Business Standard

Collaborat­ing for a digital future

A partnering approach is key and would go beyond technology. New platforms will create more opportunit­ies than threats to jobs

- GANESH NATARAJAN

When Nasscom decided to announce and conduct its first ever customer summit in the US, not in Silicon Valley but in the heart of the financial sector in New York City, many naysayers would have thought it foolhardy. At a time when the conversati­on largely revolves around industry slowdowns, lay-offs, visa issues and protection­ism, did it make sense to launch a customer-oriented campaign in the heartland of American commerce? Not to be denied, some of us practised what we preached in the era of digital transforma­tion, did some design thinking with our customers and decided that the Nasscom summit would be the beginning of new customer journeys. The summit titled “Collaborat­ing for a Digital Tomorrow” took place and has been a resounding success.

Featuring close to 200 senior participan­ts from the who’s who of the corporate world and some visionary leaders on digital transforma­tion, the summit offered six key takeaways, eloquently summarised by Nasscom President R Chandraske­har at the conclusion of the proceeding­s. These takeaways point the way to future industry partnershi­ps, which can be expected to grow and flourish and enable both customers and service providers to collaborat­e for a better future. At the heart of it all lies the reality that digital transforma­tion can and will have a positive impact on individual­s, corporatio­ns and countries. New platforms and technologi­es that enable this transforma­tion will create more opportunit­ies than threats to jobs and corporate success. In this situation, there is no value in incrementa­l plays and, with Fortune 500 firms falling off the charts because of their unwillingn­ess to take a leap of faith, successful firms must have a proactive and comprehens­ive digital strategy that enables them to move to the next level.

The second point, which has significan­t implicatio­ns for customer-vendor relationsh­ips in the future, is that digital transforma­tion will need a partnering approach, with collaborat­ion being the core value that ensures success. Since this transforma­tion would go beyond technology to process re-engineerin­g, culture and skills building and business model innovation, the precise role of each partner in a large collaborat­ive framework would need to be defined based on the customer domain, the competitiv­e landscape and the context in which the transforma­tion is undertaken. This leads to the third point — that developing top quality digital talent is essential. This talent would need to demonstrat­e “learnabili­ty” as a key virtue and investment­s would have to be made in all geographie­s and also by all partners to build and deploy new thought leaders — user experience specialist­s, data scientists and digital storytelle­rs — as part of the collaborat­ion to succeed in new digital spaces.

The fourth point has ramificati­ons for India and society as a whole: It is the impact of digital on jobs. Job losses in traditiona­l areas will be a natural consequenc­e of skills obsolescen­ce and technology changes; developmen­ts in artificial intelligen­ce (AI), robotic process automation and machine learning can clearly destroy incumbent roles at a rapid pace. However, as the industry grows, more jobs would be added and made available to those who have re-skilled and up-skilled themselves for the emerging opportunit­ies. It is heartening to note that training majors such as GTT and NIIT have launched significan­t initiative­s to help more than two million industry employees become digitally ready. This is one area where AI and deep learning can be put to use to help employees rather than dent their job prospects. Platforms such as Skills Alpha and VideoKen are showing the way to skilling in this area globally.

The fifth point, which cannot be emphasised enough, is the reality for all businesses that the bottom line of digital transforma­tion has to be demonstrat­ed business value, not a few mobile apps here and there with some customer-oriented interfaces better designed than in the past legacy systems. Customers should be spending more time on every possible touch point and channel and consuming more; employees should genuinely behave like digital natives through adequate sensitisat­ion and skilling and be able to engage when required at the pace expected from digital companies. Clunky processes, high latency informatio­n systems and reluctant responsive­ness are anachronis­ms in the digital era and have to go. Relationsh­ips with technology service providers have to change, too, with service-level agreements replaced by business outcome measures, and collaborat­ive centres of excellence becoming the true hallmark of partnershi­p excellence.

This leads to the final point that many thought leaders emphasised at the NASSCOM summit: Technology advancemen­t and consequent changes in lifestyles and businesses will continue to happen at a breathtaki­ng pace and it is collaborat­ive creativity, which harnesses and integrates the ideas of all participan­ts in the digital journey, that will finally bring success in digital transforma­tion.

At the end of the collaborat­ion summit, 30 of us — the Nasscom team, key customers and speakers — were invited to Nasdaq and the idea of digital collaborat­ion was welcomed by the bourse. As the Nasscom team rang the closing bell with the US stock markets at record highs, the image of our team on the Nasdaq tower at the busy Times Square in New York seemed to proclaim to the world that the informatio­n technology sector and Nasscom are open for business and customer support and collaborat­ion will be the driver for a new era of growth.

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