Intelligent CXO Issue 03 | Page 67

FINAL WORD

The business landscape has been intensely challenging over the past year , with impacts of the pandemic undoubtedly exacerbating the pressures faced by executive teams . However , enterprises cannot afford to pause or stagnate in the face of tough economic circumstances . In fact , the opposite is true ; the need to evolve is even greater than normal as businesses risk becoming extinct if they fail to adapt to an array of ever-evolving market conditions . The difference during these trying times is that business leaders have been forced to make tough decisions about where to focus their limited resources to reap the greatest reward , where to prioritise with limited staff and what to cut in the face of financial adversity . It is my belief that the catalyst to power through these challenging times is very clear : drive Digital Transformation ( DX ) of the enterprise .

Without embracing digital technologies and tools , the majority of businesses would have failed over the past year . Today ’ s enterprise is driven and empowered by technology in a way that we have never seen before ; from high speed communications to a full spectrum of cybersecurity services and analysis solutions . While some organisations and leaders are averse to change , a successful CEO knows that you can only drive enterprise success by leading evolution regardless of how challenging it may be to implement .
Clearing the tracks for Digital Transformation
In a society so reliant on technology and connectivity , slowing or eliminating the requirement for continuous Digital Transformation would feel like trying to stop a moving train . It is not surprising that failing to digitally transform has been identified as one of the main reasons why more than half of Fortune 500 companies have failed since 2000 . The phrase ‘ innovate or die ’ rings true here , especially in a time with such unprecedented levels of forced change .
It may seem counterproductive to invest in transformation initiatives when purse-strings are already tight , but digital spend can create a light at the end of the tunnel . Successful Digital Transformation will help a business remain competitive by streamlining complex or manual processes , reducing costs and process cycletimes , improving productivity and ultimately , allowing the business to become more efficient . While the benefits are incomparable , there are of course challenges associated with a transformation of this nature , especially with limited experienced resources , but these issues represent speed bumps rather than a roadblock .
One of the most important elements of any large-scale Digital Transformation is to establish and maintain effective and appropriate internal communications . Large-scale infrastructure changes will not happen instantly and are unlikely to come to fruition without facing unexpected hurdles .
It is therefore important that the executive team communicates companywide and focuses specific attention on the functional teams that are embarking upon the digital process re-engineering effort , and their IT partners that are likely to face the bulk of the project activities .
Digital Transformation begins with the identification of processes and systems that are in need of realignment to new business demands , pressure or pace-of-execution , and continues through the evaluation of a company ’ s on-premises and cloud infrastructure . As Digital Transformation will most probably lead to the deployment of a combination of physical and virtual technologies , IT and Security teams must ensure that they have unparalleled visibility into each step of the initiative to ensure performance and reliability is not compromised and that security vulnerabilities are monitored for exploitation . Managing expectations through continuous and broad communications is crucial especially when customer or client work-product could be impacted .
Investing in optimisation
I have suggested that Digital Transformation is a non-negotiable initiative , but the elephant in the room remains : resources are currently limited for most businesses , so investment priorities must change for new tools and technologies .
Fortunately , migrating away from current management , monitoring and security infrastructure tools is not always necessary – for many companies , simply optimising existing resources can free up the resources required to invest in a Digital Transformation initiative .
WITHOUT EMBRACING DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES AND TOOLS , THE MAJORITY OF BUSINESSES WOULD HAVE FAILED OVER THE PAST YEAR .
Paul Hooper , CEO , Gigamon
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