Do data scientists have the right stuff for the C-suite?

What distinguishes strong from weak leaders? This raises the question if leaders are born or can be grown. It is the classic “nature versus nurture” debate. What matters more? Genes or your environment?

This question got me to thinking about whether data scientists and business analysts within an organization can be more than just a support to others. Can they be become leaders similar to C-level executives?

Three primary success factors for effective leaders

Having knowledge means nothing without having the right types of people. One person can make a big difference. They can be someone who somehow gets it altogether and changes the fabric of an organization’s culture not through mandating change but by engaging and motivating others.

For weak and ineffective leaders irritating people is not only a sport for them but it is their personal entertainment. They are rarely successful.

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Programmers at Reactive Inc. David Malkin, data scientist, from left, Philip Irri, core engineer, Joseph Bullard, core engineer, and Philippe Remy, research engineer, work at Tenoha Lab share office in Tokyo, Japan, on Wednesday, April 13, 2016. The four programmers at the 18-month-old startup in Tokyo came up with an application that recognizes scrawled-out Japanese with 98.66 percent accuracy. Photographer: Tomohiro Ohsumi/Bloomberg *** Local Caption *** David Malkin; Philip Irri; Joseph Bullard; Philippe Remy

One way to view successful leadership is to consider that there are three primary success factors for effective leaders. They are (1) technical competence, (2) critical thinking skills, and (3) communication skills.

You know there is a problem when a leader says, “I don’t do that; I have people who do that.” Good leaders do not necessarily have high intelligence, good memories, deep experience, or innate abilities that they are born with. They have problem solving skills.

As an example, the Ford Motor Company’s CEO Alan Mulally came to the automotive business from Boeing in the aerospace industry. He was without deep automotive industry experience. He has been successful at Ford. Why? Because he is an analytical type of leader.

Effective managers are analytical leaders who are adaptable and possess systematic and methodological ways to achieve results. It may sound corny but they apply the “scientific method” that involves formulating hypothesis and testing to prove or disprove them. We are back to basics.

A major contributor to the “scientific method” was the German mathematician and astronomer Johannes Kepler. In the early 1600s Kepler’s three laws of planetary motion led to the Scientific Revolution. His three laws made the complex simple and understandable, suggesting that the seemingly inexplicable universe is ultimately lawful and within the grasp of the human mind.

Kepler did what analytical leaders do. They rely on searching for root causes and understanding cause-and-effect logic chains. Ultimately a well-formulated strategy, talented people, and the ability to execute the executive team’s strategy through robust communications are the key to performance improvement.

Key characteristics of the data scientist or analyst as leader

The popular Moneyball book and subsequent movie about baseball in the US demonstrated that traditional baseball scouts methods (e.g., “He’s got a good swing.”) gave way to fact-based evidence and statistical analysis. Commonly accepted traits of a leader, such as being charismatic or strong, may also be misleading.

My belief is that the most scarce resource in an organization is human ability and competence. That is why organizations should desire that every employee be developed for growth in their skills. But having sound competencies is not enough. Key personal qualities complete the package of an effective leader.

For a data scientist or analyst to evolve as an effective leader three personal quality characteristics are needed: curiosity, imagination, and creativity. The three are sequentially linked. Curious people constantly ask “Why are things the way they are?” and “Is there a better way of doing things?” Without these personal qualities then innovation will be stifled. The emergence of analytics is creating opportunities for analysts as leaders.

Weak leaders are prone to a diagnostic bias. They can be blind to evidence and somehow believe their intuition, instincts, and gut-feel are acceptable masquerades for having fact-based information. In contrast, a curious person always asks questions. They typically love what they do. If they are also a good leader they infect others with enthusiasm. Their curiosity leads to imagination. Imagination considers alternative possibilities and solutions. Imagination in turn sparks creativity.

Creativity is the implementation of imagination

Good data scientists and analysts have a primary mission: to gain insights relying on quantitative techniques to result in better decisions and actions. Their imagination that leads to creativity can also result in vision. Vision is a mark of a good leader. In my mind, an executive leader has one job (aside from hiring good employees and growing them). That job is to answer the question, “Where do we want to go?”

After that question is answered then managers and analysts, ideally supported by the CFO’s accounting and finance team, can answer the follow-up question, “How are we going to get there?” That is where analytics are applied with the various enterprise and corporate performance management (EPM/CPM) methods that I regularly write about. EPM/CPM methods include a strategy map and its associated balance scorecard with KPIs; customer profitability analysis; enterprise risk management (ERM), and capacity-sensitive driver-based rolling financial forecasts and plans. Collectively they assure that the executive team’s strategy can be fully executed.

My belief is that that other perceived characteristics of a good leader are over-rated. These include ambition, team spirit, collegiality, integrity, courage, tenacity, discipline, and confidence. They are nice-to-have characteristics, but they pale compared to the technical competency and critical thinking and communications skills that I earlier described.

Be analytical and you can be a leader. You can eventually serve in a C-suite role.

This story originally appeared in Information Management.
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