Digital Transformation IBM
Digital Transformation IBM
Executive Report
IBM Institute for Business Value
Strategy and Transformation
Digital transformation
Creating new business models where digital meets physical
IBM Global Business Services
Executive Report
IBM Institute for Business Value
IBM Global Business Services, through the IBM Institute for Business Value, develops
fact-based strategic insights for senior executives around critical public and private
sector issues. This executive report is based on an in-depth study by the Institutes
research team. It is part of an ongoing commitment by IBM Global Business Services
to provide analysis and viewpoints that help companies realize business value.
You may contact the authors or send an e-mail to [email protected] for more information.
Additional studies from the IBM Institute for Business Value can be found at
ibm.com/iibv
Introduction
Individuals and businesses alike are embracing
the digital revolution. Social networks and digital devices are being used to engage
government, businesses and civil society, as well as friends and family. People are using
mobile, interactive tools to determine who to trust, where to go and what to buy. At the
same time, businesses are undertaking their own digital transformations, rethinking
what customers value most and creating operating models that take advantage of whats
newly possible for competitive differentiation. The challenge for business is how fast
and how far to go on the path to digital transformation.
The new digital age
In every industry, business leaders realize customer expecta-
tions have created tremendous pressure to change the way they
set their strategies and run their organizations. Yet, because
they have to manage existing, often traditional, offerings and
operations, new requirements to incorporate information and
interactivity quickly drive up costs and complexity.
The IBM :o1o Global CEO Study found complexity, in fact,
to be the biggest challenge facing CEOs today. However, in
that same study, the ability for technology to mitigate
complexity was also clear: technology was second only to
market factors as a force for change.
1
This digital transforma-
tion study explores the opportunities and challenges arising
when business and operating models that leverage information,
customer and partner interactivity need to be integrated into
existing organizational capabilities.
By Saul J. Berman and Ragna Bell
Business leaders have long used information technology to
improve productivity and efhciency, reach new markets and
optimize supply chains. Whats new is that customer expecta-
tions have also changed. People everywhere are using social
networks to hnd jobs and restaurants, lost friends and new
partners and, as citizens, to achieve common political goals.
They are using the Internet for entertainment, shopping,
socializing and household management.
How can businesses best respond to this shift? How can they
take advantage of the opportunity to innovate, differentiate and
grow? And how can they do all this cost efhciently, leveraging
and optimizing the newest information technologies as part of
their overall physical operations? In our analysis of leading
companies and our work with clients, we have found that
companies with a cohesive strategy for integrating digital and
physical elements can successfully transform their business
models and set new directions for entire industries.
2 Digital transformation
These companies focus on two complementary activities:
reshaping customer value propositions and transforming
operating models using digital technologies for greater
customer interaction and collaboration. To do so, they are
building a new set of capabilities that allows them to progress
along both dimensions.
Forces for business change
Chief among forces for transformation are the surge in devices
for mobile connectivity, such as smart phones and tablets, and
the creation of social networks, such as Facebook and Twitter.
Both of these developments are creating an exponential
explosion in data, which, in turn, requires business analytics to
make sense of the information and take full advantage of it.
Shifting global connectivity and customer empowerment
drive digital transformation
The focus and impact of the Internet and global connectivity
have shifted (see Figure 1). In the 1990s, only organizations
in select industries such as music, entertainment and
electronics were exploring digital products and services.
Infrastructure providers took the lead in building out the
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resources. The Internet hype of the late 1990s ended with a
crash in 2000. Yet consumer demand for digital products and
services continued to evolve. As customers became
increasingly empowered based on pervasive access to
online information, along with a multiplicity of choices and
channels, their expectations ratcheted skyward. As a result,
customers have now become the primary force behind
digital transformation in all industries.
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Late 1990s 2000s 2010s
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Figure 1: Digital transformation is becoming pervasive across
functions, industries and geographies.
*Note: Digital transformation of business models impacts both public and private sector
organizations.
Source: IBM Institute for Business Value.
Evolution of digital transformation
Limited
Pervasive
Digital products and
infrastructure
Digital products
(e.g., music,
entertainment)
Infrastructure (e.g.
telecommunications,
software, IT)
Digital distribution
and web strategy
Web strategy and
e-commerce (e.g.
retail, electronics)
Creating effciency
through web
strategy (e.g.
government)
Digital
transformation of
business models*
Mobile revolution
Social media
Hyper
digitization
Power of
analytics
IBM Global Business Services 3
Businesses have always looked at new information and digital
technology in terms of what it can do for them, e.g., greater
prohtability and expanded customer reach through online
shopping. Now, customers also have a range of new choices,
many of which are beyond the purview of business. Decisions
about what to focus on or buy are increasingly informed
through social networks, where personal and business contacts,
product selections, home video clips, favorite news items, even
real-time location coordinates, are shared instantly and widely.
People who reach out to their personal networks for advice on
the latest generation of washing machines are also likely to use
smart phones or other devices to check out their professional
networks for views about business procurement choices. The
habits of consumers such as seeking independent information
and advice before making a purchase have become the habits
of business buyers.
Mobility shifts time and location for customer engagement
By the end of :o11, smart phones and tablets will overtake PC
shipments.
:
Downloads of mobile applications, or apps, are
expected to surge from 11 billion in :o1o to billion in
:o1.
For todays digital native, waiting by a phone for a call is as
puzzling a concept as a rotary dialer. Conversely, a time
traveller from the 1pos would hnd it challenging to assimilate
todays continuous ow of digital activity and data. As much
information is now being generated every two days, according
to former Google CEO Eric Schmidt, as existed between the
dawn of civilization and :oo.
8
Demand for video, as well as
constant connectivity, is expected to double the amount of
mobile data trafhc every year through :o1.
p
In todays digital age, almost every company is
in the business of creating content.
4 Digital transformation
Todays world exhibits a fast-developing case of hyper-digitiza-
tion. Advanced mathematical analysis, powered by intensive
computing systems, provides unprecedented opportunity to
unleash the value of interconnected data. Electronic tags on
packages, pallets and transport vehicles can relay critical
information about the location and quality of items ranging
from pharmaceuticals to food. Sensors in electrical grids and
water systems, intelligent buildings and congested roadways
can optimize the use of scarce resources. Predictions based on
information relayed from security cameras, satellites and soil
can improve public health and safety.
From individuals to businesses to industries
The forces of mobility, social media and hyper-digitization
ripple from the individual through entire industries, as
connected customers and employees move past traditional
boundaries. Whether they buy from them or work for them,
people are letting businesses know just what they want and
need. This disruption is pushing all industries toward the
digital end of the physical-digital continuum (see Figure :).
Even where offerings and points of engagement are primarily
physical, as in agriculture or consumer white goods, business
channels and customer relationships are being reshaped.
A music lesson: media and entertainment
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of the digital revolution. With the standardized mp3
format for digitized music and the availability of
broadband connections for Internet distribution, the
reality of industry disruption became apparent to all.
Traditional music companies are expected to lose more
than 35 percent of value between 2003 and 2012, with
total revenues for the period expected to drop from
US$12 billion to $8 billion. But at the same time, other
parts of the music ecosystem more closely attuned to
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includes consumer electronics companies that make
digital music players, concert promoters and producers
of other live events.
10
The lesson? Industry incumbents that avoid the hard
decisions about digital transformation are likely to
suffer a fate similar to that of traditional music
companies. For companies that stay closer to their
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new opportunities.
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Digital transformation drivers
Figure 2: Digital transformation drivers are pushing industries
along the physical-digital continuum.
Source: IBM Institute for Business Value analysis.
Degree of product and service digitization
Primarily physical
Industry examples:
qAgriculture
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products
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qServices
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Mixed digital and
physical
Industry examples:
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qAutomotive
qBanking
q$POTVNFSFMFDUSPOJDT
qHealthcare
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q1VCMJTIJOHFEVDBUJPO
publishing
qRetail
qTelecommunications
Primarily digital
Industry examples:
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qMusic
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applications D
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IBM Global Business Services 5
Transforming the business
What do businesses need to do to get ahead of the widespread
forces for change in our digital age? Key areas include recon-
hguring the customer value proposition (what is being offered)
and reshaping the operating model (how it is delivered). Up to
now, most organizations have focused on one of these areas
through a set of specihc initiatives. Each has its own set of
challenges and opportunities:
r Products and services, information and customer engagement
can be reshaped using the new capabilities for mobility,
interactivity and information access. The challenge then
becomes how to monetize these new customer value
propositions.
r The operating model can be realigned so that customer
preferences and requirements inform every activity in the
buying and selling chain. Doing this requires integrating all
business activities and optimizing how data related to those
activities is managed and tracked. What are the business
requirements for achieving the topmost level and full scale of
beneht?
Both sets of issues are best addressed in progressive stages of
transformation, as seen in Figure .
Strategic paths to transformation
We have found from our research and client experience that
the strategic routes to transformation can be summarized by
three basic approaches. One focuses on customer value
propositions and another on transforming the operating
model. Taking a more holistic and integrated approach, the
third combines those two approaches, simultaneously trans-
forming the customer value proposition and organizing
operations for delivery.
In todays increasingly digital world, even companies in the
primarily physical industries will not start their digital
transformation journey from zero. Instead, most organiza-
tions are already hnding ways to use digital information by
providing interactive web sites, improved customer service or
enhanced customer experiences. Similarly, they are creating
basic operating capabilities such as online channels or digital
supply chain tracking. From this starting point, a companys
strategic approach to transformation typically follows one of
the three paths shown in Figure .
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