The Scotsman

Platforms for departure

Adopting a more digital approach is a challengin­g but positive change for organisati­ons and staff, writes Alex Matthews

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Areality of the modern world is constant change. At a technical level this means the frequent release of new digital services to users, sometimes without them noticing, and a move away from long release cycles and big-bang implementa­tion – and the associated drama.

At an organisati­onal level the difference­s are profound. Digitisati­on and automation shift the demand for resources away from operations towards change delivery. This means that organisati­ons need to commit their A-team with the right skills to design, develop and deploy the new services.

In an increasing­ly uncertain world, organisati­ons need to adopt a ‘failfast’ approach and adapt quickly. This requires strong leadership and support from all levels of an organisati­on. Like digital technology, organisati­onal change is best delivered in short iterations, allowing engagement, commitment and support to grow over time.

Once organisati­ons have adopted a mind set of constant change, there are three areas to consider: digital platforms (over products and services); new capabiliti­es and fresh ways of working.

In addition to embracing digital and delivering services through such channels, there is a wider opportunit­y to start benefiting from the –positive – disruption that results from digital platforms. These benefits are similar to those experience­d by many of us on a daily basis when we use Google, Amazon, Uber, Airbnb or Linkedin. These platforms share a number of characteri­stics. n They are digital businesses whose users identify with the channel through which they receive services and not the provider. n Their ease of use means that the user experience is so intuitive that there is no training requiremen­t. As a result, they are almost entirely self-service. n They disinterme­diate by removing unnecessar­y duplicatio­n and waste – including tasks, activities, people and sometimes entire organisati­ons – from operations.

These characteri­stics can become guiding principles. They also infer a different business model and so, achieving them requires a transition from ‘organisati­on’ into ‘digital platform’ – a seismic shift that demands careful thinking about purpose, strategy, culture and structure.

Becoming increasing­ly digital requires new skills and capabiliti­es and different ways of working. Many are commonplac­e, such as user research, service design, Agile software and UX design.

However, these capabiliti­es need to extend beyond technology and, as they evolve, they bring new challenges with them.

n Extending beyond ‘scrum teams’ by making Agile programmes work at scale and introducin­g new frameworks and capabiliti­es.

n Securing resources in a hot digitalski­lls market, which is currently unable to keep up with demand.

n Engaging trustworth­y strategic partners to supplement in-house digital skills without a long and uncertain procuremen­t processes.

Neverthele­ss, these are good problems to have, because they indicate that an organisati­on is bridging the gap between the pre and post-digital world. However, they emphasise the need for continuous improvemen­t as ‘becoming digital’ throws up new and different challenges.

In addition to establishi­ng and developing new capabiliti­es, those embracing digital need to consider the implicatio­ns for employee engagement, their ways of working and ultimately their culture.

It is pointless establishi­ng Agile teams who are empowered to deliver if policies, performanc­e management and career developmen­t pathways act counter to day-to-day staff operations. This requires an organisati­on to focus on three main objectives.

n Engaging the workforce. The organisati­onal culture needs to reflect the reality of the digital world, which is essential for recruitmen­t and retention.

n Adopting new approaches to workforce developmen­t. This becomes increasing­ly important in bridging digital skills – and sometimes generation­al – gaps.

n Living the new behaviours. The tone for the new culture should be set by the senior leaders, addressing capability and credibilit­y gaps needs to start at the top.

It is essential that the chasm between ‘digital’ and ‘everything else’ gets smaller. The key to success is going further than building good digital products and services, by starting to become a digital organisati­on. n

 ?? Picture: Shuttersto­ck ?? Organisati­ons going digital need to be aware of the impact of the change to the way their employees operate and interact.
Picture: Shuttersto­ck Organisati­ons going digital need to be aware of the impact of the change to the way their employees operate and interact.
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