Satnam Singh is Chief Digital & Technology Officer, Advisory and Marketing at CBRE, a commercial real estate services firm.
Digital transformation is no longer a buzzword. It’s essential for organizations that want to create competitive differentiation and be industry leaders. The integration of technology, digital tools and especially generative AI has significantly shifted the business landscape, enabling companies to optimize operations, enhance customer experiences and launch innovative products or services at an accelerated pace. Businesses that harness these digital advancements, including AI, can leapfrog ahead of their competition, achieve a sustainable competitive edge and realize various commercial benefits, including increased market share, premium pricing and higher operating profits.
Generative AI offers a unique opportunity for businesses that have yet to fully embrace digital transformation. By applying this comprehensive yet straightforward framework, they can leap ahead of their competitors and reposition themselves as industry leaders, creating sustainable value through technological innovation.
Digital leaders looking for a digital transformation roadmap should start with this five-pillar framework—Purpose, Plan, Priorities, Principles and Presentation—to ensure technology investments are aligned with the overall strategic vision and objectives. Each pillar plays a crucial role in shaping a comprehensive strategy that allows businesses to move with a sense of urgency while remaining nimble amidst rapid technological changes.
1. Purpose
Understand the organization’s purpose across the short-, mid- and long-term horizons. This can be a mix of priorities across client outcomes, financials (top-line growth, margin, free cash flow) and go-to-market strategies. An effective understanding of the company’s target markets (geographic and industry), customer value proposition and sales process and pipeline are integral to this step.
When I supported digital transformation as an external advisor of a Fortune 100 company, we were focused on launching an IP-based product suite of content and connectivity services. The short-term purpose was customer acquisition, enabling the company to sell additional services and driving toward the mid-term purpose: higher average revenue per user. The goal’s long-term purpose was to shift from a commoditized services provider to a differentiated content and services provider.
2. Plan
Translate the purpose into a strategy across the short-, mid-, and long-term, focusing on themes, alignment to strategic priorities, and an approximation of value creation. Don’t focus on items from the backlog at this stage because you may miss the forest for the trees.
While serving as the chief product officer for one of the largest providers of compliance content and software, I set three strategic goals.
1. Meet users where they perform most of their work.
2. Build an integrated platform that serves both end users and the service providers who perform compliance activities.
3. Offer proactive insights to help customers manage compliance risk.
Thematically, the plan translated into a need for integrations and embedding functionality into the largest ERPs, delivering a data platform with workflow integrations and AI capabilities that compared client data against fluid regulatory requirements.
3. Priorities
Expand the plan into a 12-month roadmap, categorized under now, next and later. A good roadmap requires coordinated release planning with clear communications focused on customer benefits, training to increase adoption and a feedback loop to assess the impact of the release.
During my time as a member of the executive team of a Fortune 500 SaaS company, we launched a program called “Beyond the Bits.” The program created a structured process that enabled digital/product leaders, CSM, and marketing teams to deliver a cohesive digital adoption plan and integrate the differentiators into sales pitches. The result? A 32% jump in sales over a three-year period.
4. Principles
Before his infamous fight with Evander Holyfield, people asked Mike Tyson if he was worried. He replied, “Everyone has a plan until they get punched in the mouth.”
Helmuth von Moltke, a 19th-century Prussian military commander, said something similar: “No plan of operations reaches with any certainty beyond the first encounter with the enemy’s main force.” Truth in the boxing ring and on the battlefield can also be applied to driving digital transformation.
Businesses that simply set a strategy and assume it will not face challenges are setting themselves up for failure. You cannot build technology for the sake of technology and expect long-term success. Successful digital leaders will define a clear set of principles to enable their teams to move with confidence when faced with challenges.
Successful digital leaders define a clear set of principles that allow their teams to move forward at pace and with confidence when faced with challenges. This road is already well paved with some good examples that can simply be adopted. I will list a few here to help you get started.
• The one-way-vs.-two-way-door-decision-making approach espoused by Jeff Bezos.
• Move with urgency and focus from Stripe’s key principles.
• Defining a clear RACI to drive transparency and speed of decision-making that James Everingham implemented at Instagram (and a wonderful illustration to learn how this applies to Star Wars).
• The S.P.A.D.E. decision-making framework by the amazing Gokul Rajaram was formed during his time at Google and Square.
5. Presentation
Master the art of communication. Define a cadence to keep the organization informed about the progress of various initiatives underway and bring teams together to resolve roadblocks quickly.
Most frequently, this translates into a governance model where key stakeholders are informed on status and consulted on course adjustments. The opportunity space to drive organizational impact is much larger when the leader actively celebrates successes and creates psychological safety to discuss failures (problems, not people) openly, offering learning opportunities and avoiding costly, repetitive mistakes.
My suggestion is to set a communication model around three pillars: regular governance, successes to motivate the teams and retrospectives to drive continuous improvement.
In summary, understanding your organization’s purpose helps define clear goals aligned with strategy. The plan defines the thematic elements of the strategy that underpins these digital means. Priorities involve designing a step-by-step blueprint to reach the plan within a short-term span, typically over the course of the next 12 months. Principles allow the business to operate at pace and with a sense of urgency in implementing the priorities, especially when faced with challenges. Finally, presentation focuses on effectively communicating this change internally within teams.
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