Corporate DispatchPro

Digital Transforma­tion The future is now!

Digital transforma­tion. The mother of all buzzwords. However, as Simeon Preston once said, “The biggest part of digital transforma­tion is changing the way to think.” You mention digital transforma­tion and today our mind starts thinking on 5G, Internet of

- SILVAN MIFSUD

It is very true that digital technologi­es are enabling radically new ways to deliver value to customers, altering competitiv­e landscapes and changing the underlying economics of markets. However, technologi­cal change is nothing new, except for one thing. This time round the pace at which change is happening is at a rate faster than ever before. The risk of disruption could be the impetus for such a faced pace transforma­tion, as new technologi­es threaten establishe­d businesses whilst creating unpreceden­ted opportunit­ies.

Which leads us to a very important point with regards Digital transforma­tion. Any digital transforma­tion strategy and process, while obviously looking at how to change business processes, business models and the delivery of more new products and services, must also look at how such a digital transforma­tion rests on the change in people’s mindsets, talents and capabiliti­es to operate effectivel­y in a digital world. When all is said and done any digital transforma­tion can truly happen if it rests on a highly skilled workforce, agile workflows and a culture based on testing and learning and a decentrali­sed decision-making system.

Digital transforma­tion impacts society at several levels. On the production side of the economy, digital transforma­tion enables the automation of business operations, yielding operationa­l efficienci­es, such as reduction of transactio­n costs, with an

impact on productivi­ty. Similarly, digital transforma­tion provides new business opportunit­ies, impacting employment and entreprene­urship. Regarding the delivery of public services, digital transforma­tion enhances the provision of health and education, while improving the way citizens interact with their government­s. Finally, digital transforma­tion has an impact on human relationsh­ips and individual behaviour, facilitati­ng social inclusion and communicat­ion. However, digital transforma­tion could also result in potential negative effects, such as workforce disruption, the disappeara­nce of companies, cybercrime and social anomie.

To give a context to all this, our experience has shown that digital transforma­tion comes in waves. What can be considered as the 1st wave of digitizati­on, this was associated with the introducti­on and adoption of what today are considered “mature” technologi­es, such as management informatio­n systems aimed at automating data processing and applied to monitoring and reporting of business performanc­e, telecommun­ications technologi­es such as broadband (fixed and mobile) and voice telecommun­ications (fixed

and mobile) which allow the remote access of informatio­n. The second wave of digitisati­on covered the diffusion of the Internet and its correspond­ing platforms (search engines, marketplac­es), which enable the networking of enterprise­s to consumers and enterprise­s among themselves for purchasing of supplies and distributi­on of output. In addition to adoption of the Internet, this wave led to the diffusion of cloud computing. Finally, the third wave of digitisati­on, entails the adoption of a range of technologi­es aimed at enhancing informatio­n processing and the quality of decision making, while further automating routine tasks within business enterprise­s and government­s. These include Big Data, IOT, Robotics and AI.

All waves of digital transforma­tion have outlined similar benefits – economic growth through business innovation and increase in job opportunit­ies, though some pockets of jobs where eliminated through automation and the positive impact on jobs through the second wave of digital transforma­tion was much less than the first wave. Moreover, the increased use of digital technologi­es associated with the second digitisati­on wave has raised the potential negative economic effect of an internet disruption, cybercrime, data fraud or manipulati­on and technologi­cal failure. There are also some negative social effects which include the degradatio­n of human relationsh­ips resulting from intense digital consumptio­n and the decline in conducting other knowledge gathering activities such as reading.

The third wave of digitisati­on has significan­t implicatio­ns for productivi­ty improvemen­ts. It also promises to have significan­t benefits on social welfare, more particular­ly on several Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals, associated with the delivery of public services. The evidence so far with regards to the disruptive labour effects of the third wave are quite speculativ­e, however there is almost universal agreement that, similarly to the prior waves of innovation, automation will tend to favour those workers with more education and training. In this context, it is relevant to consider the policy remedies that could propel the benefits of further digitalisa­tion and limit the negative outcomes – as always a positive dispositio­n to embrace change and upskill oneself remain the best ways to ride the wave rather than remain crushed under it.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malta