Ventiv Technology

The Three D's of Digital Transformation - Demand, Delivery, Disruption

Ventiv Resource Library

Issue link: https://ventiv.uberflip.com/i/1473696

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 4 of 13

Numerous studies have identified some of the benefits of digital transformation: The Impediment to Change Change is always difficult. And digital transformation can be hard to "get it right". It represents a radical rethinking of how people, processes and technology fundamentally change the operations -- and overall performance -- of a company. Unfortunately, so many businesses focus on just the technology -- the shiny new object in the room. Technology can do amazing things. Just look at the growing number of new analytic and automation tools that are gaining prominence in industries across the globe -- Artificial intelligence (AI)… Robotics…Machine Learning (ML)…Cognitive Computing. Technology is great. But digital transformation is bigger than that. It's also people and processes. George Westerman, principal research scientist for workforce learning in MIT's Abdul Latif Jameel World Education Lab summed it up nicely. "Unless organizations change, the technology really does nothing for the business. Digital transformation is less of a digital problem than it is a transformation problem. It's a leadership problem for envisioning and driving change." 81% of digitally mature companies cite innovation as a top organization strength compared to just 10% from early-stage digital adopters 84% of business executives say that new business opportunities have emerged as their companies make digital transformations 43% of highly digital mature companies report significantly higher net profit margins than industry averages. (Deloitte) 2,300% higher rate of acquiring new customers among businesses who utilize a data-driven focus, versus those who do not (Forbes) The top three benefits of digital transformation include improved operational efficiencies, the ability to meet changing customer expectations, and improving the quality of new products (PTC). Based on these statistics, one could argue the Gene Kranz- attributed quote could be adjusted to say, "Failure to Transform (Digitally) is Not an Option". We have identified "three D's" in the digital transformation movement: demand, delivery, and disruption. We discuss all three in this paper. Consumer Demand COVID-19 is often singled out as the main reason for accelerating the speed of adoption. But then, what was the true catalyst for digital transformation? Quite simply, it's the customer. Gone are the days of selling products and services. More and more companies are adopting a customer-centric model into their operations. This puts the customer at center stage in today's "constantly connected" universe. DEMAND, DELIVERY, DISRUPTION | 3

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of Ventiv Technology - The Three D's of Digital Transformation - Demand, Delivery, Disruption