Data for CEOs: the no-jargon guide
Everything a CEO needs to know about data to make better decisions, without the technical complexity: what to ask for, what to measure and how to get results.
Read articleA practical framework for leadership to define a data strategy in 90 days: business goals, use cases, governance and a measurable first result.

Too many data strategies end up as a presentation nobody executes. The reason is usually that they start from technology — "we need a data lake" — instead of from the business. A useful strategy is concrete, actionable and delivers value soon.
A data strategy is the plan connecting business goals with the data capabilities needed to reach them: which decisions to improve, what data is needed, how to govern it and how to deliver it.
The question that orders the strategy is not "what platform do we build?" but "what decisions do we want to make better, and what does not being able to do so cost us today?". Technology is a consequence of those answers, not the starting point.
A strategy that does not deliver a tangible result in its first months loses credibility and support. That is why the framework ends with a working use case: proving value early funds and legitimises the next phases.
A strategy is validated by executing it, not by documenting it.
A data strategy aligns data with business goals — starting from decisions to improve, not technology. A 90-day framework moves from goals to use cases to a measured first result. Deliver something tangible early: a strategy is validated by executing it, not by documenting it.
From business goals and the decisions you want to improve, not from the choice of technology, which is a later consequence.
To define the strategy and deliver a first use case, yes. Full transformation is longer, but the first value should arrive soon.
Starting from technology, not prioritising by impact, and not delivering a tangible result in the first months.
Because proving value early builds credibility and funds the next phases. A strategy with no delivery loses support.
Goals (days 1–30), use cases and governance (31–60) and a measured first result (61–90).
No. A strategy is validated by executing it. A document nobody acts on delivers no value.
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