cindytonkin's podcast
Dean Marchiori is my guest this week. If you're after something to do while you're self-isolating, working from home or panicking about your supplies of printer toner, have a listen.
info_outline 31: Moha Ganji: planning, mentors, reflectioncindytonkin's podcast
Moha Ganji and I had a lovely time talking about being one of the IAPA Top 25 leaders, the importance of planning and reflection time, where she finds mentors, and more.
info_outline 30: Lori Silverman: not just decisions: Actions!cindytonkin's podcast
My guest today is Lori Silverman. Lori is not a data person as such: she specialises in getting organisations to shift. And she has some fascinating things to say around how data stories are told.
info_outline 29: Chris Crook: Targeted curiositycindytonkin's podcast
Chris Crook from Nature Research is my guest today. Nature Research just won a B&T, and the award itself looks quite beautiful, quite casually hanging out with the mags in their foyer.
info_outline 28: Gabe Mach: Nothing you can't fix with numberscindytonkin's podcast
Gabe Mach is my guest on this podcast. Gabe is one of IAPA's top 25 leaders in 2019. He's entertaining, interesting and thought-provoking.
info_outline 27: Nate Watson: Math is the cultural equalizercindytonkin's podcast
Nate Watson talks about how urgent it is for organisations to start using their data for decisions.
info_outline 26: Tony Savides: the Magnificent So Whatcindytonkin's podcast
Tony Savides was recently honoured as one of the top 25 Leaders in Analytics by the Institute of Analytics Professionals
info_outline 25: Satya Upadhyaya: Marketing Technologistcindytonkin's podcast
Satya Upadhyaya is a Marketing Technologist.
info_outline 24: Maura Church: Life work harmonycindytonkin's podcast
Maura Church makes data into insights at Patreon.
info_outline 22: Vin Vashishta - interesting and usefulcindytonkin's podcast
Vin Vashishta is a big name in data science.
info_outlineAaron is a decision scientist, and head of Customer Crunch. He’s always entertaining and endlessly evolving and learning.
Aaron talks about
- being an evangelist of decision science
- the importance of planning in his world
- how he now lives and breathes his values, and it means he loves working even more (in a good way)
- how he has outsourced the management of his exercise
- how to find useful things to read
- being in the enviable position of not wanting another customer and how it was a boon to his business to “fly under the radar”
- his career path from call centre to “big idea”
- why he asks for forgiveness, not permission
- the three dimensions he uses to explain things to customers
- what he looks for when he hires data scientists
- when he says no to potential customers, and how he does that
Show notes at https://consultantsconsultant.com.au/podcast/2-aaron-artery/