Thursday, May 23, 2013

3 Reasons Why Startup Marketers Should Know SQL


Startups Live and Die by Data Analysis


How often have you been in a startup and someone comes up and asks for you to pull "a few quick numbers" ?

One of common themes when running any company is the need for data analytics.
  • When do your customers buy?
  • How much do they buy?
  • When do they come back?
If you don't have an easy way to answer these questions you are driving without a map. As we collect more and more data there is a huge need to process and understand that data. Marketing and business development teams need this information to make data driven decisions.

The faster they can get this information the better the startup will be.

Developer Time is a Scarce Commodity


All to often the responsibility of generating and producing these reports falls on a developer. They rae the ones that understand the underlying data model.

The problem is that development time is valuable. Sure there are complex reports that only a developer may be able to put together. However there are a plethora of other common questions that I am sure could easily be answered with a few hours of SQL training:
  • How many users signed up today? Last week? Last month?
  • How many users do we have total?
  • Who are our top purchasers?

Data Empowerment is a "Good Thing"


By teaching non-technical people SQL they will end up asking better and harder questions. A lot of businesses can be analyzed through just their data model. What objects are in the system? How are they stored?

Exposing this knowledge can yield valuable insights into the business.


How to Get Started


From a technical standpoint there is some risk in giving non technical individuals access to run arbitrary SQL queries. A good setup is to replicate to a read only slave and give them read only access to that database.

I still haven't figured out a good tool for storing the SQL queries and sharing them though so if anyone has any suggestions I'd love to hear them.




1 comment:

Lee said...

We set them up with http://www.sequelpro.com/ on their Macs, and you can use a read-only account, then share useful queries on Google Docs.