How much would you pay to go to the moon?

How much would you pay to go to the moon?

If a ticket to the Moon existed today, how much would you pay for it? A few million dollars? Your entire savings? Or maybe just your curiosity?

As a data analyst, I find that question fascinating — not because I’m planning a lunar getaway (though it would be cool), but because it mirrors how we make decisions every day using data. Every “moon trip” moment — a career change, a bold project, a new tool — comes with a cost and an expected return.

In analytics, we talk about ROI (Return on Investment). But what about ROE — Return on Exploration? The value of pushing boundaries and testing the unknown. The people who explore data deeply are like the astronauts of the business world — diving into the unknown to bring back insights no one else could see.

Maybe the real answer isn’t in the price tag of the ticket, but in what we’re willing to risk for discovery. Because every analyst, in a way, is already reaching for the Moon — one dataset at a time.

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1 thought on “How much would you pay to go to the moon?”

  1. 🧹 Poem 2 — “The Language of Waste”

    > The street speaks —
    not in words, but in what we leave behind.
    A sachet whispers from the gutter,
    “I was useful once.”

    The wind becomes a messenger,
    carrying our careless stories to the drains.
    And when the rains arrive,
    they recite them — flooding our homes with our own verses.

    But there is another language —
    spoken by hands that sort, by hearts that care.
    The waste collector hums a hymn of duty,
    the sweeper writes poetry with her broom.

    Each clean space is a sentence of love,
    each bin filled is a paragraph of change.

    The language of waste is not decay —
    it is renewal, if we choose to speak it right.

    So let us learn this language again —
    Reuse, Restore, Respect.
    https://wa.me/qr/Y62HZUKUEGJAB1

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