What ‘digital’ really means
July
2015 | byKarel Dörner and David Edelman
Companies
today are rushing
headlong to become more digital. But what does digital really mean?
For
some executives, it’s about technology. For others, digital is a new way of
engaging with customers. And for others still, it represents an entirely new
way of doing business. None of these definitions is necessarily incorrect. But
such diverse perspectives often trip up leadership teams because they reflect a
lack of alignment and common vision about where the business needs to go. This
often results in piecemeal initiatives or misguided efforts that lead to missed
opportunities, sluggish performance, or false starts.
Even
as CEOs push forward with their digital agendas, it’s worth pausing to clarify
vocabulary and sharpen language. Business leaders must have a clear and common
understanding of exactly what digital means to them and, as a result, what it
means to their business (for a deeper look at how companies can develop
meaningful digital strategies and drive business performance.
It’s
tempting to look for simple definitions, but to be meaningful and sustainable,
we believe that digital should be seen less as a thing and more a way of doing
things. To help make this definition more concrete, we’ve broken it down into
three attributes: creating value at the new frontiers of the business world,
creating value in the processes that execute a vision of customer experiences,
and building foundational capabilities that support the entire structure.
Creating value at new frontiers
Being
digital requires being open to reexamining your entire way of doing business
and understanding where the new frontiers of value are. For some companies,
capturing new frontiers may be about developing entirely new businesses in
adjacent categories; for others, it may be about identifying and going after
new value pools in existing sectors.
Unlocking
value from emerging growth sectors requires a commitment to understanding the
implications of developments in the marketplace and evaluating how they may
present opportunities or threats. The Internet of Things, for example, is
starting to open opportunities for disrupters to use unprecedented levels of
data precision to identify flaws in existing value chains. In the automotive
industry, cars connected to the outside world have expanded the frontiers for
self-navigation and in-car entertainment. In the logistics industry, the use of
sensors, big data, and analytics has enabled companies to improve the
efficiency of their supply-chain operations.
At the
same time, being digital means being closely attuned to how customer decision
journeys are evolving in the broadest sense. That means understanding how
customer behaviors and expectations are developing inside and outside your
business, as well as outside your sector, which is crucial to getting ahead of
trends that can deliver or destroy value.
Creating value in core businesses
Digital’s
next element is rethinking how to use new capabilities to improve how customers
are served. This is grounded in an obsession with understanding each step of a
customer’s purchasing journey—regardless of channel—and thinking about how
digital capabilities can design and deliver the best possible experience,
across all parts of the business. For example, the supply chain is critical to
developing the flexibility, efficiency, and speed to deliver the right product
efficiently in a way the customer wants. By the same token, data and metrics
can focus on delivering insights about customers that in turn drive marketing
and sales decisions.
Critically,
digital isn’t about just working to deliver a one-off customer journey. It’s
about implementing a cyclical dynamic where processes and capabilities are
constantly evolving based on inputs from the customer, fostering ongoing
product or service loyalty. Making this happen requires an interconnected set
of four core capabilities:
Proactive
decision making.
Relevance is the currency of the digital age. This requires making decisions,
based on intelligence, that deliver content and experiences that are
personalized and relevant to the customer. Remembering customer preferences is
a basic example of this capability, but it also extends to personalizing and
optimizing the next step in the customer’s journey. Data providers such as
ClickFox, for example, blend data from multiple channels into one view of what
customers are doing and what happens as a result. In the back office, analytics
and intelligence provide near-real-time insights into customer needs and
behaviors that then determine the types of messages and offers to deliver to
the customer.
Contextual
interactivity. This
means analyzing how a consumer is interacting with a brand and modifying those
interactions to improve the customer experience. For example, the content and
experience may adapt as a customer shifts from a mobile phone to a laptop or
from evaluating a brand to making a purchasing decision. The rising number of
customer interactions generates a stream of intelligence that allows brands to
make better decisions about what their customers want. And the rapid rise of
wearable technology and the Internet of Things represents the latest wave of
touchpoints that will enable companies to blend digital and physical
experiences even more.
Real-time
automation. To
support this cyclical give-and-take dynamic with customers and help them
complete a task now requires extensive automation. Automation of customer
interactions can boost the number of self-service options that help resolve
problems quickly, personalize communications to be more relevant, and deliver
consistent customer journeys no matter the channel, time, or device. Automating
the supply chain and core business processes can drive down costs, but it’s
also crucial to providing companies with more flexibility to respond to and
anticipate customer demand.
Journey-focused
innovation.
Serving customers well gives companies permission to be innovative in how they
interact with and sell to them. That may include, for example, expanding
existing customer journeys into new businesses and services that extend the
relationship with the customer, ideally to the benefit of both parties. These
innovations in turn fuel more interactions, create more information, and
increase the value of the customer-brand relationship.
Building foundational capabilities
The
final element of our definition of digital is about the technological and
organizational processes that allow an enterprise to be agile and fast. This
foundation is made up of two elements:
Mind-sets. Being digital is about
using data to make better and faster decisions, devolving decision making to
smaller teams, and developing much more iterative and rapid ways of doing
things. Thinking in this way shouldn’t be limited to just a handful of
functions. It should incorporate a broad swath of how companies operate,
including creatively partnering with external companies to extend necessary
capabilities. A digital mind-set institutionalizes cross-functional
collaboration, flattens hierarchies, and builds environments to encourage the
generation of new ideas. Incentives and metrics are developed to support such
decision-making agility.
System
and data architecture.
Digital in the context of IT is focused on creating a two-part environment that
decouples legacy systems—which support critical functions and run at a slower
pace—from those that support fast-moving, often customer-facing interactions. A
key feature of digitized IT is the commitment to building networks that connect
devices, objects, and people. This approach is embodied in a
continuous-delivery model where cross-functional IT teams automate systems and
optimize processes to be able to release and iterate on software quickly.
Digital
is about unlocking growth now. How companies might interpret or act on that
definition will vary, but having a clear understanding of what digital means
allows business leaders to develop a shared vision of how it can be used to
capture value.
About the authors
Karel
Dörner is a
principal in McKinsey’s Munich office, and David Edelman is a principal
in the Boston office.
http://www.mckinsey.com/insights/high_tech_telecoms_internet/what_digital_really_means?cid=other-eml-nsl-mip-mck-oth-1508
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