This is the first in an occasional series of articles—actually, transcripts of podcasts—by MIT instructor Jonathan Byrnes. His Profit Levers podcast covers topics related to managing profitable growth, occasionally discussing issues of concern to marketers. Those episodes are the ones MarketingProfs will be publishing.

Episode 1 of the Profit Levers podcast is Big Data: Big Opportunity or Big Headache?

Welcome to Profit Levers, a podcast on presented by Profit Isle. I'm Jonathan Byrnes. I teach at MIT, and I'm Profit Isle's founding partner.

This is Episode 1 of the Profit Levers podcast. Today, I'm going to talk about "Big Data: Big Opportunity or Big Headache?" You can find a transcript for this episode on the Profit Isle website: profitisle.com

Big data is coming! What are the keys to success? Importantly, most of the seemingly obvious streams of payoff are revealed by careful analysis to be mirages at best, or quicksand at worst—while others promise high returns.

This podcast exposes the tips and pitfalls of managing in the coming Big Data world.

I really appreciate your interest in listening in.

Big Data is the breaking news story in the IT world.

Here's the picture. Sometime soon company managers will have an enormous amount of information at their fingertips. They will be able to see everything and optimize everything.

What could be better?

Within the past month, two very senior, astute individuals contacted me about this—one a senior IT industry analyst, and the other a senior editor of a major business publication. They both had the same question: If Big Data actually becomes available, what will be the consequences?

My answer: Big Data offers big opportunities, but it carries the very strong likelihood of creating really big headaches in three areas: first, paving the cow paths; second, managing at the right level; and third, driving without a road map.

Let me explain.

Paving the Cow Paths

Remember RFID?

A few years ago, RFID was all the rage. The idea was that it was becoming technically and economically possible to affix an RFID tag to every item moving through a supply chain. (An RFID tag is a small passive label that essentially emits a precise identifier when it is hit by an electromagnetic field.) Armed with this capability, managers could know the identification and location of every item in their company, and even those flowing into and out of their companies.

Today, this is resurfacing as the Internet of Things.

I remember discussing this with a former student who is a senior operating executive of a Fortune 20 company. His reaction was similar to mine: What ever would you do with all that information?

In fact, several years ago I co-authored a blog column, "Are You Aiming Too Low With RFID?" in Harvard Business School's Working Knowledge. In this piece, I joined with Sanjay Sharma, co-founder of MIT's Auto-ID Lab, and John Wass, Profit Isle's CEO (and former CEO of WaveMark, an RFID company), to argue that the biggest danger with the flood of RFID information was the almost-irresistible temptation to focus on "paving the cow paths."

Here's how we put it. "One of the most exquisite challenges of living in Boston is navigating the labyrinthine maze of streets in the downtown area. This part of town is the oldest part, and the streets follow the original paths formed by settlers driving their cows to pasture. Traffic flows poorly because the city fathers simply paved the cow paths, making the ineffective more efficient. It's much easier to navigate Back Bay, a part of Boston with grid-like streets, built on landfill centuries later."

In the article, we outlined a number of highly focused, high-value analytical uses for the "Big Data" that RFID could produce, and counseled avoiding the large-scale applications that simply automated routine activities.

In the absence of this disciplined, strategic approach, managers are in grave danger of utilizing Big Data to pave the cow paths, further entrenching existing practices and rendering the possibility of developing sweeping paradigm-changing initiatives more and more difficult.

This will almost inevitably occur because, in the capital budgeting process, the tactical payoffs from paving the cow paths will be clear and easy to measure, while the payoffs from far-reaching strategic changes in the business will be more hazy and difficult to measure.

Managing at the Right Level

This past weekend, I was reminded again of the Big Data question when I re-read Wired for War, a terrific book by P.W. Singer which traces the robotics revolution and the use of robots in 21st century conflict.

In a particularly telling chapter, Singer describes how the real-time video feeds from drone aircraft—Big Data—led to the systematic leadership problems that I call "managing at the wrong level."

Over many years, improved communications technology has enabled commanders to command increasingly at a distance from the actual battles. This led to a very effective management structure in which top commanders focus on strategy and personnel, mid-level commanders on operational initiatives, and local officers on tactical issues. This parallels the leadership structure of the most effective companies.

However, the widespread availability of drone aircraft information feeds has led to serious and systematic command and leadership problems. The ability of top commanders to see battlefield video feeds in real time has rapidly increased the centralization of command and led to an explosion of micromanagement.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

image of Jonathan Byrnes

Jonathan Byrnes is a senior lecturer at MIT, where he has taught for 30 years. He is the founding partner and chairman of Profit Isle, a profit-acceleration SaaScompany with proprietary analytics. He is the author of Islands of Profit in a Sea of Red Ink and a co-author of the upcoming Choose your Customers: How to Compete Against the Digital Giants and Thrive (McGraw Hill).