The article “In
Head-Hunting, Big Data May Not Be Such a Big Deal” contains information which
will either thrill or discourage the reader. Composed of an interview with
Laszlo Bock, a senior vice president of people operations at Google, the
article reveals changing attitudes towards leadership qualities in job
applicants and a shift in the perception of academic work. While the opinions
and claims made by Bock are relative to the inner-operations at Google, they
certainly carry weight and will no doubt become ever-increasing in other fields
and industries. The question, then, is what the interview with Bock contains,
and how one should feel about it. Certainly the ideas contained in the article
reveal an intriguing progression in work management, but they also hint at the
uncomfortable future of education and work.
“Big Data” is brought up throughout the interview, which
is essentially a compilation of information recorded by a company or
organization that can be utilized in various ways (if I comprehend fully). Big
Data is not unique to Google but is instead found across many areas and
entities, especially business. Within the context of the interview, Big Data is
referenced as the information which Google pulls from in analyzing applicants,
workers, efficiency, and so on. The merits of a manager can be somewhat quantified
by examining and evaluating worker opinions and quality of work. Yet the interview
brings up the point that statistics and generalized data do not full help
measure leadership qualities. Leadership is deemed “a more ambiguous and amorphous
set of characteristics”, and while certain attributes like consistency may be
measure, a touch of human insight is necessary.
One cannot doubt the validity of certain sets of data and
analysis. If a manager is poor at his job, there will be noticeable
deficiencies in his region and the people he manages. When the feedback of
employees regarding a manager is collected and compiled, there will likely be
indications of a person’s effectiveness, ability, or character. But to break
down human behavior into a faceless wall of information is not exactly a
comforting or endearing concept. Big Data is useful, but care must be taken not
to exclude those personal and, well, human qualities that might escape
organized recordings and measurements.
Still, data should be utilized, and will be increasingly
useful as time progresses. The closing questions of the interview allude to
this progression, as academics and the correlation between assets like G.P.A
and test scores and compared against the ability of Google employees. When Bock
states that “we’ve seen from all our data crunching is that G.P.A’s are
worthless as a criteria for hiring”, a little bit of nervousness creeps into my
mind. This is not because I rely on a G.P.A for self-assessment, but because
there is a discrepancy between what the job market is starting to favor and
what education is trying to instill. The remark that people who succeed in
academic environments are “finely trained, they’re conditioned to succeed in
that environment” is worrisome to an individual who succeeds in an academic
environment. The statements expressed in the article are born of data relating
academics to performance while working under Google, and a lack of correlation
between the two. Notions of real-world skills and personal development are
brought up to explain how useless something like a G.P.A is. Bock’s claims
within the article spark a curiosity within me regarding the future of career
application and formal schooling, while at the same time I am both intrigued
and unsettled by the notion of Big Data, and wish to see how comprehensive it
can truly become.
Fantastic review! You need not be unsettled. Your revelation is important and should bring you to a more wholesome understanding of the intricate relationship between education/work/humanity. Ultimately grades aren't important, knowledge is. Having an abundance of knowledge is useless without a solid work ethic to utilize it in productivity. And productivity won't be worth much to the world if you lack the interpersonal skills to communicate and share them, which humanity instills.
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