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The reasons why 70% of digital transformations fail, focusing on six key milestones that cause projects to derail. Learn how to align your company vision, understand user needs, build solid business cases, manage projects effectively, validate assumptions, and prepare for change to increase your chances of success.
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Successful businesses and executives understand that digital evolution is essential to survive in today’s market, and yet, seventy percent of digital transformations fail. It begs the question: What causes digital transformation failures? Professionals of all disciplines claim to have the answer. Software engineers attribute the problem to wrong or unknown requirements and technical complexity, UX designers claim the root cause is poor user experience, change managers put it down to a lack of buy-in, communication and culture development, and digital transformation experts blame leadership not developing an effective digital strategy, and inability to scale pilot programs. The truth is, they’re all correct
because there are multiple potential points of failure for any digital transformation project. The reality is that a breakdown at any point in the chain can put the whole project at risk. Here are the six key digital transformation milestones that cause projects to fail, and what you can do to keep that from happening.
Ironically, transformation does not start with technology. It starts with business, people, and well defined mission and vision statements. The mission should articulate why the organization exists, the purpose, and value, it brings to the world. The vision should articulate what the future will look like, in 3 - 5 years time, if the mission is fulfilled. Digital technologies are simply the enablers, or tools, for how to get there. All
The next challenge is to reconcile an organization’s current challenges with its future aspirations. You can only define the scope of innovation by using the right insights to identify the real challenges. To do this, you’ll have to map the current state user journeys and personas and think about how they will have to change to enable the future state. Failing to map out current and future user journeys could cause an organization to lose sight of the most important challenges, deploy the wrong technology, have unrealistic business cases, and poor user experience.
Transformation efforts are always at risk without strong project management. Teams can have the best technology, the most user friendly design, but without solid project management, the initiative could go bust. Software projects can be especially complex and must be carefully managed at every stage of the process. Organizations that do not have digital as a core competency should invest in upskilling and recruiting top-tier project managers. Many are already doing this with engineering and design, and the investment should extend to digital project management. While there are countless ways that project management can go wrong, the following are common issues you can expect and plan for:
○ Low adoption and end-user engagement after handoff
As projects progress and teams look for solutions, it’s easy to slip into making assumptions about end-user behaviors and anticipated challenges. Without communicating the objectives, and actively validating and refining the business case assumptions, these beliefs can drift from reality and misdirect efforts away from relevant challenges. Any assumptions that are baked into the business case should be validated and refined regularly in touch-points with end- users throughout the project via interviews, usability testing, demos and roadshows. The same also goes for scoping out and preparing for technical complexities. A failure to fully grasp their complexity could sink attempts to find an adequate solution by spending more time than estimated dealing with unforeseen challenges. Although it may be tempting, teams should resist the urge to dive headfirst into problems and instead conduct a technical assessment. The results can then inform strategy, and ultimately confirm whether a project is viable with the given estimate.
As with any organizational change, company culture can be a major sticking point when it comes to digital matters. Without winning hearts and minds of employees and end-users, any changes are likely to encounter resistance, which can be a barrier to new technology adoption. This leads back to the need for effective communication, both to address resistance, and prepare users for their change journey.
With so many things that can go wrong, it’s hard to know where you should focus your efforts. Perhaps the most helpful tip we can give comes from Adrian Garcia, our VP of Transformation & Strategy, who has found that “ success in digital transformation is influenced by people – not technology .”
All employees need to understand an organization’s mission and vision and the role digital transformation will play in bringing them into reality. Company culture must adapt to accommodate newly introduced technology and new ways of working. Communication plays a big part in this, but demos, experimentation, feedback and staff engagement are equally essential in generating support. Innovation leaders must focus on mindsets and behaviors as much as technology.
Businesses need to invest quality time, effort, and money into scoping out their projects before setting out to change the status quo.