Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- About the authors
- Glossary of Technical Terms
- 1 The Accidental Entrepreneur
- 2 A Reflection on the First 300 days
- 3 Why does any Organisation need a Chief Data Officer?
- 4 The Secret Ingredients of a Chief Data Officer
- 5 The First 100 Days
- 6 Delivering a Data Strategy in the Cauldron of BAU
- 7 Avoiding the Hype Cycle
- 8 Relating to the rest of the Business, Especially the C-Suite
- 9 The Chief Data Officer as a Disruptor
- 10 Building the Chief Data Officer Team
- 11 The next 300 Days
- 12 The Different Generations of Chief Data Officers
- 13 What type of Chief Data Officer are you?
- 14 How to Present Yourself as a Chief Data Officer
- 15 The Chief Data Officer and the Technology
- 16 The Hoarding Mentality and how to Break it
- 17 Data and Information Ethics
- 18 The Chief Data Officer and Data Governance
- 19 The Data Revolution
- 20 Advice to Business owners, CEOs and the Board
- 21 Conclusion
- Index
16 - The Hoarding Mentality and how to Break it
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 February 2021
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- About the authors
- Glossary of Technical Terms
- 1 The Accidental Entrepreneur
- 2 A Reflection on the First 300 days
- 3 Why does any Organisation need a Chief Data Officer?
- 4 The Secret Ingredients of a Chief Data Officer
- 5 The First 100 Days
- 6 Delivering a Data Strategy in the Cauldron of BAU
- 7 Avoiding the Hype Cycle
- 8 Relating to the rest of the Business, Especially the C-Suite
- 9 The Chief Data Officer as a Disruptor
- 10 Building the Chief Data Officer Team
- 11 The next 300 Days
- 12 The Different Generations of Chief Data Officers
- 13 What type of Chief Data Officer are you?
- 14 How to Present Yourself as a Chief Data Officer
- 15 The Chief Data Officer and the Technology
- 16 The Hoarding Mentality and how to Break it
- 17 Data and Information Ethics
- 18 The Chief Data Officer and Data Governance
- 19 The Data Revolution
- 20 Advice to Business owners, CEOs and the Board
- 21 Conclusion
- Index
Summary
Introduction
This chapter suggests that all organisations hoard data. It goes on to explore why we hoard data, where we store this data and the nature of ‘dark data’. The chapter provides some suggestions for cutting through the hoarded data and the dark data and looks at the importance of counting the value of the data we do have.
The hoarding mentality
Have you ever watched those programmes on TV where a person is labelled a ‘hoarder’? There tend to be various interviews with friends and family who are worried about the person and then pictures showing the person's home, which is usually so full of stuff that it is not fit to live in. You then see the person themselves, who sometimes recognises the problem, but not to the same extent that their nearest and dearest do. Normally they have found a way to make their home work as far as they are concerned: there are paths around the piles of things, as long as you pull in your stomach and walk sideways, and the oven makes a much better cupboard than it did a cooking implement, so cold food works just fine. If you watch them, though, you can tell that deep down they know that this isn't how most people live, but are in denial about the amount of time they are sitting in discomfort and working around a situation which, to outside eyes, could be easily solved. Most of us have tendencies in this direction: those shoes, tools or drawers full of bits that you keep just in case. Every single one of us must have experienced that feeling when you suddenly need something that you threw away the day before, because you had been storing it for so long and had never needed it, and so resolve to be more patient with your storage needs next time.
However, compulsive hoarding (which is what these individuals suffer from):
… is a pattern of behaviour characterised by excessive acquisition and an inability or unwillingness to discard large quantities of objects that cover the living areas of the home and cause significant distress or impairment. Compulsive hoarders may be aware of their irrational behaviour, but the emotional attachment to the hoarded objects far exceeds the motive to discard the items.
(‘Compulsive hoarding’, Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia)- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Chief Data Officer's Playbook , pp. 147 - 160Publisher: FacetPrint publication year: 2020