Global Study: 70% of Business Leaders Would Prefer a Robot to Make Their Decisions
A study by Oracle reveals that decision-making is increasingly difficult for employees and business leaders globally, with 85% experiencing 'decision distress'. Over 14,000 participants from 17 countries reported feeling overwhelmed by data, with 72% admitting that this has impeded their decision-making abilities. The study found that 74% of individuals believe their daily decisions have increased tenfold over the past three years. Business leaders are particularly affected, with 93% suggesting that effective decision intelligence is critical for organizational success. Despite the demand for data-driven insights, 72% of leaders feel hindered by the sheer volume of data.
Additionally, 70% of decision-makers express a preference for automated solutions, highlighting a crucial gap in current data analytics approaches.
- 93% of business leaders recognize the need for effective decision intelligence to succeed.
- Majority of participants acknowledge that data-driven organizations are perceived as more trustworthy.
- 85% of individuals experience decision distress, negatively impacting quality of life.
- 72% of leaders feel overwhelmed by data, hindering their ability to make timely decisions.
Insights
Analyzing...
85% of business leaders have suffered from decision distress – regretting, feeling guilty about, or questioning a decision they made in the past year72% admit the sheer volume of data and their lack of trust in data has stopped them from making any decision94% have changed the way they make decisions over the last three years;97% want help from data
People are overwhelmed by the amount of data and this is damaging trust, making decisions much more complicated, and negatively impacting their quality of life.
- 74 percent of people say the number of decisions they make every day has increased 10x over the last three years and as they try to make these decisions, 78 percent are getting bombarded with more data from more sources than ever before.
- 86 percent say the volume of data is making decisions in their personal and professional lives much more complicated and 59 percent admit they face a decision dilemma – not knowing what decision to make – more than once every single day.
- 35 percent don't know which data or sources to trust and 70 percent have given up on making a decision because the data was overwhelming.
- 85 percent of people say this inability to make decisions is having a negative impact on their quality of life. It is causing spikes in anxiety (36 percent), missed opportunities (33 percent), and unnecessary spending (29 percent).
- As a result, 93 percent have changed the way they make decisions over the last three years. 39 percent now only listen to sources they trust and 29 percent rely solely on gut feelings.
Business leaders want data to help and know it is critical to the success of their organizations, but don't believe they have the tools to be successful which is eroding their confidence and ability to make timely decisions.
- 85 percent of business leaders have suffered from decision distress – regretting, feeling guilty about, or questioning a decision they made in the past year – and 93 percent believe having the right type of decision intelligence can make or break the success of an organization.
- 97 percent want help from data. In an ideal world, they want data to help them: make better decisions (44 percent), reduce risk (41 percent), make faster decisions (39 percent), make more money (37 percent), and plan for the unexpected (29 percent).
- In reality, 72 percent admit the sheer volume of data and their lack of trust in data has stopped them from making any decision at all and 89 percent believe the growing number of data sources has limited the success of their organizations.
- Managing different data sources has required additional resources to collect all the data (40 percent), made strategic decision making slower (36 percent), and introduced more opportunities for error (26 percent).
- Business leaders do not believe that the current approach to data and analytics is addressing these challenges. 77 percent say that the dashboards and charts they get do not always relate directly to the decisions they need to make and 72 percent believe most data available is only truly helpful for IT professionals or data scientists.
- Business leaders know this needs to change. They believe the right data and insights can help them make better HR (94 percent), finance (94 percent), supply chain (94 percent), and customer experience (93 percent) decisions.
Collecting and interpreting data has driven people to their breaking point at a time when the stakes are incredibly high for business leaders.
- 70 percent of people say the headache of having to collect so much data and interpret it is too much for them to handle.
- This is particularly evident in the business world. 78 percent of business leaders say people often make decisions and then look for the data to justify them, 74 percent of employees believe businesses often put the highest paid person's opinion ahead of data, and 24 percent feel that most decisions made in business are not rational.
- The situation is so challenging that 64 percent of people – and 70 percent of business leaders - would prefer for all these difficulties to just go away and to have a robot make their decisions.
- Despite their frustrations with data in their personal and professional worlds, people know that without data their decisions would be less accurate (44 percent), less successful (27 percent), and more prone to error (39 percent).
- People also believe that an organization that uses technology to make data-driven decisions is more trustworthy (79 percent), will be more successful (79 percent), is a company they're more likely to invest in (76 percent), partner with (77 percent), and work for (78 percent).
"People are drowning in data," said
"When our drivers are racing at more than 200 miles per hour, they have to make critical decisions very quickly. The correct race strategy decisions like when to pit and which tires are best for the conditions on the track can mean the difference between winning and losing," said
"As businesses expand to serve new customers in new ways, the number of data inputs they need to get the full picture expands too. Business leaders that make critical decisions about how to manage their companies ignore that data at their own risk," said T.K. Anand, executive vice president, Oracle Analytics. "The hesitancy, distrust, and lack of understanding of data shown by this study indicates that many people and organizations need to rethink their approach to data and decision making. What people really need is to be able to connect data to insight to decision to action. With our span of connected cloud capabilities, ranging from foundational data management, to augmented and applied analytics, to our suite of operational applications, we are uniquely positioned to meet this need."
This global sample of 14,250 people were surveyed in
DKC Analytics conducted and analyzed this survey with a sample procured using the Pollfish survey delivery platform, which delivers online surveys globally through mobile apps and the mobile web along with the desktop web. No post-stratification has been applied to the results.
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