Boost Your Digitalization: 8 capability areas to build
During the last weeks, I reflected on the research activities in the Software Center for which I am the director and I realized that everything we do with the partner companies and the universities is concerned with increasing the pace at which we are delivering new value to customers. Whereas most companies, a decade ago, relied on product generations to deliver new value to customers, over the last decade we have seen a shift to periodic software updates and now continuous deployment with very frequent updates to deliver new value. We are moving to a world where every system we use gets better all the time.
Although continuous deployment is still the challenge for many companies, it doesn’t stop there. We now see that the next hills to take include conducting A/B testing using systems deployed in the field as well as (federated) reinforcement learning to allow systems to fully autonomously experiment with their own behavior to continuously improve the value experienced by customers.
Although everyone talks about digitalization as a goal in itself, in my view it is an enabler to achieve something else: a fundamental shift from a transactional business model and relationship with our customers to a continuous one. The transition from keeping products as static as possible once these leave the factory to continuously changing and improving already deployed systems requires a significant change across the company. Digitalization is such a?hard challenge as it literally touches every function and capability in the organization, ranging from business models to deployment and from sales to finance. In order to survive and, preferably, thrive in this transition, companies need to develop new capabilities to capitalize on the new model of delivering value to customers.
Figure: From traditional to continuous value delivery
In the figure above, the transition is illustrated graphically. In traditional value delivery, each product, once it leaves the factory, is basically frozen and deteriorates over time until the customer decides to replace it with a new product. That new product typically is a little better than the previous one, but it also will deteriorate over time and be replaced. In the continuous value delivery model, the value that the product, system or offering provides is continuously increasing. This occurs through continuous deployment of new software, but may also require periodic replacement of electronics and occasional replacement of mechanical parts. The system gets better every day I use it.
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As alluded to in the title, successfully transitioning towards continuous value delivery requires organizations to build new capabilities across the company. Major changes are required in at least the following areas:
This may seem like a lot of take in, but it hammers home the challenge of digitalization and why so many companies struggle with the transformation. I see many companies take initiatives in one or a few areas and then ignore other important dimensions, resulting in failure, disappointment and loss of valuable resources. In the coming weeks, we are going to work our way through each of the capability areas and deepdive into each of the key capabilities in these areas.
Concluding, surviving and even thriving in a digital transformation changes the entire company. It requires building new capabilities in at least eight areas, i.e. business, architecture, process, organization, user and technology innovation, automation and ecosystems. Focusing on one and ignoring the others results in failure and disappointment. Instead, focus on the promise of continuous value delivery to customers and lasting, continuous relationship with your customers where everything gets better all the time. Who doesn’t want that?
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Partner Almende
2 年In the "Innovators dilemma" market disruptions are described that definitely fit the traditional value delivery. The essence of the opportunity for new providers always being in the corner of over served customers that can do with a simpler product for less money and a sales organisation that can not see the logic of offering less value for less money. Do you think that such disruptions will be fewer once you are on the continuous value delivery track?
realizing new digital products | deep modeling
2 年?? "fundamental shift from a transactional business model and relationship with our customers to a continuous one"
Co-Founder at W3D Technologies Inc.
2 年Respectfully Jan Bosch most companies have access to methods, tools and rules. Excess access, imo. Cut vendors.?? Big first?????? ??Cheers!?? ???? ??
He who stops being better stops being good.
2 年Out of curiosity: In which of the eight would you see ?Technical Debt Management“? I have the feeling it is cross cutting through all of them.