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Business Transformation – Turning Digital Thinking into Digital Reality

Business Transformation – Turning Digital Thinking into Digital Reality

The digital revolution is here – it is essential for organisational survival, and is now a natural expectation of staff, customers, managers, boards and industry partners.   Failure to embrace digital disruption will ultimately result in significant impacts to organisational efficiencies (at best), or will ultimately lead to organisational demise (at worst).

Organisations are using technologies like social media, mobile, analytics and embedded devices to change their customer engagement, internal operations and even their business models. Whilst there are many organisations that are realising real benefits, many organisations are left wondering how to start the journey, or how to successfully execute a digital transformation.

Based on various studies, research and personal experience, the following key practices are critical in enabling organisations to undertake successful digital transformation:


 

1.  Develop a Vision

Senior leaders need to have a common vision of how to proceed, and weed out the activities that run counter to that vision. They also need to understand why to change, and how the future will be better than the current situation. Without a vision of change, employees tend to do what they have been doing for years, even if it is no longer useful in the digital world. The first step is to understand the threats and opportunities that digital represents to the organisation. Will existing ways of working continue to be effective in a digital world? Are there new opportunities available in customer experience, operational processes or business models? It is also important to assess the organisations digital maturity.

Organisations must change the approach from supporting the business with information technology, to identifying what is possible with digital – starting with mobility, cloud, situational context, and then consider how to get there from here using technology as the catalyst.

2.  Invest in Digital

To realise the digital vision, organisations must invest in the right areas. This includes cutting back in unproductive areas while ramping up investment where it needs to occur. Organisations should choose to excel in a few areas based on existing capabilities such as customer experience, social media, mobile, customer analytics, process digitization or internal collaboration – but not in all.

Organisations will need to consider adapting their business model, which could include adding value to products and services, reaching new customers, linking operational and customer-facing processes in new ways, and even launching entirely new businesses. Strong governance mechanisms are also required to increase the level of coordination and sharing across silo-run digital initiatives.

3.  Organisational Engagement

When employees are engaged in a shared vision they help to make the vision a reality. They offer less resistance to change and often identify new opportunities that were not previously envisioned. It is beneficial to use a wide array of digital channels, such as broadcast, web, video, and social networks to generate continuous two-way communication at scale. Equally important is to encourage employees to identify new practices and opportunities that will advance the vision.

4.  Customer Focus

From a digital solution perspective, focus on user experience design by directly engaging with your customer base. Ask for feedback, challenge current processes, and validate effectiveness. Provision of products or services can be enhanced by engagement with the customer base to understand the demand, and include co-design, enabling greater take-up and the ability for self-service. Provide access to your products and services from anywhere, anytime and on any device, regardless of location.

5.  Cloud First

Investment in cloud based platforms can accelerate the journey to digital, providing opportunities for simplified mobile platform interfaces, use of contextually aware services (utilising customer location, preferences, usage history, etc), context sensitive data integration and data exchange among mobile, big data analytics, social media, internet of things, etc. Develop capabilities to generate forward-looking predictive analytics and overlay with open data sources to truly innovate and provide value.

6.  Sustain the Transformation

Successful digital transformation is built on a foundation of core skills and capabilities. Assess the skills on your teams to insure they fit the new platforms for digital business. Consider hiring some experienced executives who can make an impact quickly and coach existing employees. Redesign your training programs to develop skills your company needs. Where useful, partner with vendors to gain skills and cross-sector experience that complements your capabilities. Senior leaders must focus on building and sustaining momentum for change.

Quantify and monitor progress toward the digital ambition through KPIs or digital scorecards. Scorecards have power beyond just measuring the impact of major investments. They help to change the culture. A shared understanding between IT and business executives is also critical to success.


For a real-world case study (from independent research firm Gartner), please see the link below or contact me via email, linkedin, twitter or this post.

Building a Digital House: How an Industry Regulator Created an Exemplary Public-Sector Digital Service Model

 
 

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Technology Trends 2015 – The CIO Perspective

Technology Trends 2015 – The CIO Perspective

Early in 2015 Deloittes published their sixth annual Technology Trends report (Tech Trends 2015: The fusion of business and IT).  This publication identifies the eight technology trends that have the most potential business impact over the next 12 to 24 months for technology and business.

Reading through the entire report may not appeal to all audiences, so I have attempted to distil the most relevant take-away points from the perspective of the CIO. What does this actually mean on a day-to-day basis? What aspects of this report deserve serious consideration and action for strategy and planning?

 


 

  1. CIO as a Chief Integration Officer

In brief:  The CIO role is evolving, with integration at the core of its mission. CIO’s need to harness emerging disruptive technologies for the business while balancing future needs with today’s operational realities.

Actions:

  • Engage leadership resources to solicit feedback and understand priorities
  • Tap into ideas through new employee and partnership channels
  • Prototype and demo to make the possible become feasible
  • Evaluate the current positioning, and understand the balance sheet of IT
  • Invest in underlying capabilities to improve efficacy

 

  1. API Economy

In brief:  Application programming interfaces (API’s) are the key to integration, exposing core business assets for reuse, growth, and innovation.

Actions:

  • Have a clear API strategy to define the intention, value and audience of the API.
  • Establish ownership by placing effort under an IT executive to simplify the path forward
  • Evaluate the available tools, platforms and integration possibilities
  • Plan big, start small. Businesses should balance payoff with added complexity
  • See it through. Drive a sustained campaign for awareness and support, while keeping ongoing documentation and maintenance needs in mind.

 

  1. Ambient Computing

In brief: Harnessing the real potential of the Internet of Things. From the growth of embedded sensors and connected devices, focus on translating the possibilities into real business impact.

Actions:

  • Beware of fragmentation. Use cases will require cross-organisational collaboration
  • Avoid distractions from exciting new technologies by starting with concrete business outcomes.
  • Usability should guide implementation, even if the solution is automated
  • IoT standards are evolving. Don’t wait to invest until the standards are finalised – help shape them.

 

  1. Dimensional Marketing

In brief:  A new vision for marketing is being formed as CMO’s and CIO’s invest in technology to reach digitally connected customers. CIO’s can help deliver analytics, mobile, social and web.

Actions:

  • Understand the customer journey and focus on authentic engagement
  • Big data and predictive analytics should play a role in how you invest in targets and priorities
  • Have a holistic approach – explore new channels and tools to complement existing ones
  • Authoring, provisioning and measuring usage and effectiveness should be seamless processes that provide users with contextual content across channels
  • Social activation – move beyond passive listening to inspiring brand ambassadors

 

  1. Software-Defined Everything

In brief: The entire operating environment (server, storage, and network) can now be virtualized and automated.

Actions:

  • Employ standardised design techniques. Emphasise templates and commonality to manage complexity
  • Infrastructure and application teams should work in tandem for rapid deployment
  • Every asset/application should be analysed to determine technical considerations for migration
  • Some vendors may accommodate creative financing arrangements
  • Consider potential benefits in coupling SDDC initiatives with broader IT transformation effort

 

  1. Core Renaissance

In brief: Use existing investments in core systems to form the foundation for growth and new service development. Modernise systems, re-platform solutions and extend legacy systems to fuel new services & offerings.

Actions:

  • Have a plan – balance business needs with limitations of existing systems and potential of emerging technology
  • Invest deliberately in the core to eventually become a catalyst for growth
  • Partner with strategic venders to explore new solutions for existing issues
  • Embrace a living approach to architecture with usability, integration, data and security in mind
  • Find a burning platform to move the conversation about the core to the centre stage

 

  1. Amplified Intelligence

In brief: Companies are applying machine learning and predictive modeling to large and complex data sets. Artificial intelligence is now a reality that is not about replacing workers, but augmenting their capabilities. Advanced analytics can help amplify our intelligence for more effective decision making.

Actions:

  • Develop a wish list to guide priorities and reveal what data is needed
  • Balance opportunity against expected organisational resistance.
  • Let user experience dictate the format, granularity and decisiveness of insights
  • Be transparent in intent, and consider programs to re-tool and redeploy workers

 

  1. IT Worker of the Future

In brief:  Technical talent is scarce, the legacy-skilled workforce is retiring, and skills are needed in the latest emerging, disruptive technologies.  Companies need to cultivate the IT worker of the future, with habits, incentives and skills that are inherently different from those in play today.

Actions:

  • Incentivise IT leaders
  • Rethink hiring. Include externships, hackathons, and recruit those with design aptitude
  • Introduce mechanisms to submit, explore, and develop new ideas
  • Create a virtual culture – provide tools that support remote workers
  • Leverage crowdsourcing, incubators and start-up spaces
  • Invest in your own IT workforce to drive retention and encourage referrals

 

Exponentials

In brief: Science and technology breakthroughs advancing faster than Moore’s law. Fields include: artificial intelligence; robotics; additive manufacturing; quantum computing; industrial biology; cyber security.

Four dimensions for effective innovation strategy:

  • Trend sensing: stay on top of new developments. Use “show” versus “tell” in demos and prototypes
  • Ecosystems: combine the traditional allies with entrepreneurs, start-ups, venture capitalists, etc
  • Experimentation: fail fast and cheap, move forward, and think about the impact, feasibility and risk
  • Scaling edges: achieve innovation by establishing new teams on the fringes of the organisation
 
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Posted by on May 12, 2015 in general, innovation, strategy

 

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The “must have” tools for Managers

The “must have” tools for Managers

What are the “must have” apps, tools and resources that CIO’s and IT Managers can’t live without?

I have compiled a list of some of the most popular and helpful tools that I have found useful over the years. If you have any further suggestions for the Managers Toolkit, I would love to hear from you. I will update the list below with popular suggestions and will add new apps, tools and resources as they are released.

 


 

Time Management

Rescue Timewww.rescuetime.com

  • If you are not sure if you are using your time wisely, the Rescue Time app will send you weekly reports to indicate your time thieves. It runs security in the background of your computer or mobile device and tracks time spent on applications and websites. You will be given detailed reports and data based on your activity.

 

Idea Capture

Evernotewww.evernote.com

  • Evernote is a free tool that allows you to capture all of your ideas, thoughts and images. You can record meetings, interviews, speeches and ideas, create lists, add voice or text attachments and share files with others.

 

ICT Templates and Example Documents

Dokozewww.dokoze.com

  • Dokoze is a great resource if you need to download high quality document templates and example documents. It is based around a community theme where users can share their own documents to get free or discounted downloads. There is no mandatory sign-up process and is mostly focussed around Information Technology documentation.

 

Task Lists

Remember the Milk (RTM) – www.rememberthemilk.com

Tooledowww.tooledo.com

Wunderlist www.wunderlist.com

  • RTM is a web-based task list that has free apps for Android, iPhone, iPad and Blackberry that syncs with your RTM account. You can organise your list by due date, postpone items for later, create recurring items, share tasks or assign tasks with individuals or groups, set priority levels and view the list in a number of ways. Tooledo is also a web-based tool that has basic task list features as well as project manager functions. Wunderlist is a good looking task manager that has free apps for iOS and Android.

 

Project Management

Asanahttps://asana.com/

  • Asana is a hybrid task and project manager that has iOS and Android apps, and has various collaboration features for individuals and organisations. Asana is free if you have less than 15 people working on your project.

 

Track Time on Projects

Toggl – www.toggl.com

  • Toggl is a simple time tracking tool that is a great alternative to timesheets. Simply write the task you are working on and start the timer. It tracks tasks via a day-by-day breakdown and gives you an overview of where you are spending your time. Toggl can work online or offline.

 

Mind Mapping

Mind42www.mind42.com

  • Mind42 is one of the best free mindmapping apps out there. It is a browser based tool that allows you to manage all your ideas, whether alone, twosome or working together with the whole world. As mind42 runs inside the browser, installing mind mapping tools is no longer needed – just open the browser and launch the application when needed – it behaves like a classical desktop application.

 

File Back-up

Syncback Freewarewww.2brightsparks.com/syncback

  • SyncBackFree allows you to create backups of your computer quickly and efficiently, with clear directions to help even inexperienced users make the right decisions. In addition to creating backups, this program also can synchronize files and create mirror profiles, and you can choose to compress your files or not each time you run a backup.

 

Password Manager

Universal Password Manager (UPM) – http://upm.sourceforge.net/

  • UPM allows you to store usernames, passwords, URLs and generic notes in an encrypted database protected by one master password. UPM is simple, cross platform (Android, Windows, Mac OS X, Linux) and features database syncing across several devices.

 

File Sharing

Dropboxwww.dropbox.com

OneDrivewww.onedrive.com

  • There are many apps available that allow you to transfer data from one device to another. Both Dropbox and OneDrive are free and easy to use.

 

 

 
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Posted by on November 19, 2014 in general

 

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The alternative to Microsoft Office – go hybrid !!!

In these challenging economic times, many IT leaders are intrigued by the alternatives to Microsoft Office. This intrigue is generated by an interest in cutting licensing costs, minimising the dependency on Microsoft, eliminating software assurance, and increasing consumerisation of cheaper alternative applications.

There certainly isn’t a shortage of reasonable quality alternatives, with growing awareness of web-based (and desktop based) office productivity tools being generated from the Marketing machines at Microsoft and Google. Much of the open source office productivity software available today is feature rich, has ample support documentation available, and offers cross compatibility with Microsoft. Most have variations of office productivity applications that attempt to rival Microsoft Word, Excel, Powerpoint, Access, and Visio.

Alternatives include:

  • Apache OpenOffice
  • LibreOffice (which has the same underlying code base as OpenOffice)
  • NeoOffice (for Mac OS X)
  • Google Docs
  • K Office (which offers Word, Excel & PowerPoint alternatives)

In a Forrester survey conducted in 2011, 44 percent of survey respondents were “somewhat interested” in Web-based office productivity tools and 25 percent “actively looking” or “piloting”. Only 3 percent report that they have implemented Web-based Office alternatives (i.e. spent money on them). The obstacles to broad deployment, according to this research, continue to be user acceptance and learning curve, and compatibility with Microsoft Office file formats.

Consideration should be given however, for a hybrid approach to office productivity software deployment. A Microsoft Office alternative product can serve as a replacement for selected groups within an organisation, whilst Microsoft Office can be used for power-users or in situations where business processes or functional need require it. For many (or most) users within organisations, there is ample functionality available in non-Microsoft office software alternatives to warrant investigation of a hybrid model. Concerns will no doubt arise over support, maintenance and training of two office productivity applications, and the inevitable integration / compatibility challenges. Integrating a hybrid approach provides users the choice of Microsoft Office and a non-Microsoft alternative. A detailed business case and proof of concept will be essential in getting it across the line.

 
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Posted by on October 8, 2012 in general

 

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The ICT Service Catalog – Getting Started !!!

A common challenge for many medium sized ICT departments who provide internal services to their organisation, is managing non-standard service requests. For example, internal customers may ask questions such as:

  • “I need IT support 24/7”, or
  • “Wy can’t I use Open Office – It’s free” or
  • “You have limited my mailbox to 10MB, but I can get a 20MB mailbox online through Google”, or
  • “I would like a faster response from ICT to my problems”

There many more examples which either have a productivity, cost or usability driver associated with the request.

So, how does the ICT team manage these requests in a cost effective and efficient way, whilst providing flexibility for users, managers and the organisation?

The answer lies in the development of a ICT Service Catalog. With a Service Catalog, the ICT department can detail all service offerings (and variations of offerings) to internal customers and departments. It provides much needed transparency and documentation around how (and what) ICT charge internal customers/departments for their services, and should include both products and services consumed/sold to customers within the organisation. Although money may not necessarily change hands, it helps to clarify expectations when ICT costs are distributed across the organisation.

In developing an effective ICT Service Catalog, it is important to:

  • Understand the various lines of business within the organisation, to ensure the catalog (and the deliverables/products) are appropriately tailored. Consultation with key stakeholders is critical.

  • Describe the deliverables (or the end result), rather than the tasks involved in producing them

  • Have sufficient detail about what is included in the deliverables, and clarify the subsets of what is available and how much. Effective catalogs define each of the specific things customers may (or may not) choose to “buy”.

  • Solutions / products must be defined consistently, at a uniform level of granularity, and always in terms of deliverables rather than tasks.

  • Ensure Managers have buy-in, and understand the products/services in detail.

Obviously the organisations culture needs to be ready to embrace any move to Service Catalogs. Internal charge-backs processes, activity based costing methods, contractual arrangements and service level agreements also require consideration and review when planning for ICT Service Catalog implementation. Service Catalogs, done well, are essential in providing a flexible, transparent and cost effective ICT function.

 
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Posted by on September 4, 2012 in general

 

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