The term “digital transformation” never should’ve been a thing, at least not on its own. It should’ve been expected as part of any proper offering, and to the degree that no-one ever needed to raise it as a concern. Much like buying an automobile –nobody has ever seriously asked, “Does it come with brakes?” I really don’t want to phrase the question as “Who’s to blame?,” but I recognize I run the risk of sounding like it. I think it’s a necessary exercise to determine where the opportunities got missed and which roles missed them. Self-reflection is not often a 100% positive experience, but it’s critical for growth, whether personal or organizational.
Let’s start with a universal truth: Change begets change. People, companies, celestial bodies, we all respond to inertia. We maintain our trajectory until acted upon by some outside force. To those individuals who assert “I am the outside force!”, even you were moved to action by inspiration, one of the greatest forces of all.
An organization decides it’s time to Do Something. Maybe acquire a new ERP or adopt the latest version of the office productivity software. Vendors are asked to submit proposals and present their platforms, and one is finally selected. The pricing is determined to be more than whatever they’re doing now - . especially when that ‘whatever’ is nothing. The CFO is concerned – are the cash layouts going to be greater than the realized value? Will we see net gains from this, including whatever efforts are required to launch and adopt?
So we try to answer the CFO’s concern for the sake of moving the project forward. The vendor pricing is based on a reasonably thorough market analysis, including the estimated time savings for whatever productivity gains are to be created. Data to support a presentation of “Over the next 3years, because we’re saving each employee X% of their time, and they cost you roughly $Y” is collated, filtered, and put into a chart, and the CFO is eventually convinced. Contracts are signed, project managers assigned, and the launch is underway.
In the subsequent three years, did the platform create the change? Were the advantages created? Maybe, maybe not. But it’s a bit of a mystery, one that many organizations aren’t equipped to solve. And did the CFO ever go back and ask the question? Did the project sponsor follow the results? Did the vendor check-in on the company’s progress? Did the company transform?
Digital transformation is typically defined as having created, changed, accelerated, or retired processes through the implementation of technology. Generative AI, co-authoring, workflow automation… all of these tools that are meant to enable businesses to be more productive and uncover revenue, but few organizations are able to quantify, let alone visualize in real-time, what their teams and customers are doing.
Altiam Digital has teams ready to help you truly understand your business processes, where they are, who participates, what tools are required, and how those processes change over time. And the next time your company is anticipating change, or creating it from inspiration, you’ll never have to ask, “How do we know we improved?”
Explore Altiam Digital Services.