Data-Driven Decisions

If you’re running a business, you know every decision is cause and effect. After all, you don’t simply release new advertisements or roll out new products and services without recognizing your target audience or customer preferences. Similarly, you don’t keep them in effect without testing their success rates since making business decisions mindlessly or keeping ineffective tactics causes companies to tank. 

 

What Does It Mean to Make Data-Driven Decisions?

Data-driven decision-making means small business owners use technological devices and processes to collect and examine company data alongside market trends. This data insight helps owners learn anything, from what ad campaigns work to what products sell better than others. They then make business adjustments accordingly for optimal efficiency and success.

Business leaders ensure data quality by pulling information from:

  • Market testing, where they check a product or service’s success rate before a public release
  • Customer interactions, from forms and surveys to live chats and comment and review sections
  • Customer data tracking, such as viewing activities on the company website

 

How Do Data-Driven Decisions Help Owners Strive for Their Business Goals?

Data is in no short supply, and online searchers provide 2.5 quintillion bytes of daily data. Below, we’ll explain how business owners use this to their advantage when understanding and expanding their small companies.

 

Maintaining an Edge to Stay Competitive

One can also make fewer mistakes than their competitors. According to LinkedIn, while about 51% of small businesses believe data analytics is crucial for growth, a March 2024 survey claims that only a mere one-third of companies use it to track customer and market behavior and make future predictions.

 

Putting Energy Towards Making the Right Decision Every Time

Running a business includes constant trial and error. If business owners don’t uncover errors quickly, they lose customers and sales. That’s why collecting and analyzing data helps make more confident business decisions using statistics and logic rather than a gut feeling. 

For instance, if a certain beverage at a juice cafe has a low ROI, costing more to stock than it brings back in sales revenue, it may need better advertising to raise interest. Otherwise, the owner must remove it from the inventory to bar revenue loss. Similarly, the cafe should stock popular fruits so high-demand products don’t run out, causing sales loss. 

 

Keeping Customers Happy

Just because a business owner seeks out customers better than their competitors doesn’t mean they can keep them without offering the right service and personalization tactics. For instance, machine learning streamlines processes like customer service chats so AIs handle concerns and questions instantly without waiting on live representatives. 

Similarly, a business owner can delve into customer data, learning trends from browsing and search histories to better suggest similar products to specific customers. Moreover, suppose browsers abandon carts or cease searches. In that case, business owners can send emails or targeted ads or re-spark interest with promotions.  

 

A Call to Action

So, whatever business decisions you make, ensure they’re backed with data-driven tactics for optimal success. 

 


 

Additional Information for You

ThoughtSpot: Data-driven decision making: How to use data to make more informed decisions

GoSquared: What Is Data-Driven Marketing? (+ 10 Amazing Examples!)

 


 

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By Denis Wilson

Cybersecurity Expert, Small Business Technology Consultant, Managed Services Provider, Managed IT Support

Thanks for reading this post. I always take into mind that your time and attention are precious. And these posts need to be timely, to the point, and short. For more tips on thriving with small business technology, check out the other blog posts at DWPIA Blogs. You can also find me on LinkedIn, YouTube, and Facebook

I am also a published author and speaker on cloud computing, remote-work, cybersecurity, and AI. I work extensively with business and professional associations to provide small business technology education programs.

Contact me if you have any questions about the subject. I'd be happy to spend 15 minutes discussing it with you.