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Digital Transformation Strategy – too big and hairy for IT alone

Businesses around the world are looking to seize opportunities that the digital era brings by forming a digital transformation strategy. Online communities offer new potential to create wealth. But how do enterprises harness technologies like big data and the Internet of Things (IoT) to turn data into sustainable value for your business?

The answer lies in taking a step further back in the journey to a digital future.  contributors to digital business success like data and tech tools only bring real value to enterprises when they help to orchestrate business models that are themselves well-thought through.  Considering IT changes without first re-visiting the design and fit of business models can result in limited returns from investments in IT. 

‘A business model determines how the created customer value of an enterprise is converted into value for shareholders.  The mechanism that discharges this function is sometimes called the ECONOMIC ENGINE, but fundamentally it is about people, process, technology and data.  Central to the success of both the business model and the operation of an economic engine to create wealth is a digital transformation strategy that orchestrates outcomes.’

Nick Lawrie, CEO, NDMC Consulting

When Chief Information Officers or newly appointed Digital Directors get handed the task of ‘making a digital transformation work’ it can prove to be a poisoned chalice.  Ultimately, it’s the CEO and not IT leaders that have the biggest say in what business models should apply to an enterprise, and how best to orchestrate them.

The end-game for CEOs is to create a digital transformation strategy.   Through this initiative, the prime outcome forge an effective digital interface with customers, suppliers and partners.  Within this same ecosystem expect to see technology building blocks to automate business processes, although a fundamental requirement of ecosystems is to make back-office processes more transparent.  Companies like Amazon are demonstrating the effectiveness of built-for-purpose digital platforms to pass over data entry duties to customers, removing many of the back-room processes that traditional suppliers continue to fulfill (unsurprisingly, Amazon doesn’t use Salesforce.com to manage its CRM; its own customer ecosystem removes the need for sales teams to key-fill data). 

One of the challenges CEOs face is understanding the complexities of modern technology, not just in appreciating the applicability of technology for their business models, but during the design and deployment phase when it’s so important that ‘the business’ drives ‘IT’.

This is driving demand for a new kind of agile Digital Platform development tool-set that removes the technical barriers and risks to authoring the kind of Digital Ecosystem that can fully orchestrate a business model.

Some Facts About Digital Transformation

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88% of businesses say they are already under-going a digital transformation

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On average middle-managers spend a quarter of their time searching for information... only to find that 50% of the data they find has no value

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47% of job categories may be taken over by machines in the next two decades.

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85% of businesses believe that cloud technology will transform their business or industry

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On average over 60% of enterprise budget is spent on 'keeping the lights on' technology

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40% of business managers cite a lack of urgency in the company as the biggest barrier to digital transformation

Source:

1. Altimeter Group Digital Transformation Survey
2. University of Oxford
3. Gartner (2112)
4. Gartner (2112)
5. Oxford Economics and SAP (2012)
6. MIT Sloan Mgmt. Review

What form does the software underpinning a digital transformation take?

There are some obvious features to be found in the software needed to support a digital transformation strategy.  Here we describe them.  

Remove coding, running large IT teams, gluing technology together

Platforms need a unifying codeless ‘building block’ approach to development that’s fast and affordable; so you can make mistakes and ‘fail fast’

Harvest your existing data assets – and CLEANSE them to make them useful

Fully leverages your existing data assets and makes light work of cleansing data when you start to put it to work!

Easy to use and produces user friendly (iterative) outcomes on any platform

Modern look and feel – Nobody wants to struggle with old fashioned User Interfaces that people can only access when they’re at their desk’

Brings access to the latest tech innovations

You’d expect to leverage big data, artificial intelligence, IoT, data visualizations, software robots…!

‘Enterprise ready’

It will be running business critical apps so it needs to be resilient, scalable and ultra secure – and it needs to be on the cloud!

‘IT department friendly’

Easy to deploy, easy to learn and use, not at risk of creating legacy issues down the line – even better if your IT team trusted it and liked using it!

Where do CEOs start on their digital transformation? One might argue that it begins with another look at the current business model. Is the incumbent business model maximizing returns to shareholders from the customer value being generated by the enterprise? Furthermore, is the customer value sufficient to keep the enterprise competitive?

 One challenge is working out how to articulate the business model into outcomes, capabilities, processes and mechanisms. One of the things the team at Newton Day helps with are Sprint Workshop programs to get through this ‘recognition of needs’ phase as expediently as possible without compromising on accuracy and detail.  It’s essential that enterprises really fundamentally understand who their customers are, what they value and what it takes to deliver results.

Next, a project team and plan has to be constructed..  This should comprise of a blended team of organizational design, HR, risk, legal, IT, marketing, analyst and program management experts.  Whether these individuals are contracted in, or are assigned from existing resources, it’s better to measure their contribution as a team and reward it.  In my opinion, the best governance model for digital platform projects is to have a regular Project Leadership Group (PLG) of senior execs reporting directly into the board and then support this with a Project Steering Group (PSG).

Once this stage is complete, the work to develop the technology ecosystem begins.  This starts with stakeholder workshops and normally, having mapped out the bigger game plan,  projects focus on delivering a point of detail; an aspect of the current business model that can be improved that is seen to be a quick win.  Gaining early results gives everyone inside and outside the project team confidence in the value of the program.

Now, back to the original point: Can a business expect to design, deploy and run a digital transformation strategy without the CEO leading it?  Or, put another way, would a CEO not want to be leading such a strategy that will be the source of the enterprises income in future years?  I would argue not.

 

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