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A Beautiful, Human Challenge

Digital transformation in an age of uncertainty

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Blog | Digital Transformation
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A Beautiful, Human Challenge
Digital transformation in an age of uncertainty

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I took part in a recent round-table event where an executive described digital transformation as a “beautiful, human challenge”. This phrase really struck a chord for me.

The theme was about business resilience in an age of uncertainty, and the human side of digital transformation was at the heart of the conversation throughout. Whether it was talk of change management, the rapid adoption of digital tools in response to limited movement during the pandemic, or the source of business resilience, we kept returning to the role and importance of people.

The Cheese Priest

One food & beverage exec, from a cheese producer, explained: there is sometimes a highly experienced and valued ‘cheese priest’, whose job it is to ‘sniff the air’ and make calculations and changes concerning the production environment, to ensure quality and yield. Replacing that role with data-driven algorithms is not easy – that is a senior position of huge value and heritage, so there is resistance.

However, the data model can consider more inputs, control quality even more precisely, and – here’s the kicker – offer a 10% improvement in yield. No matter how important the ‘cheese priest’ may be, if the producer does not digitalize, they will not be able to compete in the future. As the executive put it, “I think there will be big winners and big losers, and very little in between.”

The Middle Manager

In a similar way, another executive, this time from a household-name pharmaceutical company, talked about the impact on power structures when digital tools are freely available throughout the company. The move towards autonomous teams within a company, that have access to data and insights, reduces and perhaps negates much of the role of the middle managers who were responsible for bringing together information and insights and implementing plans and procedures.

That’s all very well, she says, but who does a company need to help implement the systems and adoption of digital transformation technology? The middle manager. Another very human challenge concerning change management and company structure.

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Ambitioning

In my experience, successful digital transformation has a lot to do with how companies approach ambitioning. The pandemic showed us what is possible when the motivation is there. The sheer speed and scale of vaccine production was a remarkable achievement. So how do we get people to sign up to digital transformation and get involved? How do we motivate people? Because the tech is there, it’s just a question of willing.

I see customers who struggle to change because they can’t see it and others who have really embraced change and have that motivation. Even a company such as Rockwell Automation, which is at the leading edge of industrial digital transformation technologies, was forced to change how it worked very quickly during the pandemic. Like many companies, Rockwell brought in new digital communication tools and systems in a matter of days, which might otherwise have taken years to adopt – because the motivation was huge.

In my view, the most successful companies in digital transformation adoption are ones where the motivation comes from the top down and the leaders get in front to use, embrace, and show why digital transformation is so important.

Two Sides to The Coin

The scale and reach of digitalization can make it seem like a mountain to climb. Aside from motivating the leaders, how can companies begin to implement digital transformation? I believe there are two sides to this coin.

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The first is the human side – the change management, the will to change. Asked if they felt, in the face of the pandemic, war in Ukraine, rising global energy costs, and supply chain issues, that their company was resilient, one of the executives in the panel offered an interesting response. “Yes,” he said, “we are quite resilient because resilience is about an organization that is capable of learning, and we do. We learn from failures and setbacks, and we bounce back.”

This mentality, allied with the motivation to adopt digital transformation, is vital. The journey is not necessarily a direct one. Old KPIs might not show true value in new technologies. Not everything that is tried will succeed.

The other side of the coin concerns strategy and focus. It’s about choosing where to begin and in what order to undertake changes. The very nature of digital transformation is that everything is connected, so you need to consider the whole and understand all the pieces. It can be challenging to coordinate but the best approach is to find the building blocks of each piece and then take it step by step.

Help is at Hand

Importantly, and as a closing thought, whether you are a leader at a multi-national company, or a small- to medium-sized enterprise, you are not alone. The skills, know-how and experience needed to undertake digital transformation in an era of uncertainty are often available in your extended network; your ecosystem of vendors and integrators are often very willing to co-innovate.

At Rockwell Automation, for example, we want to be part of your journey. We want to make the world more productive and sustainable. We stand with the makers, with the problem solvers, the builders, and the innovators, because we belong to that community. And we are ready to help you solve the beautiful, human challenge of digital transformation.

Find out more here.

Published January 5, 2023

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Tags: Management Perspectives, The Connected Enterprise

Åsa Arvidsson
Regional Vice President, North EMEA, Rockwell Automation
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