How to break through the gravitational pull of your legacy organization
Initial
successes in a digital transformation often break down over time. Digital
winners know what it takes to break through.
Legacy companies have made significant strides in digital innovation. You’d be hard-pressed to find a business that hasn’t launched an app, redesigned its website, piloted digital tools, or opened a Twitter account. Scaling all the benefits of digital is the next frontier, but it’s proving to be a significant barrier for many companies. While it’s possible to muscle your way through a single digital initiative, scaling them requires breaking through the gravitational pull that the legacy business exerts as it reverts to ways of working that have been successful for decades.
Breaking through that force field demands strength, conviction, and, in most cases, a trigger. CEOs need to create a sense of urgency, even fear, to spur their companies to embrace innovation and change at scale. Bosch CEO Volkmar Denner put it like this when he saw that his company faced a new level of competition: “Suddenly others are earning the money.” Denner initially invited the entire workforce to form “disruption discovery teams” to develop digital strategies that attacked the Bosch business model—and received 1,800 ideas in less than a week.1 Ideas are easy, but unless they address the core issues of the business, they often fail. Denner helped break through the old ways of doing business by institutionalizing these teams, which are now a core part of the Bosch training program and create a “disruption engine” that’s continually in motion.
So how do companies successfully break through the gravitational
pull of their legacy businesses? That struck us as the key issue to address in
a digital transformation. So we analyzed more than 50 case studies of companies
that have made significant strides in scaling their digital transformations for
our book Digital @ Scale.
We identified the following best practices:
1. Think
big.
One of the biggest culprits that causes regression to the old
ways of operating is incrementalism. When companies make only small changes,
they rarely develop enough momentum to break through legacy habits. Instead,
they need to be both bold and specific. President Kennedy didn’t say America
should join the space race. He challenged the country to send a man to the moon
and bring him back safely.
Have a bold plan: A holistic plan that scours the entire
enterprise for digital opportunities is critical—even if those opportunities
disrupt the legacy business. Instead of protecting established practices,
digital companies play offense, building new ecosystems, modernizing the
business architecture, and equipping the company for the challenges ahead. In
2009, Axel Springer CEO Mathias Döpfner articulated a crystal-clear ambition:
“In ten years, we want to generate 50 percent of our revenues and earnings from
digital.”2 With a clear goal, the company delivered. In 2016, digital media
represented 67 percent of the company’s revenues and 72 percent of EBITDA.
Put the customer first: Companies should start by asking, “What
would the optimal experience look like for our customers?” This point is
crucial because having the customer as the focus for action makes it difficult
for people to hide behind “That’s the way we’ve always done it.” One way to
mine for this knowledge is by studying customer journeys and identifying every
interaction and process aimed at customers.
Break down the functional silos: We’ve all heard this point
before, but it requires real emphasis because it both fundamentally changes the
organization and is usually met with resistance. Cross-functional teams only
work when led by individuals who are held accountable and are empowered to drive
the change and overcome institutional inertia. Some companies, for example,
establish Digital Competence Centers. The centers house the Digital
Transformation Office, which coordinates and manages the transformation, and
the Digital Expertise Lab, a center for new digital talent.
2.
Build an operating system for speed and reaction time.
To implement and scale their plans, companies need to embed the
change deep in their DNA by fundamentally changing how the company operates.
Recruit the team: If you have the same people working in your
business—even with advanced training—you should expect the same outcomes.
That’s why you need to inject talent at scale. A strong chief digital officer
(CDO), backed by the CEO and the board, is pivotal, but it’s only a start.
Companies need to find and bring in people with an array of mutually
reinforcing skills to work differently (agile coaches and scrum masters),
design differently (user experience and interface designers), and develop
differently (data scientists and IoT software developers).
Be fast, not perfect: Gaining sufficient change velocity
requires dramatically speeding up work metabolism. Waiting for enough analysis
or the perfect product allows legacy processes to kick in and take over. The
minimum viable product (MVP) approach, however, has teams create products with
only the minimum essential features and then address pain points as customers
encounter problems. MVP prevents expensive and protracted product development
based purely on assumptions and accelerates the market entry of new products.
Build to adjust: Any transformation will hit rough patches that
can derail it. That requires putting in place processes that can adapt to these
inevitable setbacks. Venture capitalists, for example, don’t wait for an annual
budgeting process to set priorities. Effective teams solve problems as they
arise based on clear goals and KPIs. Transformation teams are funded as they
meet milestones such as, for example, increasing the number of visitors to the
website. Instead of executing against a plan that envisions the solution,
effective transformers innovate, test, and improve solutions in real time. This
approach requires a digitally savvy CFO who is able to dynamically adjust
budgets.
3.
Create momentum through forceful scale.
To build real momentum, companies should scale the
transformation across the entire organization as quickly as possible.
Spread the change: Scaling a digital transformation requires
change on an enterprise level. We’ve seen successful companies bring in “shock
teams” of temporary digital specialists who rapidly digitize an initial set of
processes or establish new business models. Many companies focus on customer
journeys, digitizing and improving each customer touchpoint, prioritizing those
that can deliver the most value. While the primary focus of these teams is
getting things up and running, they focus on imparting digital skills and
establishing digital business units in the process. Crucially, these experts
also initiate the first wave of recruitment and onboarding of digital talent,
an effort that often stymies legacy companies with weak digital networks. After
a given period, usually six to nine months, the company’s in-house talent
gradually replaces the external experts. We call this approach Digital
Build-Operate-Transfer (DBOT).
Turn IT into a weapon: IT systems have been optimized for
stability, cost and efficiency, which is important to maintain the integrity of
a company’s most valuable assets: the billions of bits of data it has amassed
on customers, inventory, payroll, and more. They are too slow, however, for the
rapid, dynamic processing needed for a digital transformation and contribute to
many digital programs stalling out. One solution to build momentum is a two-speed
IT approach: a stable, cost-effective system for all non-customer-related
operations (back-end system) complemented with an agile, fast, often
cloud-based system that can work with all the processes that target the
customer (front-end system). An integration platform, or middleware, connects
these two IT worlds.
Find partners and build networks: Many established companies
prefer to bring all critical functions in-house, but that can take a lot of
time and require significant resources. We’ve found that the most successful
companies build networks of best-in-class outside specialists—even
competitors—who already have the required skills. A consortium of German
automakers, for example, formed a venture to buy Nokia’s digital mapping
business, giving the whole group the technology critical to self-driving cars
that none of them could have developed or acquired alone.4 With a clear goal,
the company delivered. In 2016, digital media represented 67 percent of the
company’s revenues and 72 percent of EBITDA. Other companies turn to start-ups
that can provide critical skills, help develop new business ideas, and even
become a valuable source for digital talent.
Starting a change program is not easy. But where the winners
really separate themselves from the rest is in capturing full value by driving
the digital transformation across the organization.
By Jürgen Meffert and Anand Swaminathan October 2017
https://www.mckinsey.com/business-functions/digital-mckinsey/our-insights/how-to-break-through-the-gravitational-pull-of-your-legacy-organization?cid=other-eml-alt-mip-mck-oth-1710
No comments:
Post a Comment