  • Tax avoidance
  • Tax evasion
  • TEAM
  • technology
  • The Amazing Big Data Challenge
  • The Big Data Contrarians
  • The Greens
  • The Guardian
  • The hidden wealth of nations
  • Trade
  • UK
  • Uncategorized
  • United Kingdom
  • USA
  • Value
  • Wales
  • wisdom

Blog at WordPress.com.

  • Follow Following
    • GOOD STRATEGY
    • Join 131 other followers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • GOOD STRATEGY
    • Customize
    • Follow Following
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
Privacy & Cookies: This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you agree to their use.
To find out more, including how to control cookies, see here: Cookie Policy