6 Digital Transformation Trends for 2019 - 2020 ~via @briansolis
Digital transformation is much more than “corporate speak”, and we should not discount its legitimacy when it comes to business modernization. So I say this, Digital transformation is not a buzzword. I repeat. Digital transformation is not a buzzword. Yes, “digital transformation” as a moniker has been overused and diluted by executives and consultants to represent all aspects of digitalization in every facet of a business. But, when you study it, without bias or agendas, an important trend in business model innovation is taking shape.
In my work during my time at Altimeter, I published “The State of Digital Transformation” for five years running. It was the industry's most comprehensive look at enterprise-wide digitization. In report, I observed that the most progressive organizations were increasingly prioritizing customer experience investments in short-and long-term digital transformation roadmaps. And, not only do customers directly benefit from these efforts, but companies are also accelerating the modernization of cross-functional operations and business models to better compete in quickly-evolving markets.
1. The Battle Between CIOs and CMOs Course-Corrected Digital Transformation
The ongoing tug-of-war between CIOs and CMOs over digital transformation has ended, and it is customers who ultimately win.
For the better part of 10 years, digital transformation was, unsurprisingly, about “digital” and how and where CIOs and IT leaders were investing in next-generation technologies. Cloud, mobile, social, apps, IoT, et al., represented significant updates and upgrades to technological infrastructures aimed at scaling and improving operations and performance. But CIOs weren’t the only drivers. CMOs recognized the rapid adoption of the same technologies among customers and how they were dramatically reshaping behaviors, preferences and outcomes.
This led to a historical tug-of-war between CIOs and CMOs, the two early adopters and leaders of digital transformation, as to who “owned” digital transformation. While CIOs focused on infrastructure, CMOs set their sights on renovating customer touchpoints and supporting back-end systems. According to our research, that purported war seems to finally be over.
2. The 2018-2019 State of Digital Transformation
This year we saw a noteworthy drop (-77%) in marketing’s executive leadership of enterprise-wide digital transformation efforts (5%). While it seems that CIOs may have won the contest, the truth is that the competition is benefitting organizations and customers alike.
In the past, marketing was a logical starting place for digital transformation efforts, as CMOs aimed to update how companies engage customers and modernize customer touchpoints. Now that mission is even more critical. New devices, apps and on-demand services are driving new customer behaviors and expectations. At the same time, mobile, big data, AI, machine learning and digital influence represent enablers for innovation beyond marketing, expanding the role of CMOs to now include customer engagement, experience, loyalty and lifetime value.
3. Digital Transformation Drives Business Performance and Growth in the Name of CX
Upon further study, we learned that the rise in CIO ownership does not at all mean that CMOs are losing stature in digital transformation leadership or influence.
As digital transformation matures, the purview targets complete business modernization to drive growth and performance. Customer experience, as a result, becomes the catalyst in uniting the enterprise. For example, CIOs are looking beyond infrastructure, becoming business partners to key functions across the organization. CMOs, in partnership with IT, are honing their focus on the digital transformation of the traditional marketing function as a whole, modernizing it for CX, for sales force collaboration, and for direct-drive revenue.
4. Digital Transformation Aims at Modernizing Touchpoints to Enhance Customer Experiences
Over the years, the top drivers for advanced digital transformation efforts have consistently revolved around two things: 1) modernizing technologies across the enterprise and 2) investing in modern customer experiences.
Now, competing for new market opportunities also becomes paramount. More than half of the companies (51%) we surveyed reported that they are investing in growth opportunities in new markets, making it the leading driver for digital transformation efforts. Studying evolving customer behaviors and preferences rank second at 46%. The third leading driver is increased competitive pressure (41%).
The reality is that customer touch points must be updated continuously as fractured, dated, or unintuitive ones impair the customer experience and introduce fissures into customer relationships and loyalty over time. As such, CX-focused efforts represent a significant cluster of short and long-term digital transformation priorities to enable a more customer-centric and real-time infrastructure.
5. Short-Term and Long-Term CX Priorities
Integrating all social, mobile, web, commerce, service efforts and investments to deliver an integrated, frictionless, and omnichannel customer experience:
54% short-term
57% long-term
Investing in more intuitive, integrated e-commerce and mobile commerce platforms and processes in the long-and short-term respectively:
36% short-term
37% long-term
Overhauling customer service to meet the expectations of connected consumers:
54% short-term
57% long-term
Further research into our customer’s digital touchpoints and customer journey:
54% short-term
57% long-term
6. With Meaningful Digital Transformation, Customers Win
CX investments represent immediate areas of opportunity, but also show that companies are focusing on keeping customer touch points up-to-date and relevant in the long term. As customers become more and more comfortable with mobile and emerging technologies, CMOs are aiming to understand these connected customers’ shifting expectations and preferences better through real-time data and analytics. Additionally, CMOs are employing new programs and services that consistently meet the needs of their connected customers as times and trends evolve.
Customer experience will only continue to serve as a primary catalyst for digital acceleration and maturity. As a result, elite CMOs are shifting the role of marketing to create a business growth engine focused on CX, performance and innovation. This may reduce the current need to participate in organization-wide efforts. In due time, however, this valuable front-line experience and expertise will place marketing back in a leadership position as organizations increasingly place customers at the center of their digital transformation initiatives.
Brian Solis, Author, Keynote Speaker, Futurist
Brian Solis is world-renowned digital analyst, anthropologist and futurist. He is also a sought-after keynote speaker, an 8x best-selling author and strategi advisor . In his new book, Lifescale: How to live a more creative, productive and happy life, Brian tackles the struggles of living in a world rife with constant digital distractions. His model for “Lifescaling” helps readers overcome the unforeseen consequences of living a digital life to break away from diversions, focus on what’s important, spark newfound creativity and unlock new possibilities. His previous books, X: The Experience When Business Meets Design and What's the Future of Business explore the future of customer and user experience design and modernizing customer engagement in the four moments of truth.
Invite him to speak at your next event or engage him to advise your organization in CX, digital transformation, innovation and more!