insights
Published on : Jun 22, 2023
Matillion, the leader in data productivity, and Vanson Bourne have released findings of a survey in a new report, "Data Productivity: A Survey of Data Experts." The survey data offers insights from data team practitioners and leaders on how they manage the increasing complexity of unprecedented amounts of data, team workloads and overall performance at work.
The survey polled more than 900 experts across the United States and the United Kingdom to determine the impact of data and business demands on data teams. Survey results illustrate that data teams are overextending themselves to meet business demands.
Additional key points from the survey include:
Teams spend too much time at work integrating, collecting and transforming data rather than performing strategic work.
Data professionals spend too much time pulling from and unifying a high volume of data sources to build their data pipelines, which only delays the transformation process.
Employee burnout hasn't reached disastrous levels, but it's on the rise, and it's leading to challenges with talent retention for employees who enjoy their work.
Low-code and no-code tools are emerging as a primary strategy for companies to transform business-ready data.
"This research highlights the data productivity pitfalls that modern data teams experience on a day-to-day basis," said Ed Thompson, CTO and co-founder of Matillion. "By taking note of these results — and partnering with organizations like ours to find solutions – businesses can empower their data teams to perform and prioritize impactful projects rather than the transformation of data; assure key decision makers with precision in their business decisions; and make it simple and cost-effective to deliver the right data to the right person at the right time."
Thompson continued, "At a time where change is rapid, complexity is growing and the appetite for the right insights at the right time is voracious, addressing data productivity issues changes the game. If organizations don't take these challenges seriously, not only will they cost money and time in lost resources, but will expose the talent pipeline to employee burnout and turnover. "