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20 Excellent Places to Look for Strategic Risk in a Company: Quantitative

20 Excellent Places to Look for Strategic Risk in a Company: Quantitative

There are many places to look for signs that something in your company needs to be adjusted.

In this post, I’ll share 20 different places where your business can look to avoid a potential catastrophe. I also explain how to evaluate these sources for vulnerabilities, and which questions to ask.

You can read the differences between Quantitative, Qualitative, and Mixed Method data review in previous articles:

Check out my podcast, What’s Wrong with Your Business? to hear me explain how to evaluate these areas.

What's Wrong with Your Business, WWB Podcast, Episode 6, quantitative data, qualitative data, interpreting numbers, customer experience, strategic risk, Grace LaConte

Quantitative Data: Show Me the Money

Let’s start by reviewing data that shows us the numbers.

Remember that scene from Jerry Maguire where Tom Cruise’s character yells “Show me the Money!”?

Yeah. That’s what quantitative data is all about. We look at things that can be easily measured and counted. It allows us to look at precise numbers and measurements of quantity.

To get this kind of data, we can use tools such as:

Hard-and-fast numbers allow us to evaluate a situation with very little bias. We can look at a business problem and predict the ways to achieve a better outcome in the future.

Here are some places where you can find quantitative data in your company.

1. Number of leads, conversions, and repeat sales

2. Number of customers scheduled for service

3. Amount of sales generated in a month, week, day

4. Amount of sales generated by customer type, service or product, and department

5. Error rates

6. Advertising/marketing campaign

7. E-mail bounce-back and open rates

8. Regular mail returns and forwards

9. Returned products/services

10. Number of customer referrals

11. Online ratings

12. Customer surveys

Surveys can be structured (which can evaluate quantity, time, money, frequency, and intensity) and unstructured (which capture people’s stories, examples, observations, and descriptions).

13. Employee surveys

Similar to the above:

14. Customer attrition rates

15. Staff turnover rates

Read more:  How to Estimate the Qualitative Loss From Staff Turnover

 

16. Defective products/services

17. Near-misses

18. Risk assessments

19. Internal audit results

20. Industry regulation checks

Regulatory bodies relating to healthcare in the In the United States include:

Key Questions for Quantitative Data

The main things to ask when looking at quantitative information involve digging deeper into the meaning behind the numbers.

Here are some questions you could ask to gain a better understanding of your company’s quantity results.

Find out more about this in How to Do a Year In Review

Evaluating the Results of Quantitative Data

Once you are familiar with the sources of measurable data in your company and how to collect this, the next step is to apply what you’ve found.

How can you apply measurable data to decision-making? Here are some ideas.

Notice that each of these is a metric — it shows movement, quality, or engagement.

In the next part of this series, I’ll explain where you can find Qualitative data — the experiences and emotions that occur in a business.

Interested in hearing how you can reverse staff turnover and increase your profit margins? Find out more here.

Grace LaConte is a Decision & Continuity Advisor who helps independent owners in manufacturing, B2B, and professional services to uncover hidden profit leaks and build stronger companies without burnout or added complexity. She uses proven frameworks and data-driven insights to improve cash flow, boost margins, and create lasting value. When not consulting, she develops practical tools that help owners protect their bottom line and grow businesses that last.

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