Merry Christmas @LeahK and a happy new decade to you too! So many questions and deep thoughts to consider with so little time left before the big night comes. Clearly this decade has had its share of significant events to choose from.
I'll keep it light with my favorite personal accomplishments, my grandchildren. This decade has seen Ava, Gabriella, Aiden, Luna and Ezra come to bless my life. With the exception of Gabriella, my kids planned well enough to avoid inspire.
In my professional life, becoming an ACE was the beginning of a new journey. Fourteen Inspires and countless user group meetings across almost a dozen locations made the world a little smaller as the alteryx community grew dramatically.
Time for me to get back to work so that I can begin my winter holidays.
Cheers,
Mark
Hi @LeahK,
my 2 drops on those topics, to my mind, during the last ten years we could talk about new technologies, but the biggeest thing is about the mindset change, now everyone understands the importance of data and what it can bring, even if in some comapnies, they don't know how to handle it, or what to do with it, at least a lot of people understand how crucial it is and even more how crucial it will be in the next years,
Thie biggest challenge for data analyst of the last ten years, maybe not being seen as the "nerd" and being able to talk data to people who were not into it, maybe also help people to change their mind and think data on their daily job too!
I may come back with other ideas later!
Happy holidays, @LeahK !!
In the past decade, I agree with @Ladarthure about people becoming aware of the importance of data, even if they aren't sure what to do with it. The rise of the citizen data scientist, through programs like Alteryx, is another big change over the last decade. You don't need to be a programmer or a statistician to work with and understand the information.
About 10 years ago, I began my own data journey, changing my focus as a corporate trainer from a bit of everything to focus mainly on analytics. Back then, my toolkit consisted of Excel and Access. So many technologies have popped up over the years since, and my focus now is on Alteryx and Tableau. I'm able to travel the world to enable people in working with their data efficiently and effectively. I basically solve puzzles for a living, and that's a lot of fun!!
One of my biggest accomplishments is a recent one. I was designated an ACE before Inspire Europe 2019, which is the beginning of another new journey for me. That's opened so many new doors, and enabled me to meet so many new incredible minds. The community here is what got me there. I became active in 2017, participating in the Weekly Challenges. When I craved more than one challenge per week, and proved to myself that I knew a few things by passing the Core and Advanced exams, I started to answer questions in the Designer Discussions, and that's when I really started to learn Alteryx. In helping others, I was granted the gift of learning myself.
Those are just a few thoughts. I'll likely add some more
Cheers!
Esther
In the past decade, I went from software engineer to data architect with a focus on analytics (when I learned Alteryx), and for over a year now, I've been in charge of Analytics, Reporting, BI and ML platforms where I work. My biggest accomplishment is still in front of me as our team will be applying ML to a variety of problems. We're reading papers and applying cutting edge concepts almost daily. Other notables this decade were placing well in the Kaggle Higgs Boson challenge, and of course being an Alteryx ACE for a few years!
My funniest tidbit is... we installed an experimental chatbot, and I fed in "Haha, I will" as a feeder, in my mind thinking "Haha, I will fool you, robot!" but it completed the feeder with "Haha, I will kill you, you insolent bastadge!" (except it was the real word, not bastadge, but the real word got bleeped here, LOL)... anyway, so, yeah, not quite ready for production there, I don't think.
The biggest things in data science, for me, have been cloud infrastructure and the explosion of machine learning. Around 2014 I was struggling to get Theano to utilize a high-powered gaming laptop GPU. Now I can spin up a server in EC2 with a GPU roughly 10 times as powerful as that laptop, and pip install tensorflow-gpu and keras like nothing (which are easier to use than Theano by miles).
Next decade - a few things: first, I think back to the explosion of computers in the 70's and 80's, roughly around the time that they first made compilers that were good enough to compile a better compiler; that explosion continues to this very day... similarly, we are now at a place where we can use AI to construct a better AI. That rocket ship is just now taking off: no longer sci-fi: in ten years AI will be super smart and almost perfectly humanoid in its capabilities. Next, biotechnology... give everyone a built-in AI assistant: you talk to it and it talks back, you even tell it to build things for you and it knows (and/or can learn) how to do so. Finally, quantum computing will develop and become available as quantum-enabled cloud services, further expanding the power of computation.
Oh, and not to get away from data: this is ALL data driven. Alteryx will be there for all of it and will continue to thrive!
As computers get more powerful and automation becomes more robust in its capabilities, there will be plenty of concern with regards to joblessness. Data literacy might go backwards at some point, when the robots know all the data and we just ask questions and/or make demands of our super-human AI partners. I think these will be the biggest challenges eventually. Right now, it's still a smorgasbord of opportunity and will probably still be in ten years... but eventually we'll have to take stock of what were doing and the implications thereof.
Looking back in shock. I dunno, but I hope it will be with regards to politics or religion; these areas have been shocking for a while and I can only hope that in 10 years we're sensible enough to realize it from a common, broadly agreed-upon angle.
If I could solve any problem... probably finding cures for deadly diseases. Same for the area I wish I had more data on.
Anything else? Within 20 years I aim to be retired and perhaps author of a good sci-fi novel. Haha.
2010: Broomfield
Snowpocalypse 🥶
2012: Alteryx gallery is launched! I won this iPad for contributing one of the first macros.
 
2015: Boston with my friend Enrique Javier
2016: San Diego I came in second at the space invaders championship. That's closer than my 2012 Grand Prix finish.
 
 
2017: Las Vegas. What an Inspire!
 
 
 2018: Anaheim & Codechella
2018: London
2019: Sydney
 
2019: Nashville
2019: London
Where I'm at now, celebrating the new year:
 
 
Cheers 🥂  
Hey @LeahK - happy 2020 to you!
The biggest change that I've seen over the last 10 years is a gradual progression towards a world where Analysis has truly become the domain of operational folk. The workforce is becoming more technical with coding skills becoming much more common in people in roles across the firm (from HR to Finance to customer outreach - we're seeing coding skills become common and pervasive).
We have also seen an explosion of innovation - 20 years ago we saw the early days of user-friendly data prep; and we started to see companies like Crystal Reports beginning to bring reporting to end users but at that time you still needed very technical skills to configure the back-end. 10 years ago, reporting was more of an end-user capability but the data preparation was still a Technology role largely.
Now we're seeing a world where there are dozens of companies who realise that data preparation and user-friendly ETL is the secret sauce to unlock the value in organizational data - and we're seeing billions of dollars of investment in this industry (especially with the large industry moves this year like Tableau).
In terms of big analytical accomplishments in my own work - I wish I could point to something like the Higgs Boson, or being able to assemble multiple streams of radio telescope data into our first picture of a black hole. I wish that I could claim credit for the data analytics which now allows space companies to land and re-use rockets; or the fact that our technology is quietly getting smarter (like Google's inbox which has learned how to filter out much of the obvious spam; and order my inbox in a way that reduces the noise).
But no - these were accomplished by people far more capable than me.
Our achievement over the last decade has been much quieter - we are very proud to have trained several thousand people in using data to solve their own problems, to bring their own sense of agency back to their work. We look at our work as a force-multiplier effect, and the dramatic improvement in the capability of analytical tooling over the last 10 years has allowed us to bring thousands more hands to the pump to help us solve little AND large business problems by giving existing folks new skills and tools.
My sense of the challenges for the next decade are:
It's going to be an interesting couple of years - looking forward to seeing how this all plays out!
Sean