The Stats Clinic

Here at HSL we have a lot of smart kinda-numerate people who have access to a lot of data. On a bad day, kinda-numerate includes myself, but in general I’m talking about scientists who have have done an introductory stats course, but not much else. When all you have is a t-test, suddenly everything looks like two groups of normally distributed numbers that you need to know how significantly different their means are.
While we have a pretty good cross-disciplinary setup here, the ease of calculating a mean here or a standard deviation there means that many scientists can’t resist a piece of the number crunching action. Then suddenly there’s an Excel monstrosity that nobody understands rearing its ugly head.
Management has enlightenedly decided to fund a stats clinic, so us number nerds can help out the rest of the lab without any paperwork overhead (which was the biggest reason to put off asking for help). They didn’t like my slogan, but hey, you can’t have everything.
I’m really interested to hear how other organisations deal with this issue. Let me know in the comments.

Leaves me bangin my head: I culdon’t do year-end stats this year ( I’ll have my revenge by April with my new computer P.S. Try automating Office ’07 Charting components. I still find that they produce better graphs than Google charts. Atleast, in a very very small rookie test I did.