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The Analytics Power Hour

The Analytics Power Hour

308 episodes — Page 4 of 7

#151: The Rise of the Analytics Engineer with Claire Carroll

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Do you long for the days when your mother could ask you, "Now, what do you actually do for your job?" and "all" you had to do was explain websites and digital analytics? The "analyst" is now a role that can be defined an infinite number of ways in its breadth and depth. Is the analyst who is starting to do data transformations to create clean views still an analyst? Or is she a data engineer? A data scientist? On this episode, we explore the idea of an "analytics engineer" with Claire Carroll from Fishtown Analytics who, while she did not coin the term, can certainly be credited with its growth as a concept. And there is a brief but intense spat about the role of "analytics translator," which Claire sat out, but observed with bemusement. For complete show notes, including links to items mentioned in this episode and a transcript of the show, visit the show page.

Oct 6, 20201h 1m

#150: The Curiosity of the Analyst with Dr. Debbie Berebichez

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Did curiosity kill the cat? Perhaps. A claim could be made that a LACK of curiosity can (and should!) kill an analyst's career! On this episode, Dr. Debbie Berebichez, who, as Tim noted, sorta' pegs out on the extreme end of the curiosity spectrum, joined the show to explore the subject: the societal norms that (still!) often discourage young women from exploring and developing their curiosity; exploratory data analysis as one way to spark curiosity about a data set; the (often) misguided expectations of "the business" when it comes to analytics and data science (and the imperative to continue to promote data literacy to combat them), and more! For complete show notes, including links to items mentioned in this episode and a transcript of the show, visit the show page.

Sep 22, 20201h 0m

#149: Making Statistics Accessible with Chelsea Parlett-Pelleriti

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How does a Bayesian tell what time it is? She starts with an estimated time as her prior and then makes a video for TikTok. If you've ever made a joke like that and then realized your audience might need a little statistical education in order to appreciate how hilarious it is (or, perhaps, what the probability is that it's hilarious), then this episode is for you. The Chatistician (and the creator of the #statstiktok hashtag), Chelsea Parlett-Pelleriti, joined the show to talk about tactics for making statistics accessible, both to ourselves and to others! Humor and thoughtfulness were both normally distributed throughout the discussion. For complete show notes, including links to items mentioned in this episode and a transcript of the show, visit the show page.

Sep 8, 202056 min

#148: Forecasting (of the Political Variety) with G. Elliott Morris

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Once every four years in the United States, there is this thing called a "presidential election." It's a pretty boring affair, in that there is so much harmony amongst the electorate, and the two main candidates are pretty indistinguishable when it comes to their world views, policy ideas, and temperaments. But, despite the blandness of the contest, digging in to how the professionals go about forecasting the outcome is an intriguing topic. It turns out that forecasting, be it of the political or the marketing variety, is chock full of considerations like data quality, the quantification of uncertainty, and even () the opportunity to run simulations! On this episode, we sat down with G. Elliott Morris, creator of The Crosstab newsletter and a member of the political forecasting team for The Economist, to chat about the ins and outs of predicting the future with a limited set of historical data and a boatload of uncertainty. For complete show notes, including links to items mentioned in this episode and a transcript of the show, visit the show page.

Aug 25, 202053 min

#147: The Podcast Book Club

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Do you know someone who always seems to have read the latest books and can cite concepts and ideas and authors and titles in any situation? Do you hate that person? Honestly, so do we. But that didn't stop us from recording an episode that, potentially, will grate on your nerves in such a way that you have to draw on your inner grit (Grit: The Power of Passion and Perseverance by Angela Duckworth) to get through it. But, with luck, there will be some good ideas that make it into your long-term memory (Brain Rules: 12 Principles for Surviving and Thriving at Work, Home, and School by John Medina), and it will be information delivered in a gender-neutral manner, unlike so much of the world (Invisible Women: Exposing Data Bias in a World Designed for Men by Caroline Criado-Perez). Give it a shot, though. It may help you become a better leader in your organization (Dare to Lead by Brené Brown). Unfortunately, we lost some of this episode (even our recording platform was tired of hearing about books?). We know what we talked about then, even if we have no audio record, so we've included those books in the show notes as well. For complete show notes, including links to items mentioned in this episode and a transcript of the show, visit the show page.

Aug 11, 202043 min

#146: The Manager/Analyst Relationship

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Analytics is hard (so they say... but we're not going to open THAT can of worms). Do you know what's harder? Managing analysts! I mean, they're always asking, "Why?" Sometimes, they even ask it five times! They can wind up, you know, analyzing whatever you're asking them to do! On this episode, special guest Moe Kiss (you may know her as a co-host of this podcast) joined Michael and Tim to dig into the ins and outs of the analyst/manager relationship. For complete show notes, including links to items mentioned in this episode and a transcript of the show, visit the show page.

Jul 28, 202056 min

#145: COVID-19 Analysts, Policy, and Black Swans with Gary Angel

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A wise man once said, "All forecasts basically assume that tomorrow is going to be very similar to today, just with an adjustment or two." That wise man was Gary Angel from Digital Mortar, and he said that on this very episode as we explored the ramifications for the analyst when the historical data is not at all a proxy for the near-term and medium-term future. What is the analyst to do when her training data has become as worthless as a good, firm handshake? If your prediction—based on listening to past episodes—is that Gary and our intrepid co-hosts might actually have some sharp ideas on the subject, well, give this show a listen and see how well you did! For complete show notes, including links to items mentioned in this episode and a transcript of the show, visit the show page.

Jul 14, 202052 min

#144: Landing the Dream Data Job with Ollie Darmon

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Remember back when the global economy was booming and analysts were both in the sexiest job of the century and on the favorable side of the supply-demand curve for talent? Those were the days! On this episode, we sat down with Ollie Darmon from Canva to get his perspective, as an in-house recruiter, on what candidates can and should do to not only get in the door, but to actually close the deal and get hired. For complete show notes, including links to items mentioned in this episode and a transcript of the show, visit the show page.

Jun 30, 20201h 1m

#143: These Are a Few (More) of Our Favorite (Analytics) Tips

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No one has ever been disappointed by a sequel, right? Especially when the original was well-received both by the critics and at the box office. Well, Episode #134: "These Are a Few of Our Favorite (Analytics) Tips" scored an 83% Tomatometer with an audience score of 91% on Rotten Tomatoes. As it happened, those are the same scores that The Sound of Music achieved, and they're pretty impressive. Unlike The Sound of Music, we decided we'd give our fans what they clearly wanted and release another episode of our (just as favorite) analytics tips! For complete show notes, including links to items mentioned in this episode and a transcript of the show, visit the show page.

Jun 16, 20201h 3m

#142: Analytics Tribe of Mentors with Jen Yacenda

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A hallmark of the analytics community is the generosity with which ideas and wisdom are shared. One of the largest analytics conferences each year is Adobe Summit. One of the most followed Tims on the planet wrote a book called Tribe of Mentors: Short Life Advice from the Best in the World. Jen Yacenda and Eric Matisoff mixed all three of these truths together in preparation for an hour-long presentation chock full of excellent career advice. And then Adobe Summit went virtual, and their session got drastically shortened. On this episode, Jen joined the gang to talk through (some of) the 11 questions that they posed to 38 analysts, the responses they got, and how she and the hosts answered the questions themselves. For complete show notes, including links to items mentioned in this episode and a transcript of the show, visit the show page.

Jun 2, 20201h 3m

#141: The State of Martech, Analytically Speaking, with David Raab

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It sometimes seems like there must be a Moore's Law of marketing technology (or "martech," as the cool kids call it, and our site is on a .io domain, so we're definitely the cool kids) whereby the number of platforms available doubles every 6 to 8 weeks. And, every couple of months, it seems, a whole new category emerges. From CMS to DAM to CRM to TMS to DMP to DSP to CDP, it's an alphabet soup of TLAs that no one can make sense of PDQ! On this episode, Michael, Moe, and Tim sat down with the man who coined the name for one of those categories back in 2013: David Raab, the founder of the CDP Institute! It was a lively chat about the messy world of vendor overload and how to frame, assess, and successfully manage martech stacks. For complete show notes, including links to items mentioned in this episode and a transcript of the show, visit the show page.

May 19, 202056 min

#140: The Analyst as Cartographer: Customer Journey Mapping with Monica Weiler

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The promise of digital—and the steady shift of consumers' interactions with brands to that medium over the course of the past two decades—is that we can now see so much more of what our customers and prospects DO. But, how much does that tell us about who they really are, why they do what they do, and how they feel as they do it? What are they thinking and feeling as they cross between channels, task shift to and from interacting with your brand, and try to move their lives forward in whatever way that matters to them? Customer journey mapping tries to answer those questions: establishing different archetypes and mapping journeys through a combination of qualitative research and quantitative analysis. Would you like to journey further into the topic? Then give this episode a listen as we explore the subject with Dr. Monica Weiler from Stratos Innovation Group! For complete show notes, including links to items mentioned in this episode and a transcript of the show, visit the show page.

May 5, 202052 min

#139: Workshops: When the Best Analysis Is Actually Human Collaboration with Jody Weir

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Sometimes, the best way to get alignment, generate new ideas, hash out different perspectives, or just effectively collaborate is to shift a gathering of peers from being a "meeting run by the organizer" to a "workshop run by a facilitator." Both meetings and workshops should have clear objectives, but workshops, when planned and run well, shift the mindset of the participants even before they arrive in the meeting room (which may make sense to have as a room at an off-site location). On this episode, we chat with master facilitator Jody Weir from THE ICONIC about her experiences, tips, and techniques for running an effective workshop. If you haven't committed to run one by the end of the show, then Michael failed in his role as podcast facilitator. For complete show notes, including links to items mentioned in this episode and a transcript of the show, visit the show page.

Apr 21, 202058 min

#138: Pants-Optional Spreadsheeting: When the Analyst Works Remotely

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These are interesting times in which we work, are they not? For many analysts, "remote work" is what they call "every weekday" or, for those who don't have things fully figured out, "every day that ends in 'Y.'" For other analysts, the current pandemic has forced them into being an unplanned — and not necessarily desired — full-time remote worker. Juggling kids, silencing pets, finding a horizontal work surface, and grappling with which pair of sweatpants to don are all the sorts of challenges (opportunities?!) that remote working can bring. On this show, we explore our experiences and thoughts and tips on the topic. Except for Tim, who thinks remote work is like in-office work: "Leave me alone, and just do your job!" For complete show notes, including links to items mentioned in this episode and a transcript of the show, visit the show page.

Apr 7, 202057 min

#137 - Data Science + Words: An NLP Meet Cute for Analysts with Dr. Joe Sutherland

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Did you know that there were monks in the 1400s doing text-based sentiment analysis? Can you name the 2016 movie that starred Amy Adams as a linguist? Have you ever laid awake at night wondering if stopword removal is ever problematic? Is the best therapist you ever had named ELIZA? The common theme across all of these questions is the broad and deep topic of natural language processing (NLP), a topic we've been wanting to form and exchange words regarding for quite some time. Dr. Joe Sutherland, the Head of Data Science at Search Discovery, joined the discussion and converted many of his thoughts on the subject into semantic constructs that, ultimately, were digitized into audio files for your auditory consumption. For complete show notes, including links to items mentioned in this episode and a transcript of the show, visit the show page.

Mar 24, 20201h 1m

#136: An Analyst and a CRO Walk Into a Podcast with Michele Kiss and Valerie Kroll

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For our special International Women's Day episode, we committed a type one error and peeked at our results, so we are releasing this winner three days early. As good analysts, we set out to optimise the podcast by swapping out Tim and Michael for two guests (it's rare for Tim to be in the control group, but he's an outlier either way). Unfortunately, it turns out we confused testing with personalisation, so we invited along a family member, Michele Kiss, as well as CRO expert Valerie Kroll, to talk about the evolution of the space from conversion rate optimisation (CRO) to experimentation. In Val's words, good experimentation programs are all about optimising to de-risk product feature roll-outs and marketing tactics, all the while learning about our users and prospects. Stay tuned for the three tips from our guests on how to set up the best version of an experimentation framework, as well as the stats on the show's gender breakdown since our start in 2015! For complete show notes, including links to items mentioned in this episode and a transcript of the show, visit the show page.

Mar 8, 202058 min

#135: Superweek 2020 – the Last Mile of Analytics

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Have you heard the one about the four analysts who run a podcast who walked into a resort in Hungary? Well, now you can! Or, at least get a taste of that experience. Michael, Moe, Tim, and Josh headed to Superweek last month and, among other things, did a 12-hour audio livestream to try to give interested listeners a taste of the experience. On this episode, we're bringing you just over an hour (occasionally, we "power" right past the "hour" mark) of that livestream, centered around (but not limited to!) Michael's presentation on "the last mile of analytics," which is about the importance of self-awareness, communication, and interpersonal skills when it comes to putting analytics into action. For complete show notes, including links to items mentioned in this episode and a transcript of the show, visit the show page.

Feb 25, 20201h 7m

#134: These Are a Few of Our Favorite (Analytics) Tips

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"QA and patience and reviews by a peer. Data viz testing, hold no chart too dear. Don't be an asshole; automate 'til it stings. These are a few of our favorite things!" With apologies to Julie Andrews, on this episode, Moe, Tim, and Michael shared some of the tactical tips and techniques that they have found themselves putting to use on a regular basis in their analytics work. The resulting show: multiple tips, minimal disagreements, and moderate laughter. For complete show notes, including links to items mentioned in this episode and a transcript of the show, visit the show page.

Feb 11, 202055 min

#133: Server-Side vs. Client-Side Tracking with Mike Robins

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Once upon a time, website behavioral data was extracted from the log files of web servers. That data was messy to work with and missing some information that analysts really wanted. This was the OG "server-side" data collection. Then, the JavaScript page tag arrived on the scene, and the data became richer and cleaner and easier to implement. That data was collected by tags firing in the user's browser (which was called "client-side" data collection). But then ad blockers and browser quirks and cross-device behavior turned out to introduce pockets of unreliability into THAT data. And now here we are. What was old is now somewhat new again, and there is a lot to be unpacked with the ins and outs and tradeoffs of client-side vs. server-side data collection. On this episode, Mike Robins from Poplin Data joined the gang to explore the topic from various angles. For complete show notes, including links to items mentioned in this episode and a transcript of the show, visit the show page.

Jan 28, 202048 min

#132: Reporting vs. Analysis

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Who would have thought that we'd get to 2020 and still be debating whether recurring reports should include "insights?" As it turns out, Tim did an ad hoc analysis back in 2015 where he predicted exactly that! Unfortunately, the evidence is buried in the outbox of his email account at a previous employer. So, instead, we've opted to just tackle the topic head-on: what is a report, anyway? What are the different types of reports? What should they include? What should they leave out? And where does "analysis" fall in all of this? We have so many opinions on the subject that we didn't even bring on a guest for this episode! So, pop in your earbuds, pull out your notebook, and start taking notes, as we'll expect a *report* on what you think of the show once you're done giving it a listen! For complete show notes, including links to items mentioned in this episode and a transcript of the show, visit the show page.

Jan 14, 202057 min

#131: 2019 Year in Review

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It's the end of the year, and we know it, and we feel fiiiiine. Or, maybe we have a little anxiety. But, for the fifth year in a row, we're wrapping up the year with a reflective episode: reflecting on changes in the analytics industry, the evolution of the podcast, and the interpersonal dynamics between Tim and Michael. From the state of diversity in the industry (and on the show), to the trends in analytics staffing and careers, to the growing impact of ethical and privacy considerations on the role of the analyst, it's an episode chock full of agreement, acrimony, and angst. And, it's an episode with a special "guest;" it's the first time that producer Josh Crowhurst is on mic doing something besides simply keeping our advertisers happy! For complete show notes, including links to items mentioned in this episode and a transcript of the show, visit the show page.

Dec 31, 20191h 8m

#130: Data Stories with Nancy Duarte

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Once upon a time, there was an analyst. And that analyst had some data. She used that data to do some analysis, and from that analysis she realized she had some recommendations she could make to her organization. This was the point where our intrepid analyst reached a metaphorical fork in Communication Road: would she hastily put all of her thoughts together quickly in a slide deck with charts and graphs and bullets, or would she pause, step back, and craft a true data story? Well, if she listened to this episode of the podcast with presentation legend Nancy Duarte, author of five award-winning books (the most recent one — DataStory: Explain Data and Inspire Action Through Story — being the main focus of this episode) she would do the latter, and her story would have a happy ending indeed! For complete show notes, including links to items mentioned in the episode and a transcript of the show, visit the show page.

Dec 17, 201958 min

#129: Data Accuracy and Completeness with Yali Sassoon

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How accurate is your data? How accurate is any of our data? If our data is more accurate, will we make better decisions? How MUCH better? Why do the show blurbs of late have so many questions? THAT is a question we can ACCURATELY answer: because the shows grapple with challenging questions! On this episode, Snowplow co-founder Yali Sassoon joined us to chat about the nuts and bolts of data accuracy: the inherent messiness of client-side tracking (but, also, the limitations of server-side tracking), strategies of incrementally improving data accuracy (and the costs therein), and the different types of scenarios where different aspects of data accuracy matter in different ways! Pour yourself a drink (a 2 oz. shot of a fine Scotch will do... which would be 59.1471 ml if you want an accurate and precise metric pour), settle in, and give it a listen! For complete show notes, including links to items mentioned in this episode and a transcript of the show, visit the show page.

Dec 3, 201955 min

#128: Neuroscience, the Customer Experience, and the Data Therein with Diana Lucaci

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READ ME!!! LISTEN!!! DO YOU KNOW WHY THIS IS IN ALL CAPS?! IS IT RAISING YOUR HEART RATE?! IS IT MAKING YOU A LITTLE IRRITATED?! IT MIGHT BE! IF IT IS, WE COULD MEASURE IT, AND MAYBE WE WOULD REALIZE THAT WE WERE INDUCING A SUBCONSCIOUS EMOTIONAL RESPONSE AND REALLY SHOULD TURN OFF THE CAPS LOCK! That's the topic of this episode: the brain. Specifically: neuroscience. Even more specifically: neurodesign and neuromarketing and the measurement and analytics therein. We're talking EEGs, eye tracking, predictive eye tracking, heart rate monitoring, and the like (and why it matters) with Diana Lucaci from True Impact. For complete show notes, including links to items mentioned in this episode and a transcript of the show, visit the show page.

Nov 19, 201955 min

#127: Is Multi-Touch Marketing Attribution Dead? Should It Be? With Priscilla Cheung

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Multi-touch attribution is like fat free cheese: it sounds like a great idea, it seems like technology would have made it amazing and delicious by now, and, yet, the reality is incredibly unsatisfying. Since we've recently covered how browsers are making the analyst's lot in life more difficult, and since multi-touch attribution is affected by those changes, we figured it was high time to revisit the topic. It's something we've covered before (twice, actually). But interest in the topic has not diminished, while a claim could be made that reality has gone from being merely a cold dishrag to the face to being a bucket of ice over the head. We sat down with Priscilla Cheung to hash out the topic. No fat free cheese was consumed during the making of the episode. For complete show notes, including links to items mentioned in this episode and a transcript of the show, visit the show page.

Nov 5, 201952 min

#126: When the Data Contradicts Conventional Wisdom with Emily Oster

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Did you hear the one about the Harvard-educated economist who embraced her inner wiring as a lateral thinker to explore topics ranging from HIV/AIDS in Africa to the impact of Hepatitis B on male-biased sex ratios in China to the range of advice and dicta doled out by doctors and parents and in-laws and friends about what to do (and not do!) during pregnancy? It's a data-driven tale if ever there was one! Emily Oster, economics professor at Brown University and bestselling author of Expecting Better and Cribsheet, joined the show to chat about what happens when the evidence (the data!) doesn't match conventional wisdom, and strategies for presenting and discussing topics where that's the case. Plus causal inference! For complete show notes, including links to items mentioned in this episode and a transcript of the show, visit the show page.

Oct 22, 201955 min

#125: Modern Browsers and the Destruction of the Analyst's Dreams with Cory Underwood

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Are you down with ITP? What about ETP? Are you pretty sure that the decline in returning visitors to your site that has everyone in a tizzy is largely due to increasingly restrictive cookie handling by browsers? Do you really, really, REALLY want Google, Apple, Mozilla, and even Microsoft to get on the same page when it comes to cookie handling and JavaScript subtleties? So many questions! Lucky for us (and you!), Measure Slack legend (and L.L. Bean Senior Programmer/Analyst) Cory Underwood has some answers. Or, at least, he will depress you in delightful ways. For complete show notes, including links to items mentioned in this episode, a transcript of the show, and an update on ITP 2.3 from Cory, visit the show page.

Oct 8, 201954 min

#124: Image-ine What the Analyst Can Do Using Machine Vision with Ali Vanderveld

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Have you ever noticed that 68.2% of the people who explain machine learning use a "this picture is a cat" example, and another 24.3% use "this picture is a dog?" Is there really a place for machine learning and the world of computer vision (or machine vision, which we have conclusively determined is a synonym) in the real world of digital analytics? The short answer is the go-to answer of every analyst: it depends. On this episode, we sat down with Ali Vanderveld, Director of Data Science at ShopRunner, to chat about some real world applications of computer vision, as well as the many facets and considerations therein! For complete show notes, including links to items mentioned in this episode and a transcript of the show, visit the show page.

Sep 24, 201959 min

#123: Ad Fraud with Augustine Fou

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What percentage of digital ad impressions and clicks do you think is actually the work of non-human bots? Pick a number. Now double it. Double it again. You're getting close. A recent study by Pixalate found that 19 percent of traffic from programmatic ads in the U.S. is fraudulent. David Raab from the CDP Institute found this number to be "optimistic." Ad fraud historian Dr. Augustine Fou, our guest on this show, has compelling evidence that the actual number could easily be north of 50 percent. Why? Who benefits? Why is it hard to tamp out? Is it illegal (it isn't!)? We explore these topics and more on this episode! For complete show notes, including links to items mentioned in this episode and a transcript of the show, visit the show page.

Sep 10, 20191h 0m

#122: Dealing with Disparate Stakeholders with Astrid Illum

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It's 1:00 AM, and you can't sleep. The paid search manager needs to know whether brand keywords can be turned off without impacting revenue. The product team needs the latest A/B test results analyzed before they can start on their next sprint. The display media intern urgently needs your help figuring out why the campaign tracking parameters he added for the campaign that launches in two days are breaking the site (you're pretty sure he's confusing "&" and "?" again). And the team running the site redesign needs to know YESTERDAY what fields they need to include in the new headless CMS to support analytics. You're pulled in a million directions, and every request is valid. How do you manage your world without losing your sanity? On this episode, analytics philosopher Astrid Illum from DFDS joins the gang to discuss those challenges. For complete show notes, including links to items mentioned in this episode and a transcript of the show, visit the show page.

Aug 27, 201959 min

#121: Onboarding the Analyst

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Somewhere between "welcome to the company, now get to work!" and weeks of tedious orientation sessions (that, presumably, include a few hours with the legal department explaining that, should you be on a podcast, you need to include a disclaimer that the views expressed on the podcast are your own and not those of the company for which you now work), is a happy medium when it comes to onboarding an analyst. What is that happy medium, and how does one find it? It turns out the answer is that favorite of analyst phrases: "it depends." Unsatisfying? Perhaps. But, listeners who have been properly onboarded to this podcast know that "unsatisfying" is our bread and butter. So, in this episode, Moe and Michael share their thoughts and their emotional intelligence on the subject of analyst onboarding, while Tim works to make up for recent deficiencies in the show's use of the "explicit" tag. For complete show notes, including links to items mentioned in this episode and a transcript of the show, visit the show page.

Aug 13, 201950 min

#120: Causal Inference with Bradley Fay

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Listen. Really. That's what you can do. You can listen to this episode and find out what you learn. Or you can NOT listen to the show and NOT find out what you learn. You can't do both, which means that, one way or the other, you WILL be creating your very own counterfactual! That, dear listener, is a fundamental concept when it comes to causal inference. Smart analysts and data scientists the world over are excited about the subject, because it provides a means of thinking and application techniques for actually getting to causality. Bradley Fay from DraftKings is one of those smart data scientists, so the gang sat down with him to discuss the subject! For complete show notes, including links to items mentioned in this episode and a transcript of the show, visit the show page.

Jul 30, 201948 min

#119: What Grinds Our Gears - MAS 2019

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Have you ever thought it would be a great idea to have a drink or two, grab a microphone, and then air your grievances in a public forum? Well, we did! This episode of the show was recorded in front of a live audience (No laugh tracks! No canned applause!) at the Marketing Analytics Summit (MAS) in Las Vegas. Moe, Michael, and Tim used a "What Grinds Our Gears?" application to discuss a range of challenges and frustrations that analysts face. They (well, Moe and Tim, of course) disagreed on a few of them, but they occasionally even proposed some ways to address the challenges, too. To more effectively simulate the experience, we recommend pairing this episode with a nice Japanese whiskey, which is what the live audience did! For complete show notes, including links to items mentioned in this episode and a transcript of the show, visit the show page.

Jul 16, 201945 min

#118: Ethics in AI with Finn Lattimore

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Did you hear the one about how the AI eliminated cancer? It just wiped out the human race! As machine learning and artificial intelligence are woven more and more into the fabric of our daily lives, we are increasingly seeing that decisions based purely on code require a lot of care to ensure that the code truly behaves as we would like it to. As one high profile example after another demonstrates, this is a tricky challenge. On this episode, Finn Lattimore from Gradient Institute joined the gang to discuss the different dimensions of the challenge! For complete show notes, including links to items mentioned in this episode and a transcript of the show, visit the show page.

Jul 2, 201951 min

#117: What's in a Job Title? Maybe the Data Shows!

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What's in a job title? That which we call a senior data scientist by any other job title would model as predictively... This, dear listener, is why the hosts of this podcast crunch data rather than dabble in iambic pentameter. With sincere apologies to William Shakespeare, we sat down with Maryam Jahanshahi to discuss job titles, job descriptions, and the research, experiments, and analysis that she has conducted as a research scientist at TapRecruit, specifically relating to data science and analytics roles. The discussion was intriguing and enlightening! For complete show notes, including links to items mentioned in this episode and a transcript of the show, visit the show page.

Jun 18, 201959 min

#116: Analytics Education at Scale with Justin Cutroni from Google

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Remember that time you ran a lunch-and-learn at your company to show a handful of co-workers some Excel tips? What would have happened if you actually needed to fully train them on Excel, and there were approximately a gazillion users*? Or, have you ever watched a Google Analytics or Google Tag Manager training video? Or perused their documentation? How does Google actually think about educating a massive and diverse set of users on their platform? And, what can we learn from that when it comes to educating our in-house users on tool, processes, and concepts? In this episode, Justin Cutroni from Google joined the gang to discuss this very topic! For complete show notes, including links to items mentioned in this episode and a transcript of the show, visit the show page.

Jun 4, 201954 min

#115: Build vs. Buy with June Dershewitz from Twitch

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A simple recipe for a delicious analytics platform: combine 3 cups of data schema with a pinch of JavaScript in a large pot of cloud storage. Bake in the deployment oven for a couple of months, and savory insights will emerge. Right? Why does this recipe have both 5-star and 1-star ratings?! On this episode, long-standing digital analytics maven June Dershewitz, Director of Analytics at Twitch, drops by the podcast's analytics kitchen to discuss the relative merits of building versus buying an analytics platform. Or, of course, doing something in between! The episode was originally 3.5 hours long, but we edited out most of Michael's tangents into gaming geekdown, which brought the run-time down to a more normal length. For complete show notes, including links to items mentioned in this episode and a transcript of the show, visit the show page.

May 21, 201954 min

#114: ITP 2.0? 2.1? Whatever it takes!

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We're not sure what's going on with this episode. For some reason, we have a bunch of first-time listeners, and they're all from Apple devices! Maybe it's because the show only comes out every two weeks, and the first-party cookies we've been using to track our listeners are now expiring after seven days! (This is a hilarious episode description if you're well-versed in the ins and outs and ethical and philosophical aspects of WebKit's Intelligent Tracking Prevention (ITP) 2.1. If you're not, then you might want to listen to the gang chat with Kasper Rasmussen from Accutics about the topic, as it's likely already impacting the traffic to your site!) For complete show notes, including links to items mentioned in this episode and a transcript of the show, visit the show page.

May 7, 20191h 0m

#113: Getting the Most Out of Conferences

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Have you ever attended a conference? Did you know that analysts over-index towards introversion?* Have you ever struggled to figure out how to start a conversation over a cold pastry and a cup of tepid coffee at a conference breakfast? IS there actually a point in developing and executing a strategy when it comes to attending a conference? Is it annoying to listen to people who speak pretty regularly at conferences pontificate about speaking at conferences? Some of these questions are answered on this episode! For complete show notes, including links to items mentioned in this episode and a transcript of the show, visit the show page. *We made this up, but it seems plausible.

Apr 23, 201952 min

#112: Demystifying Data Science with Ian Thomas

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Are you a data scientist? I mean, are you really a data scientist? What does that even mean...other than a healthy salary increase? On this episode of the show, Ian Thomas, Chief Data Officer for Publicis Spine sat down with the three co-citizen-data-scientists who regularly host the show to delve into the subject! For complete show notes, including links to items mentioned in this episode and a transcript of the show, visit the show page.

Apr 9, 201953 min

#111: Automation in Analytics with Erik Driessen

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We thought we deserved a break from the podcast, so we went looking for some AI to take over the episode. Amazon Polly wasn't quite up to the task, unfortunately, so we wound up sitting down as humans with another human -- Erik Driessen from Greenhouse -- to chat about the different ways that automation can be put to use in the service of analytics: from pixel deployment to automated alerts to daily reports, there are both opportunities and pitfalls! For complete show notes, including links to items mentioned in this episode and a transcript of the show, visit the show page.

Mar 26, 201951 min

#110: Creating Balanced Teams (and Avoiding Groupthink)

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In recognition of International Women's Day, and because it's a really important topic, this is a very special episode. The two straight, white, cisgender male co-hosts of this podcast sat this episode out, while Moe took over the mic for an in-depth discussion with Alison Vorsatz from Fairygodboss and Aubrey Blanche from Atlassian about diversity (a term they both try to avoid) in the workplace. If this episode doesn't change your perspective and compel you to action, you are almost certainly not a human being. For complete show notes, including links to items mentioned in this episode and a transcript of the show, visit the show page.

Mar 7, 201954 min

#109: RAD Podcast Analytics with Stacey Goers from NPR

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Do you know something that is really simple? Really Simple Syndication (aka, RSS). Did you know that RSS is the backbone of podcast delivery? Well, aren't you clever! What's NOT really simple is effectively measuring podcasts when a key underlying component is a glorified text file that tells an app how to download an audio file. Advertisers, publishers, and content producers the world over have been stuck with "downloads" as their key -- and pretty much only -- metric for years. That's like just counting "hits" on a website! But, NPR is leading an initiative to change all that through Remote Audio Data, or RAD. Stacey Goers, product manager for podcasts at National Public Radio, joins the gang on this episode to discuss that effort: how it works, how it's rolling out, and the myriad parallels podcast analytics has to website and mobile analytics! "For complete show notes, including links to items mentioned in this episode and a transcript of the show, visit the show page.

Feb 26, 201941 min

#108: Smart Speaker Measurement with Steve Mulder from NPR

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"Hey, Google! How do you measure yourself?" "I'm sorry. I can't answer that question. Would you like to listen to a podcast that can?" National Public Radio has long been on the forefront of the world of audio media. Why, you might even remember episode #046, where Steve Mulder from NPR made his first appearance on the show discussing the cans and cannots of podcast measurement! On this episode, Mulder returns to chat about how much more comfortable we have become when it comes to conversing with animated inanimate objects, as well as the current state of what data is available (and how) to publishers and brands who have ventured into this brave new world. "Alexa! Play the Digital Analytics Power Hour podcast!" For complete show notes, including links to items mentioned in this episode and a transcript of the show, visit the show page.

Feb 12, 201956 min

#107: Bringing Data Science to the Enterprise with Dr. Katie Sasso

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What does it really take to bring data science into the enterprise? Or... what does it take to bring it into your part of the enterprise? In this episode, the gang sits down with Dr. Katie Sasso from the Columbus Collaboratory...because that's similar to what she does! From the criticality of defining the business problem clearly, to ensuring the experts with the deep knowledge of the data itself are included in the process, to the realities of information security and devops support needs, it was a pretty wide-ranging discussion. And there were convolutional neural networks (briefly). For complete show notes, including links to items mentioned in this episode and a transcript of the show, visit the show page.

Jan 29, 201954 min

#106: SQL and the Digital Analyst with Pawel Kapuscinski

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WHERE were you the first time you listened to this podcast? Did you feel like you were JOINing a SELECT GROUP BY doing so? Can you COUNT the times you've thought to yourself, "Wow. These guys are sometimes really unFILTERed?" On this episode, Pawel Kapuscinski from Analytics Pros (and the Burnley Football Club) sits down with the group to shout at them in all caps. Or, at least, to talk about SQL: where it fits in the analyst's toolbox, how it is a powerful and necessary complement to Python and R, and who's to blame for the existence of so many different flavors of the language. Give it a listen. That's an ORDER (BY?)! For complete show notes, including links to items mentioned in this episode and a transcript of the show, visit the show page.

Jan 15, 201951 min

2018 Year in Review!

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Happy New Year! Sure. The ball has dropped in Times Square, and a new year means an opportunity to look forward. But, we wanted to take a quick look back first -- on the industry, on the podcast, and on the world in general. From GDPR to Bayesian statistics to machine learning and AI to... podcast (and #mattgershoffed) stickers, 2018 was, clearly, the Year of the Analyst. So keep analyzing! For complete show notes, including links to items mentioned in this episode and a transcript of the show, visit the show page.

Jan 1, 201950 min

#104: Getting the Data Collection Right with Adam Greco

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Have you ever had stakeholders complain that they're not getting the glorious insights they expect from your analytics program? Have you ever had to deliver the news that the specific data they're looking for isn't actually available with the current platforms you have implemented? Have you ever wondered if things might just be a whole lot easier if you threw your current platform out the window and started over with a new one? If you answered "yes" to any of these questions, then this might be just the episode for you. Adam "Omniman" Greco -- a co-worker at Analytics Demystified of the Kiss sister who is *not* a co-host of this podcast -- joined the gang to chat about the perils of unmaintained analytics tools, the unpleasant taste of stale business requirements, and the human-based factors that can contribute to keeping a tool that should be jettisoned or jettisoning a tool that, objectively, should really be kept! For complete show notes, including links to items mentioned in this episode and a transcript of the show, visit the show page.

Dec 18, 201857 min

#103: Customer Data Platforms Revisited with Todd Belcher from CDP Resource

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What's the hot new technology of 2018? AI? Deep Learning? Pole-dancing robots? Maybe. Or, maybe it's customer data platforms (CDPs) -- a topic we actually covered way back in January 2017 on episode #053 with Todd Belcher, who, at the time, was with CDP provider BlueConic. Since then, Todd left BlueConic to start CDP Resource, which is, well, a resource for companies looking to select, implement, and maintain a CDP. We asked Todd to come back on the show to give us the rundown on how there is now -- finally -- clarity, consolidation, and maturity in the space, as all of the providers have aligned around a common definition of what a CDP is, what it does, and how it should do it. Alas! The space isn't even remotely there yet! We have yet to even reach the peak of inflated expectations! Which was probably why it was such an informative discussion. For complete show notes, including links to items mentioned in this episode and a transcript of the show, visit the show page.

Dec 4, 201853 min

#102: Data and Disasters (of the Natural Kind)

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Perspective is a good thing. We've all agonized about a misreported metric or an unsatisfying entry page analysis and had to remind ourselves that we're not exactly saving lives with our work. On this episode, though, the gang actually meanders into life-and-death territory by chatting about one of the uses of data outside of the world of digital marketing and websites and eCommerce: natural disaster preparation and response. Sherilyn Burris from Cascia Consulting joins Michael, Moe, and Tim to chat about her experiences in a variety of roles in just that area, how she uses data, how the data landscape has evolved over the past 15 years, and what she has learned about communicating data to politicians, to the media, and to the general public (which has some intriguing parallels to the communication of data in digital analytics!). For complete show notes, including links to items mentioned in this episode and a transcript of the show, visit the show page.

Nov 20, 201855 min