- SVP at a SalesTech SaaS Company
Sound familiar? If you are like most of my clients, you are not alone. Leaders today aren’t struggling because they lack data—they’re struggling because they don’t know how to translate their abundance of data into clear, decisive actions. Teasing through data to determine the right next step is complex and time-consuming. And even when leaders uncover critical insights, they often face a second challenge: team resistance. Why? Because data often tells a hard truth—about inefficient processes, unmet customer needs, and strategies that need to shift. When insights require change and teams push back, leaders find themselves in high discomfort, feeling stuck between what the data says and what their organization is ready to act on.
Below are three primary obstacles that often prevent middle managers from making data-driven decisions, as commonly reported by my middle manager clients, along with practical steps to overcome them.
Having more data doesn’t automatically lead to better decisions. For many leaders:
💡 Fix: Leaders, it's time to shift from measuring everything to identifying the 3-5 key insights that directly impact customer and business impact. Don't ask the question "What happened?" rather ask "What did we expect to have happen? What was the delta? What blocked it from happening? Now, what do we do next to close the gaps?"
When leadership teams fail to collaboratively set goals and exclude their front-line team members from strategizing how to achieve those goals, misalignment arises. One term often used to describe this issue is siloing. Siloing occurs when departments within an organization function independently and refrain from sharing information with other departments. However, siloing doesn't entirely capture the problem. Another significant issue that undermines leadership effectiveness is authoritarianism. Authoritarianism occurs when leaders make decisions based solely on their own ideas, neglecting to listen to their team or seek input from others. These problematic leadership modes lead to:
💡 Fix: Leaders must align on what the goals are AND how to get there. This means:
✅ Engaging teams early in defining priorities and stress-testing strategies before execution.
✅ Ensuring cross-functional clarity on how different departments contribute to shared outcomes.
✅ Committing to ongoing alignment, not just setting goals once a year and hoping they stick.
When leaders and teams collaborate on both goals and execution plans, decision-making is focused on impact, teams operate more effectively, and customers experience a more seamless journey.
Leaders often assume that progress is inevitable because they are making decisions and launching initiatives. Yet, quarter after quarter, many organizations face the same unresolved challenges. Why?
💡 Fix: Before launching any initiative, leaders should ask: What measurable change do we expect to see? If there’s no clear answer, the initiative isn’t ready. Tie decisions to specific, customer-driven outcomes—otherwise, it’s just more busy work.
Growth and progress don’t come from simply collecting more data—they come from using data to make the right decisions and ensuring teams are aligned on execution. Leaders who shift from information overload to insight-driven decision-making see:
✅ Faster execution with fewer bottlenecks
✅ Clearer accountability across teams
✅ Improved customer outcomes that drive long-term success
If your team is stuck in a cycle of “busy but not better,” then it is time to rethink your decision-making process.