Not too long ago, I announced a pretty significant career change. Yes, I’m returning to academia to teach at the W. P. Carey School of Business at Arizona State University. I don’t think that I could have taught at an institution clinging to the past. Fortunately, that doesn’t apply here. It’s clear to me that ASU is one of an increasing number of colleges and universities that recognizes the importance of data, analytics, and data science.
Talking heads like me have been aware of this trend for a few years now. Still, it’s interesting to hear and read students’ perspectives on the matter. For instance, current UNC-Chapel Hill student Jeff Duresky wrote an interesting post on how some universities are moving from theory to practice. That is, his classes are moving beyond the hype of Big Data. Students are actually operationalizing new data sources in the classroom through sophisticated tools such as JMP. They are working on both real-world and fictional datasets. In some cases, they are acquiring valuable professional experience on corporate projects. In so doing, they are complementing their academic underpinnings and making themselves considerably more employable.
Why now?
It doesn’t take a rocket surgeon to understand why progressive schools are formalizing data-oriented programs.
Let’s start with the premise that one of the primary purposes of college is to enable students to land well-paying and hopefully meaningful jobs. Along these lines, I’m hard-pressed to think of hotter areas these days than analytics and data science, but don’t believe me. Management consulting firm McKinsey predicts a severe “shortage of talent necessary for organizations to take advantage of Big Data.” By 2018, the United States alone could face a shortage of 140,000 to 190,000 people with deep analytical skills…with the know-how to use the analysis of Big Data to make effective decisions.”
Make no mistake: students who can make sense out of Big Data stand to do well. In the process, they can pay back their college loans relatively quickly. Don’t get me wrong, though: college should be about more than just landing a lucrative job upon graduation. Still, this remains a critical point.
I am reminded here of something that happened to me a few months ago, I was signing books after giving a keynote in San Diego. An adjunct professor approached me and, as I was signing his copy of The Visual Organization, he asked me how he could get his smartphone-addicted and occasionally apathetic students more interested in data-related topics. I blurted out the first thing that came to my mind: Show them starting salary figures of analysts and other data types.
He smiled at my response and I have little doubt that he did just that.
Simon Says
Unlike a certain demagogue running for president, I am not certain of everything. I don’t know all of the answers, nor can I predict the future. I can, however, say two things without fear of accurate contradiction. First, Big Data has arrived. Second, as I have said many times, all companies are tech companies. Some just haven’t realized it yet.
As I start my own academic career (again), I think about the lessons I have learned in industry as they relate to future college graduates. It is simply incumbent upon institutions of higher learning to not only prepare students for today’s business environment, but for tomorrow’s.
Peering into the future, it’s obvious that the majority of white-collar jobs will require at least some facility with all things data. I just don’t see a future in which an organization will able to hide “data-challenged” folks or dataphobes. The schools most likely to succeed in this new era understand this new reality and are modifying their curricula accordingly.
This article was originally published on www.huffingtonpost.com and can be viewed in full
Archive
- October 2024(44)
- September 2024(94)
- August 2024(100)
- July 2024(99)
- June 2024(126)
- May 2024(155)
- April 2024(123)
- March 2024(112)
- February 2024(109)
- January 2024(95)
- December 2023(56)
- November 2023(86)
- October 2023(97)
- September 2023(89)
- August 2023(101)
- July 2023(104)
- June 2023(113)
- May 2023(103)
- April 2023(93)
- March 2023(129)
- February 2023(77)
- January 2023(91)
- December 2022(90)
- November 2022(125)
- October 2022(117)
- September 2022(137)
- August 2022(119)
- July 2022(99)
- June 2022(128)
- May 2022(112)
- April 2022(108)
- March 2022(121)
- February 2022(93)
- January 2022(110)
- December 2021(92)
- November 2021(107)
- October 2021(101)
- September 2021(81)
- August 2021(74)
- July 2021(78)
- June 2021(92)
- May 2021(67)
- April 2021(79)
- March 2021(79)
- February 2021(58)
- January 2021(55)
- December 2020(56)
- November 2020(59)
- October 2020(78)
- September 2020(72)
- August 2020(64)
- July 2020(71)
- June 2020(74)
- May 2020(50)
- April 2020(71)
- March 2020(71)
- February 2020(58)
- January 2020(62)
- December 2019(57)
- November 2019(64)
- October 2019(25)
- September 2019(24)
- August 2019(14)
- July 2019(23)
- June 2019(54)
- May 2019(82)
- April 2019(76)
- March 2019(71)
- February 2019(67)
- January 2019(75)
- December 2018(44)
- November 2018(47)
- October 2018(74)
- September 2018(54)
- August 2018(61)
- July 2018(72)
- June 2018(62)
- May 2018(62)
- April 2018(73)
- March 2018(76)
- February 2018(8)
- January 2018(7)
- December 2017(6)
- November 2017(8)
- October 2017(3)
- September 2017(4)
- August 2017(4)
- July 2017(2)
- June 2017(5)
- May 2017(6)
- April 2017(11)
- March 2017(8)
- February 2017(16)
- January 2017(10)
- December 2016(12)
- November 2016(20)
- October 2016(7)
- September 2016(102)
- August 2016(168)
- July 2016(141)
- June 2016(149)
- May 2016(117)
- April 2016(59)
- March 2016(85)
- February 2016(153)
- December 2015(150)