Why Digital Transformations Fail Summary

Why Digital Transformations Fail

The Surprising Disciplines of How to Take Off and Stay Ahead
by Tony Saldanha 2019 240 pages
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Key Takeaways

1. Digital transformation is critical for survival in the Fourth Industrial Revolution

Companies either transform or die in industrial revolutions.

The Fourth Industrial Revolution is characterized by the fusion of physical, digital, and biological worlds through technologies like AI, robotics, and the Internet of Things. This era demands digital transformation, which is the migration of enterprises from the Third to the Fourth Industrial Revolution. Organizations must adapt their products, operations, and business models to leverage digital technologies or risk obsolescence.

Disruption is inevitable , affecting industries from retail to manufacturing. The retail apocalypse, for example, has led to the closure of thousands of brick-and-mortar stores as e-commerce giants like Amazon dominate. Even traditionally stable industries are not immune, as demonstrated by the struggles of iconic brands like Sears and Toys "R" Us.

Opportunities abound for those who successfully transform. Digital technologies can create new business models, improve efficiency, and enhance customer experiences. Companies like Netflix have repeatedly disrupted their own business models, evolving from DVD rentals to streaming to content creation, demonstrating the power of continuous digital innovation.

2. Most digital transformations fail due to lack of discipline, not technology

The surprising answer to why digital transformations fail is a lack of discipline in defining and executing the right steps for digital transformations to take off and stay ahead.

Failure rate is high : Studies show that 70% of all digital transformations fail, despite the high stakes involved. This failure rate is not due to a lack of technological capabilities, but rather a lack of disciplined execution.

Discipline is key : Successful digital transformation requires a structured approach, similar to the checklist methodology used in the airline industry to improve safety. This involves:

  • Setting clear goals and metrics
  • Defining specific steps and milestones
  • Regularly assessing progress and adjusting course
  • Ensuring accountability at all levels of the organization

Learning from failures : Organizations must analyze why transformations fail and apply these lessons. Common pitfalls include:

  • Lack of clear leadership and ownership
  • Insufficient change management strategies
  • Failure to align transformation efforts with business goals
  • Underestimating the cultural changes required

3. The five stages of digital transformation: from foundation to living DNA

To be clear, our motivations for leading change don't need to be defensive. To the contrary, every change is an opportunity, and the world has never seen as much opportunity as that driven by the Fourth Industrial Revolution.

The transformation journey is broken down into five stages:

  1. Foundation: Basic automation and digitization of processes
  2. Siloed: Individual functions or units using disruptive technologies
  3. Partially Synchronized: Company-wide digital strategy, but incomplete execution
  4. Fully Synchronized: Enterprise-wide digital platform or new business model in place
  5. Living DNA: Perpetual state of innovation and adaptation

Progression through stages is not always linear. Organizations may need to leapfrog stages or combine efforts to accelerate transformation. The ultimate goal is to reach Stage 5, where digital capabilities and an agile, innovative culture become integral to the organization's DNA.

Assessing current state is crucial for determining the appropriate transformation strategy. Leaders must honestly evaluate their organization's digital maturity and tailor their approach accordingly, focusing on the disciplines required to move to the next stage.

4. Committed ownership and iterative execution are crucial for early-stage transformation

Digital is a relatively new and fast-changing area. It requires special engagement at the leadership level.

Committed ownership is essential for successful transformation. This involves:

  • Personal engagement from top leadership
  • Clear communication of the transformation vision
  • Active barrier-busting during execution
  • Developing digital literacy among leaders and board members

Iterative execution reduces risk and accelerates learning:

  • Break large projects into smaller, manageable chunks
  • Use agile methodologies like lean startup or design thinking
  • Create a portfolio of projects with varying risk levels
  • Establish "innovation velocity" as a key metric

Balancing speed and risk : Organizations must find ways to accelerate transformation while managing risk. This may involve:

  • Creating "cultural firewalls" to protect innovative projects
  • Establishing separate teams or units focused on disruptive innovation
  • Developing new reward systems that encourage smart risk-taking

5. Identifying digital leverage points and empowering disruptors drive siloed transformation

Digital leverage points are simply the best areas where digital technology can be leveraged.

Identifying leverage points involves:

  • Analyzing strategic strengths and opportunities
  • Understanding digital possibilities and limitations
  • Using creative processes like design thinking to generate ideas
  • Focusing on areas with the highest potential for disruption or value creation

Empowering disruptors requires:

  • Setting a compelling vision or "Massive Transformative Purpose" (MTP)
  • Providing air cover for risk-taking and experimentation
  • Demonstrating leadership commitment through personal involvement
  • Creating a pipeline of initial projects to build momentum

Balancing core and edge : Organizations must find ways to nurture disruptive initiatives while maintaining core operations. This may involve:

  • Creating separate innovation units or "edge organizations"
  • Developing new governance models that allow for greater autonomy
  • Establishing partnerships with startups or other external innovators

6. Effective change management and strategy sufficiency enable synchronized transformation

Work backward from change acceptance strategies toward change creation, not the other way around.

Effective change management involves:

  • Understanding the organization's change readiness and culture
  • Choosing appropriate change models (organic, edge, or inorganic)
  • Addressing the "frozen middle" of resistant managers
  • Creating new reward systems aligned with transformation goals

Strategy sufficiency ensures transformation efforts are comprehensive:

  • Develop a portfolio of initiatives with varying risk levels (e.g., 70-20-10 model)
  • Generate a sufficient volume of ideas through intrapreneurship programs
  • Balance incremental improvements with disruptive "moonshot" projects
  • Establish clear metrics for success beyond innovation theater

Overcoming resistance : Organizations must proactively address sources of resistance:

  • Fear of change and potential job losses
  • Inertia and complacency in successful business units
  • Misjudgment of the pace and impact of digital disruption

7. Digital reorganization and staying current are key to fully synchronized transformation

The piston-engine version of IT has reached an inflection point. It needs a consciously different engine, a totally new charter, and a new name—the digital resources function.

Digital reorganization involves:

  • Rethinking the role and structure of IT functions
  • Developing new digital capabilities across the organization
  • Creating more flexible technology platforms and architectures
  • Upgrading the vendor ecosystem to align with new digital needs

Staying current requires ongoing effort:

  • Creating executive learning opportunities
  • Partnering with venture capitalists and startups
  • Leveraging partners for education and insights
  • Opening up data and APIs to foster innovation
  • Enlisting tech-savvy employees as digital ambassadors

Balancing old and new : Organizations must find ways to leverage existing strengths while building new capabilities:

  • Retraining existing workforce for digital skills
  • Developing new policies for human-machine collaboration
  • Creating fluid organizational structures that can adapt to rapid change

8. Agile culture and risk sensing create a perpetual state of transformation

Culture eats strategy for breakfast (and apparently lunch, according to another quote). Whatever it consumes, the fact is that for an organization to digest digital transformation, there are three specific behaviors that will enable an agile culture necessary to create a living DNA of perpetual digital transformation: customer-focused innovation, an adaptive environment, and a shared common purpose.

Agile culture is characterized by:

  • Customer-focused innovation
  • Adaptive and flexible work environments
  • A shared sense of purpose and mission
  • Continuous learning and experimentation

Risk sensing involves:

  • Regularly assessing industry trends and disruptions
  • Monitoring customer needs and expectations
  • Evaluating the impact of new technologies on business models
  • Measuring digital investment and organizational readiness

Perpetual transformation becomes possible when:

  • Digital capabilities are embedded throughout the organization
  • Innovation and adaptation become second nature
  • The organization can quickly sense and respond to new opportunities and threats
  • There is a balance between stability and change, allowing for continuous evolution

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