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Organizations struggle to make progress with their digital transformation investments
NEW YORK, July 3, 2018 /PRNewswire/ -- New research from Capgemini's Digital Transformation Institute highlights that the minority of businesses feel they have the digital (39 percent) and leadership (35 percent) capabilities needed to make their digital transformation journey a success. The report, "Understanding Digital Mastery Today: Why companies are struggling with their digital transformations," reveals that while companies are making progress on evolving their customer experience, they are struggling to transform their back-end operations. Furthermore, businesses are failing to create the strong digital culture needed to bring their employees into their digital transformation agendas. The report, which surveyed more than 1,300 business leaders in over 750 organizations with the majority (71 percent) reporting revenues of over $1 billion, compares digital transformation progress against Capgemini Consulting and MIT Sloan's 2012 report, "The Digital Advantage: How Digital Peers Outperform Their Peers in Every Industry." The new research shows that despite huge investments in digital transformation initiatives, set to exceed $2 trillion by 20211, organizations today feel less equipped with the right leadership capabilities than they were six years ago (45 percent in 2012 compared to 35 percent in 2018), while less than half still feel they have the right digital capabilities to advance their transformations (39 percent in both 2012 and 2018.) Organizations make headway on customer experience, but excellence in operations is still lacking However, only 36 percent of organizations said that operations2 was an area they excelled in. While there were small gains from 2012 to 2018 in the percentage of organizations that design their products digitally (38 percent to 40 percent), only 35 percent are monitoring operations in real time (48 percent in 2012), only 29 percent modify their operational processes to quickly adapt to external challenges (34 percent in 2012), and many organizations are not providing the tools and capabilities that their employees might expect. For example, only 38 percent of organizations say that their employees can collaborate digitally with other employees and just 33 percent of organizations agree that digital technologies improve communication between senior executives and employees (compared to 70 percent and 62 percent in 2012, respectively). IT and business relationships show decline While 59 percent of respondents in 2012 felt that the CIO and senior business executives have a shared understanding of how IT can be used to increase productivity of the organization's operations, this has declined to 35 percent in 2018. Six years ago, 53 percent of respondents agreed that the CIO and senior business executives have a common view of IT investment priorities, but that has also declined in 2018 to 36 percent. The report concludes that these reductions suggest optimization is still occurring in silos or that business leaders are impatient with the pace of IT and are spinning off shadow IT3 to lead their initiatives. "Speed of products, solutions and digital innovation development has greatly increased," said Enrico Maria Bagnasco, Head of Technology Innovation at Telecom Italia. "It is therefore important that companies keep an open dialogue with the external ecosystem and find a balance between business and technology to achieve the goals of digital transformation projects." Low digital culture stalls progress According to Cyril Garcia, Head of Digital Services at Capgemini, "Today's technology landscape is much more complex than in 2012. New technologies such as artificial intelligence, machine learning, automation and the Internet of Things are providing businesses with opportunities they have never had before, but critical to their success is the ability to adapt and embed these technologies into their organizations. To take full advantage of the new technology landscape, it's vital that business leaders not only invest in new technology but work together with their employees to advance the digital transformation agenda, putting just as much emphasis on change management as they do in understanding of the technology." How to sustain digital transformation journeys A copy of the report can be downloaded here. Research Methodology About Capgemini Visit us at www.capgemini.com. People matter, results count. About the Digital Transformation Institute
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