Why the perception of digital transformation needs to change

According to the Management Consultancies Association (MCA), management consultancy has grown by an additional 7% over the last year, now being at the forefront of digital opportunities, with the sector worth an estimated £10.6bn. However, despite its exponential growth, recent research revealed that 79% of executives admitted they do not review internal processes before setting KPIs for a transformation process. This is supported by the fact an average of 84% of digital transformation strategies fail, due to lack of leadership and clear perception on purpose.

Because of this, the majority of transformation programs are at a great disadvantage from the start, with no clear direction or strategy, from both the business in hand and for the consultancy or contractor carrying out the work.

In turn, business leaders continue to fail to grasp a perception what digital transformation is, its purpose and how it can drive meaningful change.

This comes from short-sightedness. A belief that a transformation project is just that – a one time thing or ‘technology project’. In reality, business leaders need to change their perception of digital transformation, discarding their foggy understanding of its value or meaning, and replacing it with the concept of business evolution – a process that enables business leaders to constantly strive for meaningful change, with consistent, positive and measurable outcomes. Here’s why:

Focus on outcome, not process

The term ‘transformation’ in itself means to make a change and though change is incredibly valuable, there needs to be a concrete understanding as to what the outcome from that change should be.

Digital transformation churn: Why the digital transformation fail rate is so high

The digitisation of the global economy has had many effects on global enterprises but few are more significant than the overwhelming desire to undergo digital transformation. Modern companies are under tremendous pressure to undergo this process lest they be left in the past, but digital transformation failure rates have become a major problem. Read here

On average, 84% of digital transformation strategies fail, and although this will be the result of multiple different errors, for many it will be the failure to diagnose and understand the complex challenges faced by the organisation in hand. In understanding these challenges, you can focus on your perception of what the outcome should be, before honing in on the process.

Change your perception, question everything

Many organisations call on digital transformation for a single project, without understanding how to fully utilise the process to bring about transformative, long-term change.

To maximise transformation, businesses and leaders need to question everything – their operations, processes and current ways of working – to really understand what is and isn’t working, gaining a clear insight into what needs to be changed and why.

In understansding how damaging the phrase ‘but we’ve always worked this way’ can be, business leaders start to shift their perceptions and focus on what they want their business to look like and why. Business leaders believe conventional digital transformation is about technology – in replacing it with ‘outcome realisation’, they will understand it’s not just about digital. It’s about people, hearts and minds – everything.

Future growth

A core part of ‘outcome realisation’ is having objectives, goals and targets; knowing exactly what you want from transformation and change.

These goals – your outcomes – should be aligned with the future longevity of your business, its continued and successful operation and resulting growth.

The business leaders that try to uphold stagnant, unproductive processes are those more likely to impact the continued growth and development of their business. Those constantly moving forwards, evolving and questioning what isn’t working and why, are those with an admirable future in their hands.

Leadership in the age of disruption: How to rise to digital transformation

Brad Parks, VP of Business Development at Morpheus Data, looks at what it takes to be a leader in the age of disruption. Read here

For too long, business leaders have thought out ‘digital transformation’ as a complex term that is hard to understand and even harder to execute. Yet, the concept of evolution and fresh-thinking outcome realisation overcomes this, forcing leaders to really look at their business on a consistent basis, question everything, and deliver valuable outcomes with resulting growth.

Written by Alistair Sergeant, CEO of Equantiis

Editor's Choice

Editor's Choice consists of the best articles written by third parties and selected by our editors. You can contact us at timothy.adler at stubbenedge.com