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Linear Trendline Vs Common Sense
I need to know why the amount of workload this year is down 9% so far, but
the linear trend line is up. True, work has increased in recent months, but it is down for the fiscal year-to-date. The linear trend accounts for the recent increases, but not for the fact that the total amount of workload this year has declined when compared to the same time period last year. €˜Any thoughts? |
Linear Trendline Vs Common Sense
Douglas wrote on Thu, 7 Jun 2007 07:10:00 -0700:
DE I need to know why the amount of workload this year is down DE 9% so far, but the linear trend line is up. True, work has DE increased in recent months, but it is down for the fiscal DE year-to-date. The linear trend accounts for the recent DE increases, but not for the fact that the total amount of DE workload this year has declined when compared to the same DE time period last year. €˜Any thoughts? The trendline is a mathematical determination from the data and essentially there would be roughly as many values below as above the line, I guess. Perhaps a moving average might be more helpful to you. James Silverton Potomac, Maryland E-mail, with obvious alterations: not.jim.silverton.at.verizon.not |
Linear Trendline Vs Common Sense
If you now have so many orders that there is overtime to do them, is it any
help that tings was slow i january? If orders again are turning down in january, then I would say that linear is not the right thinking. Then You go to other matematical use. -- Jakob "James Silverton" skrev i melding ... Douglas wrote on Thu, 7 Jun 2007 07:10:00 -0700: DE I need to know why the amount of workload this year is down DE 9% so far, but the linear trend line is up. True, work has DE increased in recent months, but it is down for the fiscal DE year-to-date. The linear trend accounts for the recent DE increases, but not for the fact that the total amount of DE workload this year has declined when compared to the same DE time period last year. 'Any thoughts? The trendline is a mathematical determination from the data and essentially there would be roughly as many values below as above the line, I guess. Perhaps a moving average might be more helpful to you. James Silverton Potomac, Maryland E-mail, with obvious alterations: not.jim.silverton.at.verizon.not |
Linear Trendline Vs Common Sense
Linear trendlines shouldn't be used for this kind of analysis. If any
econometric or statistical analysis is going to be done, it needs to be done in a proper (and extremely time consuming) way. Just use your common sense. Your business intuition is probably going to be better than what any statistician tells you anyway. As for an explanation why the trend line is "up"... It could be because that for the last few years, there's been an increasing trend, which is why the trend line has a positive gradient. It's just even more reason not to use it for this kind of analysis. The trendline isn't very aptly named... It's just basically the best fit line to the data, which rarely (if ever) captures any sort of causal relationship. My guess (emphasize "GUESS") could be that you need to look into how efficient your work is. There could be a productivity/efficiency improvement from the last measurement date that explains the lower workload even though work has increased. "Douglas Eckert" wrote: I need to know why the amount of workload this year is down 9% so far, but the linear trend line is up. True, work has increased in recent months, but it is down for the fiscal year-to-date. The linear trend accounts for the recent increases, but not for the fact that the total amount of workload this year has declined when compared to the same time period last year. €˜Any thoughts? |
Linear Trendline Vs Common Sense
Thank you very much, Jakob Austgulen!
"Jakob Austgulen" wrote: If you now have so many orders that there is overtime to do them, is it any help that tings was slow i january? If orders again are turning down in january, then I would say that linear is not the right thinking. Then You go to other matematical use. -- Jakob "James Silverton" skrev i melding ... Douglas wrote on Thu, 7 Jun 2007 07:10:00 -0700: DE I need to know why the amount of workload this year is down DE 9% so far, but the linear trend line is up. True, work has DE increased in recent months, but it is down for the fiscal DE year-to-date. The linear trend accounts for the recent DE increases, but not for the fact that the total amount of DE workload this year has declined when compared to the same DE time period last year. 'Any thoughts? The trendline is a mathematical determination from the data and essentially there would be roughly as many values below as above the line, I guess. Perhaps a moving average might be more helpful to you. James Silverton Potomac, Maryland E-mail, with obvious alterations: not.jim.silverton.at.verizon.not |
Linear Trendline Vs Common Sense
Thank you very much, James Silverton!
"James Silverton" wrote: Douglas wrote on Thu, 7 Jun 2007 07:10:00 -0700: DE I need to know why the amount of workload this year is down DE 9% so far, but the linear trend line is up. True, work has DE increased in recent months, but it is down for the fiscal DE year-to-date. The linear trend accounts for the recent DE increases, but not for the fact that the total amount of DE workload this year has declined when compared to the same DE time period last year. €˜Any thoughts? The trendline is a mathematical determination from the data and essentially there would be roughly as many values below as above the line, I guess. Perhaps a moving average might be more helpful to you. James Silverton Potomac, Maryland E-mail, with obvious alterations: not.jim.silverton.at.verizon.not |
Linear Trendline Vs Common Sense
Thank you very much, Harimau!
"Harimau" wrote: Linear trendlines shouldn't be used for this kind of analysis. If any econometric or statistical analysis is going to be done, it needs to be done in a proper (and extremely time consuming) way. Just use your common sense. Your business intuition is probably going to be better than what any statistician tells you anyway. As for an explanation why the trend line is "up"... It could be because that for the last few years, there's been an increasing trend, which is why the trend line has a positive gradient. It's just even more reason not to use it for this kind of analysis. The trendline isn't very aptly named... It's just basically the best fit line to the data, which rarely (if ever) captures any sort of causal relationship. My guess (emphasize "GUESS") could be that you need to look into how efficient your work is. There could be a productivity/efficiency improvement from the last measurement date that explains the lower workload even though work has increased. "Douglas Eckert" wrote: I need to know why the amount of workload this year is down 9% so far, but the linear trend line is up. True, work has increased in recent months, but it is down for the fiscal year-to-date. The linear trend accounts for the recent increases, but not for the fact that the total amount of workload this year has declined when compared to the same time period last year. €˜Any thoughts? |
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