Companies are eager and ready to invest in digital transformation strategies, but are they achieving results? The numbers so far indicate that the answer may be a resounding “no.”
Several studies report that up to 80% of transformation efforts fail to achieve their intended goals. Another study polled senior executives and found that 50% feel their company is not successfully executing digital strategies. What’s causing this?
Where companies tend to fall short of achieving their digital transformation goals is not realizing that the transformation requires “a new way of working” across the organization. This means:
True digital transformation requires an intense focus on executing the digital strategy and creating a culture that encourages, supports, and reinforces the “new way of working.”
Our research and experience in working with companies across industries has uncovered that there are four key elements for successful digital strategy execution: direction, competence, opportunity, and motivation.
Without direction, competence, and opportunity, leaders and employees can’t execute the digital strategy. Without motivation, they won’t execute the digital strategy.
Is your organization’s digital strategy execution achieving results? If not, ask yourself if your organization provides:
Culture can make or break your digital strategy. At ALULA, we define culture as patterns of behavior that have been either reinforced or discouraged by people, systems, or processes over time. No two cultures are the same, and an organization’s digital culture can be best defined by the people within it.
Our research indicates there are six qualities of a digital culture. Three of these qualities are foundational and must be present throughout the transformation: innovation, collaboration, and agility. To accelerate your digital transformation, the following three qualities must also exist in the culture: customer centricity, courage, and data acumen.
How do you know if you have cultural issues that may be placing your digital transformation initiative at risk? Here are some of the most common cultural challenges:
Digital transformation completely changes the way an organization does business. The shift involves new technology, revised processes, and new management systems, to name a few changes.
Technology strategy is relatively straightforward, but executing the strategy and creating a digital culture is more difficult. Helping everyone in the organization, from the C-suite to the frontline, work in a new way requires every employee to think and act differently. This requires new behaviors.
If you are starting your digital transformation journey, or if your transformation is under way and falling short, invest the time and focus on planning the strategy execution and examining your culture. Digital transformation is complex and requires a tremendous amount of change, energy, and courage.
Don’t become another statistic of a strategy that did not get the business results needed. Spend the time up front and throughout the journey to get it right.
Take our complimentary 10-question Digital Transformation Readiness Assessment. You’ll learn in five minutes how prepared your organization is for digital transformation.