Measure and Inspire Your Organisation’s Success Through Data
How to Measure and Inspire Progress and Success at the Individual-, Group- and Organisational-Levels.
To successfully act, adapt and thrive, we can’t just react to problems as they occur — we need to predict and mitigate issues before they happen. We need to monitor patterns and forecast trends. We need to identify successful steps taken by others before us to inform our own decisions and surface the strongest possible solutions. And we need to do all of this accurately and at scale if we are to truly understand and address the wide-ranging needs of diverse populations during these unprecedented times.
That, in essence, is why data matters — and it has never been more critical than during the pandemic, when companies and their employees have faced unprecedented challenges, disruptions, and stress. During such times, the more nuanced our understanding of various situations, the more informed our decision-making processes can be and the better we can then subsequently identify solutions that will work not just for some, but for all.
In this practical session, you will hear from Matthew T. Riccio, PhD, VP of Research, Insights & Measurement and Head of Thrive Sciences at Thrive Global, as he shares real life examples of how data can be used to not only measure but inspire progress and galvanise change.
Speaker:
Matthew T. Riccio, MA, MPhil, PhD
VP of Research, Insights & Measurement ; Head of Thrive Sciences
Dr. Matthew T. Riccio, MA, MPhil, PhD, is the Head of Thrive Sciences and VP of Research, Insights, and Measurement at Thrive Global. Prior to joining Thrive Global, Matthew spent more than a decade in academia investigating the ways in which psychosocial, environmental and interpersonal factors can and do influence health-relevant behavior. His research has been published in numerous peer-reviewed scientific journals, including Annals of Behavioral Medicine, European Health Psychologist, International Journal of Psychology, Motivation and Emotion, Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, Social and Personality Psychology Compass, and more, with representative media coverage in Yahoo! Health, Cosmopolitan, Daily Mail, Refinery 29, MSN, Women’s Health, SELF Magazine, Huffington Post, and TEDxNewYork, among others.