An IDC study of CIOs worldwide reveals an appetite for digital transformation, even as IT teams struggle against age-old challenges.
Business lines, CIOs, and IT teams are not working collaboratively and, as a result, are putting digital transformation success at risk, according to a new study by technology analyst firm IDC.
Despite an improved position for CIOs and CTOs within organizations, the high rate of demand for digital transformation is spawning multiple projects, leaving organizations with shadow digital transformation, rather than a seamlessly integrated digital business. The recent IDC study found that the root cause is the pace and demand for digital services in the enterprise. “Four in five survey respondents say business demand for digital initiatives and capabilities is on the rise,” states IDC. Worryingly, only 40% of the survey group have a company-wide digital strategy in place that coordinates and focuses these projects.
IDC finds that two-thirds of global businesses are investigating new business operational ideas and the vast majority are based on digital concepts. “Brainstorming and giving staff room to experiment appear to be commonplace. So too are the processes needed for incubating and scaling those ideas. The number of digital pilots is growing rapidly.” IDC reports that businesses are now allowing ideas to flourish from each and every part of the organization. This represents a decline in the top-down approach to leadership of the past and is more reflective of the way digital start up businesses operate. However, the democratization of ideas across the business poses a challenge for CIOs. As ideas take seed throughout the business, there are risks that the CIO, and the technology investments they have made, may be sidelined. This leads to technology and information silos and difficulty meeting cyber-security and data privacy compliance requirements.