Digital Transformation: A Sense of Urgency Among Executives is a Common Missing Link
Danielle MacInnes @dsmacinnes, Unsplash.com

Digital Transformation: A Sense of Urgency Among Executives is a Common Missing Link

Digital transformation isn't just a buzzword. It's more than just going digital or migrating to the cloud or adopting the next shiny object at scale. It's also about modernization.

I recently spent time TechRepublic's Karen Roby to discuss the changes shaping digital transformation, including operational models and the modernization of infrastructure, work and mindsets. You can watch the video interview at the link below or read the transcript here.

Brian Solis: Every year I published (and I might retire it this year) The State of Digital Transformation for the last five years. And essentially what that research has shown is sort of this eventual but certainly sluggish migration from the digital transformation of, so for example, cloud, customer support, what have you, to a more enterprise-wide, cross-functional digital transformation, which is essentially saying, business optimization, business modernization, or change management. Because what the underlying forces behind, or at least the underlying opportunity behind, digital transformation is that this is an opportunity for the entire organization to not just modernize how it works on the inside or the back office, but also how it functions, how it feels, how it resonates with the front office, the market, the customer, the employee.

The digital in this is really about innovation. Some of the things that I'm not seeing are that prioritization and that sense of urgency around digital transformation to essentially make businesses more relevant or modern and more promising and ultimately profitable in a modern economy.

Karen Roby: Are companies still treating IT as a different department, or is it more integrated now?

Brian Solis: I think if I could add any value to the conversation, it would be this: Of course you have to manage infrastructure, of course you have to modernize infrastructure. At the same time, this is an opportunity to reimagine that infrastructure, not just from an agile mindset ... how we work or do DevOps, etc, but to look at why we're doing something. So this is IT splitting into two, which is not a new conversation, which is management, but also toward innovation.

So, essentially partnering with the rest of the organization from a business standpoint to understand their goals, understand the larger organizational goals, and then make technology investments in all of the apps and services necessary for those to run in an optimal way to help enable those goals. Essentially, you're adding more value and, of course, more pressure. But more value to the IT organization as a whole. So the CIO role or whatever it emerges to be, whether it's innovation, digital, it becomes much more of an enablement solution to help the business use technology in ways that are going to help it operate, not just at scale, but faster for an on-demand economy, for a connected customer, for a connected employee at the speed, essentially, of how everything's evolving.

Karen Roby: What are some of the most important tips you would pass on to a CEO about things they need to be doing to move forwardf?

Brian Solis: As that old saying, I think it's Stephen Covey, "Start with the end in mind." I think a lot of times leadership gets in its own way because it's bringing to that question that you just asked a whole bunch of legacy, a whole bunch of cognitive biases and essentially a whole bunch of experiences that are kind of working against us right now. What that end-in-mind looks like—and this is where I see digital transformation completely thrive—is let's not just talk about cloud or mobile or conversational interfaces or AI or chatbots. Let's look at how the customer's changing, what their expectations are, what their behaviors are, what they look at as sort of the ideal standard for engagement experiences, customer experiences, and reverse-engineer that. We're giving all of those investments a sense of purpose.

For example, we could look at what customers expect, what they love, what they're doing, and see all kinds of gaps that we're missing today, and where you can fill those gaps. And then we can also study the market innovators and see where we're also missing opportunities and we can prioritize those in terms of a roadmap. It's essentially IT and business groups coming together for a much more cross-functional digital transformation. So cloud, mobile, dev ops, all of those things, hugely urgent, but we just give it a sense of direction and purpose.

And by the way, that's just one of the ways that answered the question. We can also look at the employee experience as well, as they become more connected, more distracted, so that we can help them be more productive and work with more purpose

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Karen Roby: Are CEOs and other C-suite members as concerned about privacy and security as they should be?

Brian Solis: It's a good question because there are two answers to it. One is, if you're regulated, you're talking about it quite a bit; if you're not, it's almost like an uh-oh moment. If you're not, it's almost like an uh-oh moment. I always talk about change is the "aha," like, "we need to do this, what if?" and then, "Uh-oh, we just had a breach, and now we need to do this." And oftentimes it's the latter.

I do think if we're looking at it from the customer perspective—and privacy and security are paramount to them—and if any event happens, we're going to see this type of churn or this type of loss in brand engagement or loyalty or conversions or sales. However, you want to put a metric or a series of metrics to it, we can change the conversation much more proactively because it's certainly not that way now. It's just sort of a check box. But I think the underlying foundation for what it takes to breach or what it takes to have that event is easy across multiple fronts. And so it just becomes part of the sense of urgency around digital transformation that we have to pay attention to, part of a series of boxes, by the way.

Karen Roby: When it comes to digital transformation, what will our conversation be centered around a couple of years from now?

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Brian Solis: I think it's going to center around new operational models within the organization. I don't know how sexy that is, but I tell you, we need to work differently, right? So the infamous silos that we've talked about an enterprise for forever have to break down, and the only way they're going to break down is if we can force-create new models.

To give you an example, in a year from now, we'll probably see much more data-centered models where marketing and growth and customer experience are actually now sitting together as part of one function. They might report up to a different type of role, whether it's still the same as CDO or CMO or CGO for growth. We're going to see these models start to emerge in order to make much more real-time and even predictive analytics operationalized across the customer experience, across the customer journey, and even eventually in the employee journey. I think that's where we'll really start to see the conversation a year from now. Still around growth and then forced optimization and forced modeling around that growth.

Brian Solis, Digital Analyst, Author, Keynote Speaker

Brian Solis is world-renowned digital analyst and futurist. He is also a sought-after keynote speaker and an 8x best-selling author. In his new book, Lifescale: How to live a more creative, productive and happy life, Brian explores how to be more creative in a world of digital distractions. His previous books, X: The Experience When Business Meets Design and What’s the Future of Business explore the future of customer and user experience design and modernizing customer engagement in moments of truth.

Brian's research covers digital transformation, innovation and disruption, experience and service design, CX, and culture change.

Invite him to speak at your next event or bring him in to your organization to challenge and motivate colleagues and executives.

This story originally appeared on Techrepublic and ZDNet.


Paul Greenland

Chief Marketing Officer, Bruviti AI

4y

Good insights here. I especially agree with the points on customer journey and think the employee journey plays a crucial role too.

Peter Abraham

Co-founder, Author, Practitioner - Business Agility, Digital Marketing & Digital Transformation, Consultant, Strategist, M&A PE advisor

4y

Couldn't agree more on your points Brian. To summarise 2 key ones you highlighted for me are: 1. Profitability which falls out of relevancy...which is linked with... 2. Starting with the end in mind - far too often it's a tech driven solution not a customer/user one. Lots of companies still stuck in digitalisation not true transformation where they've really thought through how to change more than one customer pain point...because it requires strategy not tactics and there's currently a lot of short termism... just listen out for the phrase 'quick wins'. Thanks for sharing your viewpoint.

Vicky Day (née Stone)

Continuous Improvement Practitioner | Passionate about #LifelongLearning #FutureOfWork #DistributedWork #WorkFromAnywhere #AsynchronousWork

4y

Declan Cameron Claire Goulding Frances Eames - interesting perspective

Rich Jones

My Mission: Inspiring credit unions and leaders to transform into being better servants for their members, employees, and communities.

4y

I think a lot of CEOs actually think they are "digitally transforming." Branches are adding ITMs, IT is improving their online and mobile banking efforts, marketing is doing email, Google ads, and inbound marketing, lending is moving more loans through the online loan origination systems, and on and on... But here's the point, all of these siloed efforts are not coordinated or in sync. To become truly transformed, it takes an organizational-wide strategy and implementation plan directed by a single strategic leader. All efforts across all silos must be in sync and aligned.

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