Skip to Content
  • 오피스

    오피스

    미주
    • Atlanta
    • Austin
    • Bogota
    • Boston
    • Buenos Aires
    • Chicago
    • Dallas
    • Denver
    • Houston
    • Los Angeles
    • Mexico City
    • Minneapolis
    • Monterrey
    • Montreal
    • New York
    • Rio de Janeiro
    • San Francisco
    • Santiago
    • São Paulo
    • Seattle
    • Silicon Valley
    • Toronto
    • Washington, DC
    유럽, 중동, 아프리카
    • Amsterdam
    • Athens
    • Berlin
    • Brussels
    • Copenhagen
    • Doha
    • Dubai
    • Dusseldorf
    • Frankfurt
    • Helsinki
    • Istanbul
    • Johannesburg
    • Kyiv
    • Lisbon
    • London
    • Madrid
    • Milan
    • Munich
    • Oslo
    • Paris
    • Riyadh
    • Rome
    • Stockholm
    • Vienna
    • Warsaw
    • Zurich
    아시아, 호주
    • Bangkok
    • Beijing
    • Bengaluru
    • Brisbane
    • Ho Chi Minh City
    • Hong Kong
    • Jakarta
    • Kuala Lumpur
    • Manila
    • Melbourne
    • Mumbai
    • New Delhi
    • Perth
    • Seoul
    • Shanghai
    • Singapore
    • Sydney
    • Tokyo
    오피스 전체보기
  • 얼럼나이
  • 미디어 센터
  • 구독
  • 연락처
  • Korea | 한국어

    지역 및 언어 선택

    글로벌
    • Global (English)
    미주
    • Brazil (Português)
    • Argentina (Español)
    • Canada (Français)
    • Chile (Español)
    • Colombia (Español)
    유럽, 중동, 아프리카
    • France (Français)
    • DACH Region (Deutsch)
    • Italy (Italiano)
    • Spain (Español)
    • Greece (Elliniká)
    아시아, 호주
    • China (中文版)
    • Korea (한국어)
    • Japan (日本語)
  • Saved items (0)
    Saved items (0)

    You have no saved items.

    관심 있는 내용을 북마크하여 Red 폴더에 저장할 수 있습니다. Red 폴더 에서 저장된 내용을 읽거나 공유해보세요.

    Explore Bain Insights
  • 산업
    메인 메뉴

    산업

    • 우주항공, 방산 및 정부 서비스
    • 농업 관련 산업
    • 화학
    • 인프라, 건설 및 건축 자재
    • 소비재
    • 금융 서비스
    • 헬스케어
    • 산업용 기계 및 장비
    • 미디어 및 엔터테인먼트
    • 금속
    • 광업
    • 석유 및 가스
    • 제지 및 패키징 산업
    • 사모펀드
    • 사회 및 공공 부문
    • 유통
    • 기술
    • 텔레콤
    • 운송
    • 여행·여가
    • 유틸리티 및 재생가능 에너지
  • 컨설팅 서비스
    메인 메뉴

    컨설팅 서비스

    • Customer Experience
    • ESG
    • Innovation
    • M&A
    • 운영
    • 조직
    • 사모펀드
    • 고객 전략 및 마케팅
    • 전략
    • AI, 인사이트 및 솔루션
    • Technology
    • 변화 혁신
  • Digital
  • 인사이트
  • 베인 소개
    메인 메뉴

    베인 소개

    • 업무 소개
    • 베인의 신념
    • 구성원 및 리더십 소개
    • 고객 성과
    • 주요 수상 경력
    • 글로벌 파트너사
    Further: Our global responsibility
    • 다양성과 포용
    • 사회 공헌 활동
    • Sustainability
    • World Economic Forum
    Learn more about Further
  • Careers
    메인 메뉴

    Careers

    • Work with Us
      Careers
      Work with Us
      • Find Your Place
      • Our Work Areas
      • Integrated Teams
      • Students
      • Internships & Programs
      • Recruiting Events
    • Life at Bain
      Careers
      Life at Bain
      • Blog: Inside Bain
      • Career Stories
      • Our People
      • Where We Work
      • Supporting Your Growth
      • Affinity Groups
      • Benefits
    • Impact Stories
    • Hiring Process
      Careers
      Hiring Process
      • What to Expect
      • Interviewing
    FIND JOBS
  • 오피스
    메인 메뉴

    오피스

    • 미주
      오피스
      미주
      • Atlanta
      • Austin
      • Bogota
      • Boston
      • Buenos Aires
      • Chicago
      • Dallas
      • Denver
      • Houston
      • Los Angeles
      • Mexico City
      • Minneapolis
      • Monterrey
      • Montreal
      • New York
      • Rio de Janeiro
      • San Francisco
      • Santiago
      • São Paulo
      • Seattle
      • Silicon Valley
      • Toronto
      • Washington, DC
    • 유럽, 중동, 아프리카
      오피스
      유럽, 중동, 아프리카
      • Amsterdam
      • Athens
      • Berlin
      • Brussels
      • Copenhagen
      • Doha
      • Dubai
      • Dusseldorf
      • Frankfurt
      • Helsinki
      • Istanbul
      • Johannesburg
      • Kyiv
      • Lisbon
      • London
      • Madrid
      • Milan
      • Munich
      • Oslo
      • Paris
      • Riyadh
      • Rome
      • Stockholm
      • Vienna
      • Warsaw
      • Zurich
    • 아시아, 호주
      오피스
      아시아, 호주
      • Bangkok
      • Beijing
      • Bengaluru
      • Brisbane
      • Ho Chi Minh City
      • Hong Kong
      • Jakarta
      • Kuala Lumpur
      • Manila
      • Melbourne
      • Mumbai
      • New Delhi
      • Perth
      • Seoul
      • Shanghai
      • Singapore
      • Sydney
      • Tokyo
    오피스 전체보기
  • 얼럼나이
  • 미디어 센터
  • 구독
  • 연락처
  • Korea | 한국어
    메인 메뉴

    지역 및 언어 선택

    • 글로벌
      지역 및 언어 선택
      글로벌
      • Global (English)
    • 미주
      지역 및 언어 선택
      미주
      • Brazil (Português)
      • Argentina (Español)
      • Canada (Français)
      • Chile (Español)
      • Colombia (Español)
    • 유럽, 중동, 아프리카
      지역 및 언어 선택
      유럽, 중동, 아프리카
      • France (Français)
      • DACH Region (Deutsch)
      • Italy (Italiano)
      • Spain (Español)
      • Greece (Elliniká)
    • 아시아, 호주
      지역 및 언어 선택
      아시아, 호주
      • China (中文版)
      • Korea (한국어)
      • Japan (日本語)
  • Saved items  (0)
    메인 메뉴
    Saved items (0)

    You have no saved items.

    관심 있는 내용을 북마크하여 Red 폴더에 저장할 수 있습니다. Red 폴더 에서 저장된 내용을 읽거나 공유해보세요.

    Explore Bain Insights
  • 산업
    • 산업

      • 우주항공, 방산 및 정부 서비스
      • 농업 관련 산업
      • 화학
      • 인프라, 건설 및 건축 자재
      • 소비재
      • 금융 서비스
      • 헬스케어
      • 산업용 기계 및 장비
      • 미디어 및 엔터테인먼트
      • 금속
      • 광업
      • 석유 및 가스
      • 제지 및 패키징 산업
      • 사모펀드
      • 사회 및 공공 부문
      • 유통
      • 기술
      • 텔레콤
      • 운송
      • 여행·여가
      • 유틸리티 및 재생가능 에너지
  • 컨설팅 서비스
    • 컨설팅 서비스

      • Customer Experience
      • ESG
      • Innovation
      • M&A
      • 운영
      • 조직
      • 사모펀드
      • 고객 전략 및 마케팅
      • 전략
      • AI, 인사이트 및 솔루션
      • Technology
      • 변화 혁신
  • Digital
  • 인사이트
  • 베인 소개
    • 베인 소개

      • 업무 소개
      • 베인의 신념
      • 구성원 및 리더십 소개
      • 고객 성과
      • 주요 수상 경력
      • 글로벌 파트너사
      Further: Our global responsibility
      • 다양성과 포용
      • 사회 공헌 활동
      • Sustainability
      • World Economic Forum
      Learn more about Further
  • Careers
    최근 검색어
      최근 방문 페이지

      Content added to saved items

      Saved items (0)

      Removed from saved items

      Saved items (0)

      Brief

      Infobesity: The enemy of good decisions

      Infobesity: The enemy of good decisions

      How to attack information overload.

      글 Paul Rogers, Rudy Puryear and James Root

      • 읽기 소요시간

      Brief

      Infobesity: The enemy of good decisions
      en

      An epidemic is plaguing the corporate world, and people have already coined a word to describe it—infobesity. Companies have overindulged in information. Some are finding it more difficult than ever to decide and deliver.

      Like conventional obesity, infobesity has many sources. The never-ending stream of emails and voicemails. The PowerPoint presentations that dominate so many meetings. The endless reports from finance, marketing, cross-functional teams and external researchers. Useful information creates opportunity and makes for better decisions. But the torrent that flows through most organizations today acts like so much bad cholesterol, clogging their arteries and slowing their reactions.

      Why does infobesity compromise performance? It’s mostly because we human beings can process only so much data. An uncontrollable flood of it overwhelms us, and we feel stressed. Our systems shut down, and our capacity to absorb additional information actually decreases. To cope with the flood, our brains develop tricks and habits. We rely more on information that is closer to home than on information from a distant source. We remember data presented in one format and forget data presented in another. We even squirrel away bits of information for our own private use. (Maybe that’s why local offices know things that the corporate center doesn't, and vice versa.) All such reactions hamper our ability to make decisions based on the best available evidence, and performance suffers accordingly.

      The decision solution

      Fixing the infobesity problem requires stepping back from the daily flood of data. It requires reexamining how an organization operates and what kind of information it really needs.

      At root, a company’s performance is simply the sum of the decisions it makes and the actions it takes every day. The better its decisions and its execution, the better its results. However, some of those decisions matter more than others. Successful companies know which decisions are most important, and they establish well-understood processes for making and executing them. They also know who plays the key roles in each one.

      The goal, then, is to generate the data required for critical decisions—no more and no less. This information should get to the right people at the right point in the process, in a format designed for maximum understanding and ease of use. This kind of decision-based approach is a sure cure for infobesity, sort of analogous to eating less and exercising more. There are really just four requirements:

      Focus. Companies today generate data that no one needs and put it into reports that no one reads. The business units at one energy company, for instance, used to report performance on some 400 individual line items. Then the company mounted a “focused information sets” initiative, which reduced the number of line items to 30 and lowered reporting costs. Since those 30 covered the vast majority of items that truly add value, the move led to better business decisions while saving everyone’s time. Similarly, a large retailer’s marketing function once reported vast quantities of data relating to each campaign, yet all that information rarely helped executives decide whether the campaign had been a success. Today, every marketing brief identifies the few objectives by which a campaign will be measured and provides only the data that is relevant to those objectives.

      Standardization. Is the data you need for decisions in the same format and easily accessible? One large wireless provider had to invest in custom software to reconcile different customer databases resulting from mergers. The investment allowed the company to reduce data-query and preparation time by 90%, leading to much faster decisions. A major gaming company relied in the past on each of its facilities to decide on promotions to customers and then to analyze the results. When it centralized and standardized that function, it discovered that patterns that seemed valid for a single property did not hold up in the aggregate. The standardized information was not only cheaper to provide; it also led to better marketing decisions.

      Timing. Companies sometimes think that decision makers need all available information at the beginning of a decision process. That was the case with a pharmaceutical manufacturer, which gathered reams of data about potential markets for a drug under development as soon as the drug began to be tested. Trouble was, many drugs never made it through certain stage gates, so for them, the data-gathering effort was mostly wasted. When the company relocated its information gathering to a later stage in the process, it saved a considerable amount of money and was able to provide decision makers with only the data relevant to a given decision.

      Quantity and source. In the current fad for “big data,” companies mine electronic warehouses for insights about customers, transactions and products. Some manufacturers even use big data to help frontline employees make production decisions: If a screw at Raytheon’s new Alabama missile plant is turned 13 times rather than 12, an error message flashes and the production line halts. Big data often provides executives and managers with highly useful information for making key decisions. The UK-based retailer Tesco, for instance, has created a high-level statistical model that predicts customer behavior based on the weather. Managers can then adjust stock levels so the store doesn't run out of window fans during a hot spell.

      The test for big data is whether its output is relevant to key decisions. And it should complement rather than replace other sorts of information. LEGO engineers decide which products to develop based partly on input from hobbyist groups and other customer communities. Apple Store employees spend part of their time learning and discussing customer feedback from the previous day or week so they can make better decisions about customer service. “Small data” of this sort—direct and often qualitative—is particularly helpful for the everyday decisions made by frontline employees, which often add up to considerable value over time.

      Information is cheap and easily available today, so it is probably no surprise that many companies suffer from too much of it. But organizational infobesity undermines performance and demoralizes the employees who have to cope with it, leaving people feeling they are trapped inside an “endless runner” video game. Smart companies will address infobesity sooner rather than later—by tailoring their information flows to their most important decisions.

      Paul Rogers is a partner with Bain & Company in London and leads the firm’s Global Organization practice. Rudy Puryear is a partner in Chicago and leader of the Global Information Technology practice. James Root is a partner in Hong Kong and leader of the Asia-Pacific Organization practice.


      The impact of infobesity

      Infobesity—or information overload, to use the more general term—has been around for a while. Consider the Reuters report Dying for Information, first published in 1996, in the early days of the Web. Here are the startling statistics, as summarized by Reuters:

      • Two-thirds of managers report that tension with work colleagues and loss of job satisfaction arise because of stress associated with information overload.
      • One-third of managers suffer from ill health as a direct consequence of stress associated with information overload. This figure rises to 43% among senior managers.
      • Almost two-thirds (62%) of managers testify that their personal relationships suffer as a result of information overload.
      • 43% of managers think that important decisions are delayed and of having too much information.
      • One in five senior managers believes that substantial amounts of time are wasted collecting and searching for information.
      • Almost half (48%) think that the Internet will be a prime cause of information overload over the next two years.

      And indeed, the condition has almost certainly grown worse. In early 2010, the research firm Basex conducted a survey asking knowledge workers to describe their workday. Among the study’s findings, according to Basex:

      • 66% of knowledge workers feel they don't have enough time to get all of their work done.
      • More than 50% of knowledge workers feel that the amount of information they are presented with on a daily basis is detrimental to getting their work done.
      • 94% of those surveyed at some point have felt overwhelmed by information to the point of incapacity.
      • 30% of knowledge workers have no time at all for thought and reflection during their day, while 58% had only between 15 and 30 minutes.
      저자
      • Paul Rogers
        Former Partner, Middle East
      • Headshot of Rudy Puryear
        Rudy Puryear
        Alumni, Dallas
      • Headshot of James Root
        James Root
        파트너, Hong Kong
      문의하기
      관련 컨설팅 서비스
      • 조직
      조직
      Decisions during change

      Poor decision making and execution will undermine even the most carefully planned change.

      자세히 보기
      조직
      Why we behave—and decide—the way we do

      Here are four biases that can hobble even the most thoughtful decision makers.

      자세히 보기
      Big Data Analytics

      Big Data Analytics enables the rapid extraction, transformation, loading, search, analysis and sharing of massive data sets.

      자세히 보기
      조직
      Want More Out of Your AI Investments? Think People First

      To unlock AI’s exponential productivity potential, companies must modernize workflow and workforce in tandem.

      자세히 보기
      조직
      Stay Relevant, Spark Energy: Pedro Arnt, CEO dLocal

      How can a hyperscaler grow at lightning speed without losing its soul? 

      자세히 보기
      First published in 6월 2013
      태그
      • 조직

      프로젝트 사례

      전략 A Bold New Strategy Restores a Bank to a Leadership Position

      See more related case studies

      조직 Centralization boosts performance for an energy giant

      See more related case studies

      조직 A Regional Operating Model Lifts European Sales for a Medical Device Maker

      See more related case studies

      베인에 궁금하신 점이 있으신가요?

      베인은 주저 없이 변화를 마주할 줄 아는 용감한 리더들과 함께합니다. 그리고, 이들의 담대한 용기는 고객사의 성공으로 이어집니다.

      급변하는 비즈니스 환경에서 살아남기 위한 선도자의 시각. 월간 Bain Insights에서 글로벌 비즈니스의 핵심 이슈를 확인하십시오.

      *개인정보 정책을 읽었으며 그 내용에 동의합니다.

      Privacy Policy를 읽고 동의해주십시오.
      Bain & Company
      문의하기 환경정책 Accessibility 이용약관 개인정보 보호 쿠키 사용 정책 Sitemap Log In

      © 1996-2026 Bain & Company, Inc.

      문의하기

      무엇을 도와드릴까요?

      • 프로젝트 문의
      • 채용 정보
      • 언론
      • 제휴 문의
      • 연사 초청
      오피스 전체보기