Hubbard was a business analyst at Coopers & Lybrand[1] in 1988 after finishing his MBA at the University of South Dakota.[citation needed] He formed Hubbard Decision Research in 1998.[citation needed]
Views
He is critical of several popular methods and standards in risk management and decision making in organizations. He argues that extensive research in methods such as "risk matrices", the use of weighted scores in decision making, and expert intuition are inferior to certain quantitative methods.[2]
Hubbard is known for asserting that everything can be measured,[3] and that initial measurements are the most valuable as they reduce the greatest amounts of uncertainty.[citation needed]
Selected publications
Books
How to Measure Anything: Finding the Value of Intangibles in Business. Wiley. 2007. ISBN9781118983836.[4]
The Failure of Risk Management: Why It's Broken and How to Fix It. Wiley. 2009. ISBN9781119198536.[5]
Pulse: The New Science of Harnessing Internet Buzz to Track Threats and Opportunities. Wiley. 2011. ISBN9781119200956.
How to Measure Anything in Cybersecurity Risk. Wiley. 2016. ISBN9781119162315.[6]
Shepherd, K., Hubbard, D., Fenton, N., Claxton, K., Luedeling, E., & deLeeuw, J. (2015). Policy: Development goals should enable decision-making. Nature. July 2015. https://doi.org/10.1038/523152a[8]
Hubbard, D., & Samuelson, D. A. (2009). Analysis placebos: The difference between perceived and real benefits of risk analysis and decision models. Analytics Magazine. Fall 2009.
Hubbard, D., & Samuelson, D. A. (2009). Modeling Without Measurements: How the decision analysis culture's lack of empiricism reduces its effectiveness. OR/MS Today, 36(5), 26–31.
Hubbard, D. (2009). It's all an illusion: The perception that many things are immeasurable is common — it's also an illusion. ArchitectureBoston. 11(5)Archived 2018-11-20 at the Wayback Machine.
Hubbard, D. (2003). Expert analysis: An effective measure. CIO: ROIowa. August 2003.[9]
Mayor, T., & Hubbard, D. (2001). Case study:[10] Red light, green light. CIO Enterprise Magazine. October, 2001.
Worthen, B., & Hubbard., D. (2001). Case Study: Two Teams are better than one. CIO Enterprise Magazine. 2001.
Hubbard, D. W. (1997). Risk vs. return. InformationWeek, (637), 105.