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Neil Hoyne is Chief Strategist at Google and one of the sharpest voices on how companies actually make decisions when data, intuition, and organizational politics collide. He works at the intersection of strategy, analytics, and customer value, helping leaders think more clearly about what metrics mean, how to use them, and where they can quietly mislead. He is also the author of Converted and is currently working on a new book exploring how strategy frameworks can be applied to careers and life decisions.
Most leaders say they want to be data-driven. But in practice, many organizations still use data to confirm what they already believe, delay hard choices, or create the appearance of rigor without real clarity. At the same time, teams are drowning in more information than ever, while AI is making data gathering and analysis faster, cheaper, and easier to commoditize. The harder challenge now is not collecting data — it’s creating the conditions for better decisions.
In this episode, we explore how strategy should be defined in an uncertain world, why customer-centric thinking changes the role of marketing, and how leaders can avoid mistaking metrics for truth. Neil also unpacks customer lifetime value (CLV), the hidden ways metrics get manipulated, and why many companies ask the wrong question when they say they want more data. We also discuss what strategists should focus on as AI changes the work, and why the future advantage may come from decision frameworks, not dashboards.
In this episode we cover:
•Neil’s practical definition of strategy: using resources to stay alive today while improving your position for tomorrow
•Two definitions of marketing — product-centric vs customer-centric — and how the marketer’s role changes in each
•What CLV actually is, why it matters, and how short time horizons distort strategic choices
•Why common metrics (like conversions and engagement) often aren’t comparable across platforms
•The two questions leaders should ask about every KPI: how it’s calculated and how it could be manipulated
•Why smart leaders still ignore data, and how human psychology shapes decision-making
•How to define “how much data is enough” before a decision
•What chief strategy officers can do beyond the annual planning ritual
•Why AI strategy should start with your company’s core strategy — not the other way around
Chapters:
00:01 — Intro + Neil Hoyne
03:10 — The “Last Supper” question
08:10 — Misreading people’s career stories
10:10 — Strategy definition
16:40 — What marketing is
21:05 — Customer-centric thinking
24:10 — CLV basics
30:10 — Why metrics mislead
35:10 — How teams game KPIs
39:20 — Why leaders ignore data
52:00 — How much data is enough?
1:01:20 — Risk, speed, and decisions
1:07:20 — What strategy leaders should do
1:18:10 — New book on careers
1:25:10 — AI noise vs core strategy
1:30:20 — Closing
Additional Resources:
•Neil Hoyne on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/neilhoyne/
•Neil Hoyne website: https://neilhoyne.com/
•Converted (Neil Hoyne’s book): https://www.converted.us/
•Intro (booking 1:1 time; proceeds to charity): https://intro.co/ (search Neil Hoyne on Intro)
Thank you to our guest John Fallon. Thank you to our executive producer Zach Ness, our producer Nazanin Homayoun Jam and our editor James Pearce. If you enjoyed this episode, please follow, download, and subscribe. I’m your host, Kaihan Krippendorff—thank you for listening.
Follow us at outthinker.com/podcast
By Outthinker5
2828 ratings
Neil Hoyne is Chief Strategist at Google and one of the sharpest voices on how companies actually make decisions when data, intuition, and organizational politics collide. He works at the intersection of strategy, analytics, and customer value, helping leaders think more clearly about what metrics mean, how to use them, and where they can quietly mislead. He is also the author of Converted and is currently working on a new book exploring how strategy frameworks can be applied to careers and life decisions.
Most leaders say they want to be data-driven. But in practice, many organizations still use data to confirm what they already believe, delay hard choices, or create the appearance of rigor without real clarity. At the same time, teams are drowning in more information than ever, while AI is making data gathering and analysis faster, cheaper, and easier to commoditize. The harder challenge now is not collecting data — it’s creating the conditions for better decisions.
In this episode, we explore how strategy should be defined in an uncertain world, why customer-centric thinking changes the role of marketing, and how leaders can avoid mistaking metrics for truth. Neil also unpacks customer lifetime value (CLV), the hidden ways metrics get manipulated, and why many companies ask the wrong question when they say they want more data. We also discuss what strategists should focus on as AI changes the work, and why the future advantage may come from decision frameworks, not dashboards.
In this episode we cover:
•Neil’s practical definition of strategy: using resources to stay alive today while improving your position for tomorrow
•Two definitions of marketing — product-centric vs customer-centric — and how the marketer’s role changes in each
•What CLV actually is, why it matters, and how short time horizons distort strategic choices
•Why common metrics (like conversions and engagement) often aren’t comparable across platforms
•The two questions leaders should ask about every KPI: how it’s calculated and how it could be manipulated
•Why smart leaders still ignore data, and how human psychology shapes decision-making
•How to define “how much data is enough” before a decision
•What chief strategy officers can do beyond the annual planning ritual
•Why AI strategy should start with your company’s core strategy — not the other way around
Chapters:
00:01 — Intro + Neil Hoyne
03:10 — The “Last Supper” question
08:10 — Misreading people’s career stories
10:10 — Strategy definition
16:40 — What marketing is
21:05 — Customer-centric thinking
24:10 — CLV basics
30:10 — Why metrics mislead
35:10 — How teams game KPIs
39:20 — Why leaders ignore data
52:00 — How much data is enough?
1:01:20 — Risk, speed, and decisions
1:07:20 — What strategy leaders should do
1:18:10 — New book on careers
1:25:10 — AI noise vs core strategy
1:30:20 — Closing
Additional Resources:
•Neil Hoyne on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/neilhoyne/
•Neil Hoyne website: https://neilhoyne.com/
•Converted (Neil Hoyne’s book): https://www.converted.us/
•Intro (booking 1:1 time; proceeds to charity): https://intro.co/ (search Neil Hoyne on Intro)
Thank you to our guest John Fallon. Thank you to our executive producer Zach Ness, our producer Nazanin Homayoun Jam and our editor James Pearce. If you enjoyed this episode, please follow, download, and subscribe. I’m your host, Kaihan Krippendorff—thank you for listening.
Follow us at outthinker.com/podcast

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