Who is a Data Scientist?

Sponsored Post.By Initiative for Analytics and Data Science Standards (IADSS)

As the role of data and analytics is expanding very rapidly in creating new business models or changing existing ones, demand for analytics professionals is growing at an increasing rate. The world has witnessed an explosion in the number of people describing themselves as Data Scientists or Analytics Professionals. Yet in the majority of cases, such people do not fit the bill for an available role. This leaves employers, trainers, educational institutions, recruiters, and customers in a total state of confusion.

Help us collectively define industry standards. Survey takes 5-10 minutes and answers for the survey will be kept anonymous. The results will be published in KDnuggets. Survey link:**https://www.surveymonkey.co.uk/r/M5TML7P

Kaggle, as a platform for data science projects, gives insight about the rapid increase in number of analytics professionals. Number of Kaggle members exceeded 1 million with an annual growth over 100%.

Image 1: Number of Kaggle Members

Growing number of analytics professionals can also be observed from LinkedIn. A quick analysis on LinkedIn member base (targeting job titles and listed capabilities) shows a large number of professionals who define themselves in analytics or related spaces. Number of LinkedIn profiles with an analytics/ data science related title exceeds 1,6 million, while this number exceeds 12 million when analytics/ data science related capabilities are targeted. Top 100 analytics and data science LinkedIn groups have more than 2.3 million deduplicated members.

Image 2: LinkedIn Capability and Title Targeting

Almost every company in the industry has a unique way of defining roles and assigning titles in data analytics related positions. For any given role or title, such as ‘Data Scientist’ or ‘Data Mining Manager’, a variety of role definitions, expected hard and soft skills, expected level of experience, level in the organization, or career development plan including training can be seen. This creates inefficiencies and makes it difficult for companies to find the right match for a given position, leverage analytics skills effectively and retain talent. It also makes it hard for professionals to understand what a certain position requires and develop their own development plans. This has resulted in a chaotic market that is confusing to employers, academic and training institutions, recruiters, managers, customers, and candidates.

In order to address this, Initiative for Analytics and Data Science Standards(IADSS - www.iadss.org)has been launched and IADSS kicked-off a research study at global scale. The study aims to gain insight about the analytics profession in the industry and help support the development of standards regarding analytics role definitions, required skills and career advancement paths. This will help set some industry standards which in turn could support the healthy growth of the analytics market.

IADSS will also work to create awareness and promote standards globally. You are hereby invited to join IADSS’s discussion group :https://www.linkedin.com/groups/8679045/

If you want to be a part of this initiative and help us collectively define industry standards, take part in the research. Survey takes approximately 5-to-10 minutes and answers for the survey will be kept anonymous. More details are provided at the introduction pages of the survey.

Survey link:**https://www.surveymonkey.co.uk/r/M5TML7P