Leadership and Digital Transformation
In Digital Transformation, Innovation, Leadership, Strategy, Technology

Leadership’s Role in Digital Transformation

Do You Need to Hire a Head of Digital Transformation?

News Flash: The #1 thing leaders need to understand is that the Digital Transformation train left the station a few years ago. If you weren’t on board back then, you need to stop looking for the next train and rapidly go in search of building a rocket ship. Businesses have run out of time to embark on multi-year transformation projects – that window has closed. In the following text, I’ll provide you with 4 constructs to help you evolve your thinking around digital transformation.

Your business now operates as part of a global digital ecosystem, where leveling the playing field has become a digital impossibility. Playing for parity by traveling the traditional path of best practices ensures one thing; you will spend great amounts of time and money failing slowly, publicly, and painfully. The only chance businesses have at longevity, much less sustainability, is to stop trying to play catch-up and get out in front – fast.

The Holy Grail of enterprise sustainability is business model reimagination, and reinvention – not digital transformation – at least how many businesses attempt it. Even the swiftest of fast followers will struggle not to choke on the dust of first movers in today’s world.

If you’re stuck in the purgatory of a legacy-based business model, don’t transform – reinvent. Put another way, don’t copy – create. The business you’re in today will not be the business you in even a few years from now. If you don’t begin to reinvent and reimagine your business today, your future will be a bleak one.

Understanding the Role of a Digital Transformation Executive

Don’t chase category leaders – outsmart them and unlock hidden value they’ve yet to recognize. Please don’t attempt to compete with those who are more evolved, piggyback off of them, partner with them, engineer around them, on the move out in front of them. The magic happens when you compete on your terms and not simply cede opportunity to bigger competitors by playing according to their rules on their home court. Remember, bigger isn’t better – better is better. The following are four focus points that smart companies use to reframe their thinking around digital.

Focus Point #1: Rethink how you approach digital. Yes, all businesses need to be modernized to remain competitive, but launching a digital chat-bot, while not a bad thing, also won’t solve your problem. Stop thinking about managing the risk of technology, tools, and process improvement. Start thinking about opportunities based on insights, customers, markets, and business models. Beating your competition to the future will be accomplished by those companies with vision, talent, grit, purpose, agility, creativity, commitment, and determination – not just those organizations with bigger budgets.

Focus Point #2: Redefine your future and get there first – resist the temptation to chase others in pursuit of their future as already defined by them. This race you should be running is not so much against others as it is against yourself. Your organization must immediately stop processing with dominant logic and an institutionalized approach. It’s not enough to digitally literate; you must digitally reinvent. Stop thinking about a strategy refresh and start thinking about new business models, wire-frames, jump-starts. The first rule to surviving in a digital world is that action will consistently win against reaction. Smart companies are already cannibalizing aspects of their own business not only as a springboard to the future but to keep their more evolved competitors from doing the cannibalizing.

Focus Point #3: Reevaluate your talent. Smart companies are already doing two things that legacy-based companies are not. They are already retraining large portions of their workforce in next-generation competencies, and they are also making big talent upgrades by hiring an entirely different kind of leader. They are not filling current openings to maintain their business but hiring executives to reimagine the business and lead them into their redefined future. New thinking will not likely come from those who want to protect their creation but from those who want to engineer a new creation. Think next chapter vs. the last book.

Focus Point #4Reset the activity. Now that the thinking and planning have been done, it’s time to start doing. It’s the operationalizing of new behaviors by resetting and reshaping day-to-day activities that will cement change as the new norm. Again, innovation requires deviation from the norm in all areas, but mostly in what you do and how you do it.

The best companies don’t play catch-up – they leap-frog. This is the question every organization must answer… Are you going to act or react?

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