One thing I’ve seen repeatedly: teams generate a huge amount of reporting—but very little of it actually drives decisions.

At one point, I was part of a team producing over 100 performance reports daily.

The intent was good: visibility, transparency, data-driven decision-making.

But over time, a few things became clear:

  • not all reports were being reviewed
  • information was being filtered through layers before reaching decision-makers
  • the focus shifted from “what decisions need to be made?” to “what reporting needs to be produced?”

At that point, reporting becomes output—not impact.

And it creates a different kind of inefficiency:

  • teams spend time producing information that isn’t fully used
  • insights get diluted as they move through layers
  • decisions are delayed, even though “data is available”
  • The goal of reporting isn’t volume—it’s clarity.

Good reporting should answer a specific question, support a specific decision, or highlight a specific risk.

If it doesn’t, it’s worth asking:

  • What decision is this enabling?
  • Who is responsible for acting on it?
  • Is this the simplest way to surface that information?

More data doesn’t create better decisions.
Better structure and ownership do.

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