Prepare to Succee

Driving Digital at the Speed of Expectation

Effectively leading through digital transformation begins not with technology, but with understanding the consumer side of digital.
Next Article
Driving Digital at the Speed of Expectation
Image credit: CBS Photo Archive | Getty Images
6 min read
Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

Ever wonder why the term “digital” has become one of the biggest technology buzzwords? After all, we’ve had digital technology for over a half century, since the first commercially available computer correctly predicted that Eisenhower would win a landslide victory in the 1952 presidential election. Since then, we’ve been on a digital transformation journey that has fueled nearly every advancement in modern history.

So, why the renewed fascination with digital transformation?

To answer this, we must look beyond technology and understand the fundamental shift in consumer attitudes and behaviors that have accelerated technology adoption and given rise to a powerful new force: the speed of expectation. Only by understanding the consumer side of digital can we truly appreciate the groundbreaking implications of the digital economy and the tools, strategies and mindset required to lead it.

So, what exactly is “digital” anyway?

Unlike previous advancements where a singular invention, like electricity, brought about radical change, today’s digital revolution is characterized by a fusion of technologies that include social, mobile, cloud, internet of things (IoT), Artificial Intelligence (AI), Machine Learning (ML) and a slew of others. By themselves, these technologies are not revolutionary. But together, they have created a powerful set of force multipliers whose combined effect is creating a new reality to which every company must adapt.

The intersection of these four forces is the essence of present-day digital:

Behind the scenes

While digital technology is disrupting the global economy, there’s another more subtle phenomenon happening behind the scenes with consumers. Every advancement throughout history, from the steam engine to the internet, has taken years to gain mass adoption and establish a lasting impact on society. It's hard to imagine now, but electricity took 46 years before it became the primary source of power. After centuries of technology advancing ahead of human capability, consumers have finally caught up and are now demanding better experiences.

Be careful when the belt is in motion

This cycle of continuous disruption is reminiscent of an episode of I Love Lucy in which Lucy and Ethel were tasked with wrapping candy on a fast-moving conveyor belt. At first, the pace was manageable. But as the belt sped up, the women became overwhelmed and resorted to stuffing candy in their mouths. Fortunately for Lucy and Ethel, the factory foreman intervened to turn off the belt. The cycle of digital innovation, however, has no such safety valve. Companies not only have to contend with developing better user experiences, but they must do it at the speed of expectation.

Simply put

Half a century later, the digital revolution is still going strong. Today, the technology is vastly different — smarter, faster, more accessible and connected. But more disruptive than the technology itself is the unrelenting pace of innovation and the consumer adoption and empowerment accompanying it. Viewing digital transformation through this customer-focused lens, perhaps the essence of digital is more appropriately reduced to just one sentence:

In all these examples, it’s clear digital's disruptive forces present more of a challenge in adapting mindset than adopting new tools. Using digital-age tools with an industrial-age mindset may provide short-term gains, but won’t lead to better customer experiences that endure.

Technology will always come and go. What is here to stay is the giant leap in speed and agility required to succeed in a customer-centric economy.

Balanced transformation

Now we stand at the threshold of an economy where longstanding business norms are becoming increasingly ineffective. The advantages once attributed to company size and assets are no longer the best indicators of growth. Speed, agility, responsiveness and customer obsession are the new keys to the kingdom.

While the rules of the game have changed, it’s the speed of the game — driven by the accelerating pace of technology adoption — that is the primary source of disruption. Winning in this new era requires a hyper focus on building technical and organizational capabilities to enable the continuous delivery of value at the speed of expectation.

Transforming the enterprise to meet these demands requires a balanced, three-pronged strategy:

  1. Modernizing back office systems to achieve agility and scale on-demand
  2. Shifting the collective organizational mindset and skillset from the industrial past to the digital future
  3. Anchoring both on a solid foundation of data and advanced analytics to anticipate rapidly changing consumer expectations

Focusing on any one of these components alone will not lead to success. The front office is only as seamless as the back office allows, and both must be guided by data-driven decisions and strategies. The challenges that lie ahead for leaders in this era are significant, but with a balanced digital transformation strategy, the opportunities for growth and profitability are equally enormous. If you approach digital transformation as only a means to automating routine work, you will soon run out of places to “hide the candy.” Time is of the essence. As you read this article, a digital competitor you’ve never heard of is quietly preparing to steal your market share. Will you be ready?