The Structures That Can Support Your
Digital Journey
We
regularly hear that digitisation efforts have to be driven from the top. They
need management attention and an end-to-end plan that makes digital part of the
organisational DNA. But what this actually means is rarely articulated. The
structural arrangements companies make to digitise are as important as the
decision to follow a path of digitisation in the first place.
As
we discovered in interviews with executives at the forefront of the digital
journey for a recent research article, digitisation often starts in small
pockets, special teams or special units (often in IT departments, for better or
worse). But these efforts are unlikely to become part of the core business until
management sets some clear, high-level policies and structures (i.e. fully
connected to line management).
The
problem with budding digital projects is that they often lack legitimacy, power
and integration with the core business. Therefore, concrete strategic
commitments need to be made from the top that allow these pockets of growth to
scale and become part of the firm’s core operations.
If
we take e-books as an example, one of our interviewees from a large global
publishing house told us: “Publishers were not positive about e-books… They
didn’t think it was going to make them a lot of money, which it didn’t
initially.” More importantly, it wasn’t part of their scorecard and incentives.
It took substantial (widespread) changes in top management incentives and the
creation of a common policy on how to deal with agents and authors, for
electronic books to really take off in this organisation: “There was a certain
tipping point where they just started accepting this as another format.”
The
point is that digital changes can be disruptive internally, impacting in
fundamental ways how people interact and do their job. This will usually have
knock-on effects, with implications for various structures (incentives,
decision processes, linking mechanisms, customer policies), all of which need
to be examined and possibly modified.
The
evolution of digital structures
While
this example shows how top-down commitment enabled a digital initiative to
become part of the core business, our study also gave us an overall impression
of how digital structuring may proceed on the whole.
1.
Small is beautiful
As noted, these projects often start small. This can also mean that they may be numerous and eventually require consolidation.
As noted, these projects often start small. This can also mean that they may be numerous and eventually require consolidation.
2.
Centralisation
Eventually, some rationalisation or centralisation of things digital may be necessary. As one manager recounted: “There were a few teams in one of the product lines that did digital product development and technology. We had many different pieces, and they were all very small and they had no management with a digital focus. We centralised it in one big team.”
Eventually, some rationalisation or centralisation of things digital may be necessary. As one manager recounted: “There were a few teams in one of the product lines that did digital product development and technology. We had many different pieces, and they were all very small and they had no management with a digital focus. We centralised it in one big team.”
3.
Integration: Making it core
As single digital initiatives develop, scaling their impact requires integrating them back into the core business. However, this can be done in several ways. There is no single best way to integrate digital with the legacy business – it all depends on the context.
As single digital initiatives develop, scaling their impact requires integrating them back into the core business. However, this can be done in several ways. There is no single best way to integrate digital with the legacy business – it all depends on the context.
A. Legacy adopts digital
One path is for the core,
pre-existing business to simply pull in the digital business. If we return to
e-books, another interviewee told us that digital belonged to IT in the very
beginning: “Then we created a specialised e-book department with an e-book
salesperson, e-book production, e-book strategy.” Eventually, all of this work
was “decentralised” and placed within each of the respective (core or legacy)
publishing units: “The producer of print is now responsible for doing e-books
as well.”
B. Digital adopts legacy
Alternatively, the digital
business – which may be scaling rapidly – can become the central unit (or power
centre) and absorb parts of the legacy business. Ultimately, the adopting unit
may vary even within a business line. For example, one interviewee in magazine
publishing said that digital products at his firm started as a distinct business
entity with separate leadership, adding: “That’s now changed. These two spaces
are more and more consolidated and we have certain verticals where these things
come together again.” In the case of one brand, the legacy publisher is now in
charge of both print and digital, while for another brand, the digital business
director is helming both sides – a good example of how digital is growing
faster and is probably “more future-proof”, in the words of the interviewee.
4.
Matrix structures
Finally, in some situations, both units may be strong and viable on their own (at least for now). Some form of matrix structure may then be required to reduce redundancies and ensure idea and innovation sharing. This includes maintaining some central digital units (e.g. digital marketing, digital technology development), accessible to all.
Finally, in some situations, both units may be strong and viable on their own (at least for now). Some form of matrix structure may then be required to reduce redundancies and ensure idea and innovation sharing. This includes maintaining some central digital units (e.g. digital marketing, digital technology development), accessible to all.
While
not exhaustive, our interviews shone light on the possible paths organisations
can take on their digital journey to scale digital experiments and eventually
integrate them. The key is being flexible with structures and letting them
evolve to keep pace with the opportunity.
Making digital
initiatives part of the company operations is one thing. Making them part of
the culture is quite another.
Charles
Galunic,
INSEAD Professor of Organisational Behaviour | December 14, 2017
Read more at
https://knowledge.insead.edu/leadership-organisations/the-structures-that-can-support-your-digital-journey-7941#UyTj0K3HGf1BjLwD.99
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