IT leaders are in a strong position after digital initiatives saved many businesses. But now, what businesses are asking for is evolving again.
Digital Transformation has helped companies become more flexible and resilient in the face of worldwide recession, leaving the more digitally mature among them better placed to prosper in the post-pandemic era.
After years of being promoted, piloted and implemented with varying degrees of urgency and success in organizations, digital transformation enabled a rapid pivot to remote working and put the digitization of business processes, including customer and employee experience (CX and EX), to a serious stress test.
In its IT Spending & Staffing Benchmarks 2021/22 report, market research firm Computer Economics described technology's role in the rapid recovery from the pandemic as "nothing short of a miracle". Digital transformation passed the test, it seems. Going forward, Computer Economics suggested that the "low-hanging fruit" in cloud migration is now picked and that "We are now in the stage of digital transformation where we are not just replacing existing tools -- we are now enhancing them."
In this article we'll examine where digital transformation is likely to go next.
Towards the end of 2020, in the grip of the pandemic and with vaccine deployment still to come, IDC published its predictions for digital transformation (DX) for 2021 and beyond.
The headline prediction was that direct DX investment will total over $6.8 trillion between 2020 and 2023 -- a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 15.5%. IDC says that that translates into nearly two-thirds (65%) of global GDP being digitalized by 2022. By 'digitalized', the analyst firm means "the inherent value that digital brings to existing products and additional digital services that companies might offer," explained Bob Parker, senior vice president at IDC, in an accompanying webcast. "This is why digital transformation is really a CEO priority -- more so than a CIO priority," Parker added.
Here is the complete list of IDC's DX predictions for 2021:
Many surveys take the temperature of digital transformation each year, covering a mix of organization sizes, sectors and geographies. Here's a roundup of some key reports, the most recent of which give some pointers to the post-pandemic future.
Survey | Produced By | Respondents |
---|---|---|
Global Digital Transformation Survey Report 2021: Priorities in the post-pandemic world (August 2021) | Fujitsu Future Insights | 1,200 CxOs and decision-makers at large and mid-sized organizations spread across 9 countries worldwide |
2021 Deloitte Digital Transformation Executive Survey: Putting digital at the heart of strategy (April 2021) | Deloitte Insights | 2,860 executives across industries in US (56%), EMEA (25%) and APAC (19%) |
2021 State of Digital Transformation: Building a Framework for Digital Success (March 2021) | TEKsystems | 430 technology and business decision-makers in enterprise IT and line-of-business functions across a broad spectrum of industries |
The 2021 CIO Agenda: Seize This Opportunity for Digital Business Acceleration (Dec 2020) | Gartner | 1,877 CIOs across 74 countries (33% North America, 37% EMEA, 22% APAC, 9% Latin America) |
Key findings
By 'digital muscles', Fujitsu Future Insights (FFI) is referring to six organizational capabilities: Leadership (digital transformation is the priority of the CEO); Ecosystem (establishing a trusted ecosystem of partners); Empowered people (ensuring people have the right skills and opportunities to grow); A culture of agility (an innovation-supporting culture with an appetite for change); Value from data (the ability to use trusted data to deliver outcomes, while keeping it secure); and Business integration (enabling technology to become the business operating system). These capabilities, FFI says, have helped organizations respond to the pandemic effectively.
"We think organizations should reimagine a new, balanced way people and technology work together. How can organizations maximize the potential and well-being of their people, while increasing productivity through automation. Definitely, ethics and trust are becoming more important than ever before in redesigning future business processes." FFI
Key findings
Deloitte Insights has helpfully summarized its survey results in this infographic:
Deloitte's survey highlights the value of digital transformation very clearly. Digitally mature organizations are more likely to agree that: "Digital significantly helped us cope with the pandemic"; that "Our annual revenue growth and net profit margins are significantly above industry average"; and that "Digital transformation is the central pillar of our business strategy".
Key findings
TEKsystems divided its survey population into digital leaders and digital laggards. DX leaders have "a mature digital transformation plan where digital processes and mindsets are ingrained in the DNA of the organization", while DX laggards have "tentative plans and limited digital transformation initiatives and investments in place".
Key findings
Regarding the top-level finding, 'CIOs have the opportunity to play a leading role in digital business acceleration', Gartner had this to say:
During the COVID-19 lockdown, many CIOs helped save their enterprises. They now have the attention of the CEO in a way they hadn't before. The enterprise's path to the future runs through IT, and boards and CEOs know it...These stronger relationships give CIOs leverage they'll need for their next big challenge - digital business acceleration.
Gartner divided its 1,877 survey sample into top-performing (303), typical (1,373) and trailing (201) organizations, based on a combination of their digital maturity, business performance and pandemic response.
Gartner found that organizations that have already increased their funding of digital innovation are 2.7 times more likely to be top performers than trailing performers.
Digitization has proved its worth during the pandemic, with more digitally mature businesses generally proving resilient in the face of serious disruption.
Going forward, businesses will need to adapt to the post-pandemic landscape as widespread hybrid working changes the way employees and customers interact with them. And rather than reacting to events, businesses will need detailed roadmaps that set out how they will digitize their business processes to achieve current and future goals. The efficiency, resilience and sustainability of supply chains should be a key element of these plans.
It won't all be plain sailing, of course. In a recent survey of 500 decision-makers at large organizations in the UK, Citrix reported that 44% of IT leaders have had their "fingers burnt" by negative experiences with previous digital transformation programmes. In contrast, 51% cited at least one DX project that didn't go according to plan. As a result, 85% say their past experiences have impacted their approach to current programmes, with 58% reporting 'somewhat challenging' experiences to date. Almost all (94%) embarked on their first DX programme with confidence in its outcome.
Still, 35% of CIOs and 41% of CTOs report 'ideal' experiences with digital transformation, 97% of IT leaders believe that their DX programmes are crucial to the success of their current role and future career, and 68% see major initiatives as a career-defining opportunity. IT leaders are also almost unanimous (99%) that digital transformation will be an important part of their businesses' survival and future roadmap.
Clearly, there's a lot to play for as digital transformation enters the post-pandemic phase.
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