moneyball
Collocations
4ADJ.
all, enabling
VERB + MONEYBALL
shot, work
MONEYBALL + NOUN
baseball, business, formula, spreadsheets
PREP.
after, in
Definitions
noun
Baseball management relying on sabermetrics.
Sure, the Florida Marlins and some others have a shot, but the “Moneyball” approach — using spreadsheets and unconventional thinking to fell baseball’s rich Goliaths — seems to have been co-opted by the big guys themselves.
Sure, statistical analysis has changed baseball's front offices for the better. A little. But most things haven't changed. The Red Sox version of Moneyball, after all, includes lots and lots of money, and there's nothing new there.
The application of advanced analytics to any domain in order to improve outcomes.
Campaigns are spending a lot of money, but they are not playing Moneyball.
The technical savvy on display was enough to show any guest that there’s more—a lot more—to the hotel business than the front desk and housekeeping. As host Wapner said, “It’s moneyball for hotels.”
noun
Alternative letter-case form of Moneyball.
[Ben] Waber portrays the work as “moneyball” for business, enabling any organization to manage its workers like a sports team based on measures that reveal how people move through the day, with whom they interact, their tone of voice, if they “lean in” to listen, their position in the social network across a variety of office situations, and much more, all of it to produce forty separate measures that are then integrated with a “business metric dashboard.”
Thesaurus
Synonyms
Antonyms
Idioms & Phrases
Example Bank
4Sure, the Florida Marlins and some others have a shot, but the “Moneyball” approach — using spreadsheets and unconventional thinking to fell baseball’s rich Goliaths — seems to have been co-opted by t
WiktionarySure, statistical analysis has changed baseball's front offices for the better. A little. But most things haven't changed. The Red Sox version of Moneyball, after all, includes lots and lots of money,
WiktionaryThe moneyball formula in baseball—replacing scouts’ traditional beliefs and biases about players with data-intensive studies of what skills actually contribute most to winning—is just as applicable to
Wiktionary[Ben] Waber portrays the work as “moneyball” for business, enabling any organization to manage its workers like a sports team based on measures that reveal how people move through the day, with whom t
Wiktionary