Newsletter Article
HUMAN JUDGEMENT REMAINS THE DATA ADVANTAGE
AI can analyse information quickly, identify relationships and reduce many of the manual steps involved in traditional reporting.
But it does not remove the need for human expertise.
AI can analyse large volumes of information, surface patterns and produce recommendations faster than traditional methods. But speed does not determine whether an answer is commercially relevant, operationally practical or appropriate for the situation.
The World Economic Forum reports that analytical thinking remains the most sought-after core skill, with seven in ten employers considering it essential.[1]
Technology can surface patterns, anomalies and relationships at speed.
People still need to:
AI may identify that a metric has changed.
Human expertise determines whether that change represents:
Human expertise becomes more consequential as AI capability grows. In essence experienced people know which questions to ask, which factors may be missing and when an apparently plausible result does not reflect the realities of the business. They provide the context needed to distinguish a temporary fluctuation from an operational issue, customer risk or commercial opportunity.
AI also has the potential to broaden capability across the organisation. Experienced professionals can use it to investigate more deeply and work across datasets they could not review manually, while less experienced employees can use guided questioning and contextual answers to develop their understanding faster.
The strongest outcomes come from a productive division of labour: AI provides speed, scale and a starting point; people provide direction, interpretation and accountability. The objective is not to remove human expertise from the process, but to give it greater reach and more time to focus on the decisions that matter.
The greatest value of AI is not replacing human judgement.
It is giving people faster access to the evidence and context they need to make better commercial, operational and customer decisions.
That requires AI to operate across trusted, connected and governed organisational data, not isolated applications or incomplete datasets.

The Data Advantage #9, July 2026