American Association for Physician Leadership

Strategy and Innovation

Two Big Reasons That Digital Transformations Fail

Mike Sutcliff | Raghav Narsalay | Aarohi Sen

November 19, 2020


Summary:

Most of the leaders we surveyed reported poor returns on their digital investments. The primary reason: unsuccessful efforts to scale digital innovations beyond early pilot work.





Most of the leaders we surveyed reported poor returns on their digital investments. The primary reason: unsuccessful efforts to scale digital innovations beyond early pilot work.

Plenty of cash is flowing into digital initiatives at large, industrial companies. In fact, the executives we surveyed recently at 1,350 of these businesses globally reported investments in digital reinvention totaling more than $100 billion between 2016 and 2018.

The problem is that the expected results often fail to materialize. Most of the leaders we surveyed (companies representing 17 countries and 13 industries) reported poor returns on their digital investments. The primary reason: unsuccessful efforts to scale digital innovations beyond early pilot work.

What’s keeping companies from scaling pilots successfully? And what are the companies that are experiencing better returns on digital investments doing differently from the rest? Two critical challenges — and their remedies — emerged from our analysis:

UNSPOKEN DISAGREEMENT AMONG TOP MANAGERS ABOUT GOALS: If top managers aren’t on the same page, it makes it difficult for their direct reports to agree on what to prioritize and how to measure progress. The remedy: Define and articulate not only the opportunity but also the problem it solves, and how the company will build the organization around the desired solution before investing.

A DIVIDE BETWEEN THE DIGITAL CAPABILITIES SUPPORTING THE PILOT AND THE CAPABILITIES AVAILABLE TO SUPPORT SCALING IT: When this problem isn’t addressed, companies may face a choice between accepting long delays in ramping up production or attempts by leadership at rapid, unwieldy change to meet what they have promised. The remedy: Look outside to close gaps or nurture pilots internally, ramping up digital capabilities across the organization from the get-go.

When companies anticipate the challenges we’ve outlined here, they’re better positioned to make a compelling case for funding. And they’re much more likely to succeed with their innovations.

Mike Sutcliff is the group chief executive of Accenture Digital. Raghav Narsalay is a managing director at Accenture Research in Mumbai. Aarohi Sen is a manager at Accenture Research in Delhi.

Copyright 2019 Harvard Business School Publishing Corp. Distributed by The New York Times Syndicate.


Mike Sutcliff

Mike Sutcliff is the group chief executive of Accenture Digital. Connect with him on Twitter  and LinkedIn .


Raghav Narsalay

Raghav Narsalay is global research lead on Industry X for Accenture and is based in Mumbai.


Aarohi Sen

Aarohi Sen is a manager at Accenture Research in Delhi.

Interested in sharing leadership insights? Contribute



For over 45 years.

The American Association for Physician Leadership has helped physicians develop their leadership skills through education, career development, thought leadership and community building.

The American Association for Physician Leadership (AAPL) changed its name from the American College of Physician Executives (ACPE) in 2014. We may have changed our name, but we are the same organization that has been serving physician leaders since 1975.

CONTACT US

Mail Processing Address
PO Box 96503 I BMB 97493
Washington, DC 20090-6503

Payment Remittance Address
PO Box 745725
Atlanta, GA 30374-5725
(800) 562-8088
(813) 287-8993 Fax
customerservice@physicianleaders.org

CONNECT WITH US

LOOKING TO ENGAGE YOUR STAFF?

AAPL providers leadership development programs designed to retain valuable team members and improve patient outcomes.

American Association for Physician Leadership®

formerly known as the American College of Physician Executives (ACPE)