Scanning and
Responding to Digital Change
Digitisation requires
organisations to keep a keen eye on the horizon and respond by bending their
processes.
Most
forms of disruption today are about digitisation. Netflix has revolutionised
the way people experience videos, providing non-linear viewing (unchaining us
from TV guides) and easy access (no DVD rentals). But there are a multitude of
ways digital products, data and processes can be used to create novelty and
value without necessarily “disrupting”.
It’s
worthwhile distinguishing digitisation from “disruption”— the latter is more
about radical upending of business models, often by people or companies well
outside of the targeted industry. However, digitisation includes how incumbent companies
alter and expand their value propositions by harnessing digital means.
Companies
can become more digital without necessarily overturning their business models.
But because digitisation can lead to disruptive movements, companies have
to be good at scanning the landscape for developments, absorbing them and
exploiting the opportunities.
Earlier,
we looked at the mindset needed for digitisation and the sort of people
organisations need for the journey. Based on insights we gleaned from
interviews with executives and managers at the forefront of digitisation, we
now turn to how organisations can track disruptive threats and respond to them.
Tracking
storms
Our
interviewees said that it is important to scan the environment both to
understand what is happening and to determine what is possible and most likely
to occur. In other words, scanning should involve present-and-future threat
combinations.
One
respondent told us, “We have a special team, called the ‘FinTech team’. They
are a small team but they are just scanning all over the world for
developments. They go to conferences, they go to Silicon Valley. They really
look at the disrupters that could potentially threaten us.”
The
same interviewee also explained that their company had a strategy review process
at the level of the CEO’s office. Its purpose is to constantly re-examine the
strategy, what is changing, what is working and what the firm has to adopt,
prioritising the biggest threats. The lesson here is that the scanning needs to
be linked up to strategic planning and senior decision makers.
Ideation
routines
Staying
current and attuned to the outside world is important, providing digitising
companies with a window into inspiration and potential threats. But perhaps the
core of digitisation is what happens next, which is ideation—the creative
process of moving from inspiration to innovation. This is because there is
no single blueprint for monetisation of digital opportunities—that is, no
“winning strategy” for all—but rather it is vital that companies construct
creative and collaborative processes to search these new spaces, recombine
existing resources and define their own digital path.
Rather
than a “lone genius” model where one “guru” comes up with the design of all
things digital, the required logic that emerged from organisations we
interviewed was recombinant thinking, or a creative collaboration of multiple
people or groups.
One
interviewee told us, “You don’t work that much anymore in a very hierarchical
manner. You’ve got your boss, you’re part of the team, but it’s more like an
agile organisation,” where people are part of project groups and they’re
measured on the success of those projects. But it doesn’t stop with
brainstorming.
The
ideation processes we came across were not like traditional R&D, which
typically focus on narrow exploration, as opposed to exploitation.
Organisations we spoke to combined exploration and exploitation, in other words
raw creativity, prototyping and testing. They were, nonetheless, systematic and
disciplined. Several insights emerged.
1.
Speedboats
Organisations, especially large ones, are often akin to supertankers. Steering them in a new direction can be laborious and time consuming. The emphasis here was on being nimble.
Organisations, especially large ones, are often akin to supertankers. Steering them in a new direction can be laborious and time consuming. The emphasis here was on being nimble.
“You
have a traditional organisation where other values, other goals are [living].
Then you need to be successful in the digital world, so instead of trying to
steer the tanker, you try to build a speedboat on the
side and have some impact on the core business as well…” said one interviewee.
side and have some impact on the core business as well…” said one interviewee.
The
respondent emphasised that the speedboat was not autonomous. It was clear that
its job was to race around the ocean to explore opportunities while staying in
communication with the tanker.
2.
Requisite variety
Small is beautiful but speedboats lack heft, i.e. resources and viewpoints. One manager we spoke to works on creating a mix of skills in innovation teams. He said that getting the right mix is essential. “We created a new advertising platform. We brought together seven or eight different departments over two to three months. It was a perfect example of how much power and intelligence you have when you create the right combination of people.”
Small is beautiful but speedboats lack heft, i.e. resources and viewpoints. One manager we spoke to works on creating a mix of skills in innovation teams. He said that getting the right mix is essential. “We created a new advertising platform. We brought together seven or eight different departments over two to three months. It was a perfect example of how much power and intelligence you have when you create the right combination of people.”
3.
Customers first pass: channeling customer insights
Design thinking is emerging as one of the popular innovation paradigms of our time, the cornerstone of which is taking the user’s point of view. It was no surprise, then, to find respondents emphasising the importance of really understanding the target audience for their products or services. “The reason [we do the investigative work] is to generate insights about customer needs and pain points in the certain market segment. The reason is also that we make sure that team members really understand with whom they are dealing, who is the customer.”
Design thinking is emerging as one of the popular innovation paradigms of our time, the cornerstone of which is taking the user’s point of view. It was no surprise, then, to find respondents emphasising the importance of really understanding the target audience for their products or services. “The reason [we do the investigative work] is to generate insights about customer needs and pain points in the certain market segment. The reason is also that we make sure that team members really understand with whom they are dealing, who is the customer.”
4.
Customers second pass: fast experiments
But to avoid getting caught up in guessing exactly what the customer wants and trying to merge many insights together, releasing a prototype (if possible) helps organisations to test their ideas quickly in the marketplace.
But to avoid getting caught up in guessing exactly what the customer wants and trying to merge many insights together, releasing a prototype (if possible) helps organisations to test their ideas quickly in the marketplace.
“Analysing
in advance doesn’t work anymore,” said one respondent. “We take a
rapid-prototyping ‘agile’ approach: Test with the consumer, or test with all
the methods that there are.”
To
sum up, decision makers need to consider whether—given their product, market
and context—to invest in a heavier front-end process (taking more time to
understand what the user really wants) or heavier back-end process
(prototyping, experimenting and testing). One size is unlikely to fit all.
5.
Funnelling ideas
Ideation systems, however, need to also have some internal mechanisms for funnelling ideas, which means starting wide and narrowing down ideas gradually through a critical process. One method we came across was particularly creative.
Ideation systems, however, need to also have some internal mechanisms for funnelling ideas, which means starting wide and narrowing down ideas gradually through a critical process. One method we came across was particularly creative.
In
one company, brainstorming involved 90 staff, split into three groups of 30.
The first group was called the “dreamers”. They came up with everything they
felt was interesting in digital and diversification. The second group was the
“realistic” one, typically comprised of those who preferred “grounded” ideas.
They picked up ideas from the dreamers and considered how realistic they were.
The third group was the “pessimistic” one. After the realistic group reduced
the number of ideas to around ten, the pessimists examined all of the downsides
and further narrowed the ideas down to three. “Thanks to this new move…I'm
getting more and more support from all the different stakeholders within the
company”, said one interviewee.
What
all of these insights have in common is that they involved many more people
than is typically the case in core innovation work. It brings us back to a
theme we have already mentioned and into which we will delve deeper at a later
stage: A collaborative workplace and strategy is an important part of
going digital. It has the added advantage of bringing more of the organisation
on board the digitisation initiatives.
Nonetheless,
organisations often face inner resistance to change. In our next article in this
series, we will explore how organisations at the vanguard of digitisation
tackle resistance within their ranks.
Charles Galunic, INSEAD Professor of Organisational Behaviour | September 22, 2017
Read more at
https://knowledge.insead.edu/leadership-organisations/scanning-and-responding-to-digital-change-7226#26RJBX73KOuIHciZ.99
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