Each time I open Salesforce in my browser, I think of Steven Hawking.
It's because of an aphorism an entrepreneur shared with me a few weeks
ago. He said:
> The cost to fix a data error at the time of
entry is $1. The cost to fix it an hour after it's been entered is $10.
And the cost to fix it several months later is $100+.
Take
for example a venture capitalist's CRM tool. If I mistype an email
address or the details of the last fund raise, it might cost me a minute
or two to fix it at that very moment. A minute of time is worth about
$1.
If I'm lazy and don't correct the error, later on that day one
of my colleagues might search our CRM for the company and comes across
the erroneous record which he suspects is inaccurate. First, he will
check his notes, then he will call me to verify and then he will change
the record. The rigamarole has undermined his trust of my data and the
ten minutes he spent correcting my data entry are wasted.
Worst of
all is if I contact a startup to inquire about an upcoming fund raise
with incorrect data. As a result, I could miss an opportunity to partner
with a great company because of incorrect timing or lose credibility
with the startup's executive team. The cost to the firm could be in the
tens of millions of dollars.
All because I was lazy updating the CRM record.
Data
promises compounding returns. The more data you have on a customer or
prospect or your own business, the better the insights you can draw and
the better decisions you can make. But these returns are blind to the
quality of data.
Bad data has equally great compounding effects. And as Hawking so succinctly put it:
“The greatest enemy of knowledge is not ignorance, it is the illusion of knowledge.” – Stephen Hawking
Original Source :http://www.linkedin.com/today/post/article/20130129163420-4444200-the-cost-of-bad-data-is-the-illusion-of-knowledge
The Cost of Bad Data is the Illusion of Knowledge
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