“Ours is the age that is proud of machines that think and suspicious of men who try to.”
– H. Mumford Jones
“Ours is the age that is proud of machines that think and suspicious of men who try to.”
– H. Mumford Jones
“Digital” has replaced “Cloud” as the hot synonym for “Everything.”
No matter what a company plans to do and how it plans to do it, it’s now officially Digital.
Not that I’m a Digital skeptic. I’d just like, when we talk about “Digital,” to be confident we’re talking about the same thing.
Google a bit and you’ll find quite a few different accounts of why Digital is so important, along with several definitions, some of which, reprehensibly, make it a noun.
My favorite: Digital enables new business models. Examples include Uber, AirBNB, and Zipcar, all of whose “new” business models amount to being brokers — companies that bring buyers and sellers together in exchange for a cut of the action.
It’s a very new business model, certainly no older than the Phoenicians.
For whatever it’s worth (probably what you pay to receive KJR) here’s my take on why business leaders not only can’t ignore matters Digital, but have to embrace the subject. Truly Digital companies:
And remember, it isn’t a decision unless it commits or denies the time, staff and budget needed to effectively …
It’s OODA again. Digital businesses are built on OODA loops focused on the potential impact of new technologies. Not static list of specific technologies. New and interesting technologies as they arise and mature.
For Digital businesses the Orient stage has outsized significance, because many of us humans have a strong tendency to reject the new as either wrong or no different from the same old same old.
Digital businesses can no more afford to fall into that trap than the opposite extreme — dying from the shiny ball syndrome of chasing the next huge thing before giving the current huge thing a chance to succeed.
So Digital business have to establish methods, and not just methods but a supporting enterprise-wide culture, that let them go beyond the lip service of “that’s what we’ve been doing all along” to accurately recognize what really are familiar old concepts hiding behind shiny new buzz-phrases and what are truly new and important possibilities.
And none of this will matter if the company’s IT organization hasn’t figured out just how different the Digital world is from the standard collection of “best practices” followed by old-school industrial-age IT.
Recent history — how IT responded to two past transformational technologies, the personal computer, and the world wide web — illustrates the challenge. In both cases, IT ignored them completely until long after they’d become entrenched elsewhere in the business.
Why was that? Boil everything down and it came to this: When they first appeared, and for several years afterward, neither the PC nor the world wide web fit what IT did. They were out-of-scope, and outside IT’s current areas of expertise. CIOs didn’t know what to do with or about them, so it was safer and easier to declare them Someone Else’s Problem.
In the Digital era this attitude just won’t cut it because new technologies that can have an impact on your business are emerging faster than ever. Digital businesses need IT that provides technology leadership to the business, at all levels of the business, and at all levels of IT.
Technology leadership means more than just (for example) the CIO explaining to the other members of the executive suite how the Internet of Things represents a threat to the company’s current product line.
It means the IT organization knows how to recognize, research, pilot, and incubate new technologies. And, for those that succeed, how to integrate them into both the company’s technical architecture and IT’s organizational architecture.
All levels of the business and IT means the conversations between a help desk analyst and a workgroup manager about collaboration technologies are just as Digital as the CIO’s executive-suite conversations about the Internet of Things.
And are just as important.