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Read articleOversizing infrastructure, starting from the technology instead of the use case, ignoring data governance… The 7 most expensive mistakes and how to avoid them.

Many data projects fail not for lack of technology, but for the wrong approach. These are the seven most expensive mistakes we see again and again, and how to avoid them.
If you look at the seven, they share a root: putting technology ahead of the business. When the start is "which tool do we set up" instead of "which decision do we want to improve", the project grows in complexity and cost without getting closer to value.
The biggest mistake is not choosing the wrong technology, but starting from it instead of the business.
Data platforms fail from approach, not technology: starting from the tool, oversizing, ignoring governance, underestimating maintenance, not measuring ROI, doing everything at once and building in-house unnecessarily. The fix is to reverse the order — business question first — and deliver scoped, measured results.
Starting from technology instead of a concrete, measurable business use case.
By starting scoped, measuring ROI from the start and relying on a provider that already has platform and team ready.
For most, outsourcing with a managed service reduces cost, time and risk. Building in-house only pays off when data is the core of the product.
It locks up budget in capacity "just in case" and inflates cost from day one, before any value is delivered.
Return to a concrete use case, scope it down to a small useful result, measure its business impact, and outsource the non-differentiating operation.
Putting technology ahead of the business. Reversing that order — business question first — prevents most of them.
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