The four-level framework — data, information, knowledge, wisdom — within which Meeker operates with authority at the middle levels and explicitly marks the boundary of what quantitative analysis can achieve at the top.
The data hierarchy runs from data to information to knowledge to wisdom. Meeker operates at the second and third levels with authority that three decades of practice have earned. Information: the organization of raw data into trends, comparisons, trajectories. Knowledge: the interpretation of those trends through frameworks of understanding refined across multiple technology cycles. The fourth level — wisdom, the application of knowledge with judgment about what it means and what it demands — is a level that Meeker's framework approaches but does not claim to occupy. Wisdom requires something the data does not provide: a position on what matters. The data can show that AI adoption is accelerating; wisdom asks whether the acceleration is desirable. The data can show that productivity is increasing; wisdom asks whether the increased productivity is producing work worth doing. These are not questions quantitative analysis can answer, because answering them requires not data but values.