A 10-Point Framework for the
Digital Journey
Digitisation is here to stay so
organisations should consider treating it as a long-term investment.
In the near
future, it may be difficult to imagine a company not involved in some way in digitisation.
While Uber, Amazon and Netflix grab headlines for their growth in the platform
economy, traditional companies are also digitising. UPS uses smart routing
devices to trim millions of miles on their delivery routes. Caterpillar now
equips its tractors and diggers with internet-enabled sensors that provide data
to customers and itself for smarter maintenance and performance.
The new evolving
ecosystem of mobile computing, interactivity and data gathering presents an
opportunity to craft new value propositions. This is just as well since the era
of “easy” global growth becomes less likely to continue. While population
increase and mass consumer markets gave traditional businesses opportunities to
grow in the 20th century, the wave of the future is more likely to centre on
creative recombinations of technology and people, something digitisation
encapsulates.
Management waves
and new technologies have come and gone before, from cassette tapes and fax
machines to business process reengineering and Six Sigma, which makes it easy
to dismiss digitisation as a fad. But executives we recently interviewed for a
research article share a belief that despite the growing access to computers
and data over previous decades, digitisation is just starting. The managers and
leaders we interviewed were actively involved in shaping the digital future of
media companies (books, music and television). We also spoke to managers in
banking, ship building, retail and consulting to understand more from companies
where the product is less likely to be digitised.
While this work is
ongoing, below is the first of several instalments explaining the framework we
see emerging: 10 checkpoints on the digital journey that companies face. In
later articles, we will expand on these points, which include skills and roles,
structures and processes, and cultural aspects. We will start and end with
cultural aspects, specifically checkpoint one, the mindset shift.
Mindset shift
While companies
need to respond to this new reality seriously, there is no recipe for
transformation. “Going digital” or “digitisation” is often characterised as a
transformation, suggesting that organisations embark on a
caterpillar-to-butterfly metamorphosis with a clear start and finish and emerge
ready to take flight as digital leaders.
The
lessons from companies well down the road of digitisation show that framing it
as a journey is a better starting point. Our study revealed the issue of mindset
as the first of 10 dimensions companies would do well to consider throughout
this journey. Interviewees for our study were willing to experiment and start
early, iterate and grow in capabilities and know-how, which are important
ingredients for any organisation looking to adapt to a fast-moving environment.
According to a
theory of organisational behaviour called “absorptive capacity”, companies who
amass foundational knowledge, skills and ideas build the capacity to absorb new
ideas faster. Absorptive capacity is defined as a company’s ability to
recognise the value of new information, assimilate it and apply it to
commercial ends. Absorptive capacity depends on prior knowledge, because
knowledge is cumulative. In the same way a student doesn’t go from learning
simple algebra to doing advanced calculus overnight, organisations can’t run
before they can walk. In short, they don’t just become digital by buying or
creating a new technology; they build ongoing capabilities and knowledge over
time.
It’s not too late,
or too early
An interviewee
from the book industry told us that “we’ve been producing e-books since 2000,
although we didn’t sell many of them. But it was a mini example of the whole
value chain which we looked at in more depth later. Getting the rights from
authors and agents, technically producing the e-books from today’s perspective
through many aggregators and vendors…was like a preparation phase for the
business which kicked off in about 2009.”
The good news from
this example is that it’s not too late, or indeed too early, to get involved.
For the company above, its earliest foray into e-books was not a commercial
success, but it was an invaluable learning process and set it up for the e-book
wave.
It’s not about
technology
It’s also
important to frame digitisation as being less about computing-based
efficiencies than about organisational effectiveness. Companies are fairly
confident that the software infrastructure will exist for them to create
platforms and gather data. What is most important is understanding the
potential of technological developments to shape consumer experiences.
One participant
told us that, “you have to digital define the way we interact, probably the way
we live in many areas. So it’s much further reaching than it was in the past.
Now it’s starting to change…business models. It might change the overall user
experience…I’m thinking a lot about how will people interact, or how will they
consume information.”
The processes
organisations should adopt to become digital are not necessarily themselves
“digital”. Technology is important but it’s not the essential component.
Our interviewees
gave us the sense that they were overwhelmed with data, not least because data
have become so fine-grained and instant. Acting on constant feedback and
insights, but without jumping at every data point, will be crucial to
leveraging data effectively. In my next article, I will expand on how
organisations can leverage these bigger analytics to derive larger meaning and
what skillsets organisations will need to use such tools effectively. As we
learnt from those who see digitisation as a journey, the focus today is less on
data and storage than on analysis and ideas.
Charles Galunic | August 2, 2017
Read more at
https://knowledge.insead.edu/leadership-organisations/a-10-point-framework-for-the-digital-journey-6801#hjbE5Wz7MCv0Fv5T.99
1 comment:
True. Digitization is necessary but not mandatory in many businesses.
Post a Comment