The first part covers digitisation (6 minutes), the rest are
pointers for execution (12 minutes). ‘Misconceptions
that can derail execution’ may be useful.
Digitisation is
simply how business is carried out over
the internet.
Or to be more
complete, business operations; ranging from the sell-side (marketing, sales) to
product design, business development, customer services ..….and to tasks like monitoring
trends, gauging customers’ wants, customer relationship, many of these in
situ. To be clear, it mostly realigns
the processes while also introducing new methods to operate in the digital
space.
Digitisation
uses the internet or rather its machinery - business models, rules, methods,
tools, engagement platforms – and technology (tech), to do that. It is a new way to carry out business
operations, brought about by the reach, borderless nature and scale the
internet creates.
Think of digital
as another channel to carry out your business, alongside conventional means and
digitisation as the mechanism.
Applying digitisation…open
culture, externalisation, customer-centric, data-centric
Whether a goal,
scheme or simply a task, craft a (digital) plan over it. Tool it using tech.
In planning, assess
the different internet models, digitisation mechanisms that can play a role
(eg. co-creation, a form of crowdsourcing), engagement tools (OpenAPI, a tool
to link up partners) and digital techniques (machine learning), applying the
relevant aspects. Weigh the plan against
the influence of digitisation and effects of tech. That’ll probably modify
it.
The internet can be described as a communications utility with wide
global reach, borderless, characterised by being cheap, fast and easy-to-use,
allowing services built on it to be provided 24x7 and with immediacy. These
change behaviour.
Example. The internet
connects buyers directly to sellers, and to information. Customers now have access to information when
once it was restricted. Such
democratisation of information moves the power closer to the buyer. Consumers are now more comfortable buying
directly. They may buy from sources or
places they were once hesitant to. This
is changing commerce. The middleman
model that until now rules commerce is threatened. This is also why customer experience is now
so important. The internet introduces
scale and thus a lot more competitors.
Keep an open mind when crafting the plan. Be wary of old rules, ditch the old ways if
they hinder. Most do. Think agile, do not over develop it. Start basic, with a MVP (minimum viable
product). Use data science (collect
data, apply algorithms to analyse and derive insights) to monitor and if
relevant ask the community (customers, public).
You will get a better idea of the areas to be further developed. A/B testing (versions of the same
product/features/ideas are tested in the market simultaneously) may help
here. Bear in mind the execution should
be a dynamic process - pivot the entire plan, a part of the plan or continue
with the plan according to the data gathered.
In tooling it,
with tech, bear in mind traditional IT.
It may unwittingly hinder execution.
IT, all these
while have been dealing with internal operations. Digitisation is about externalisation, in
particular the sell-side. Different
thinking is required, different approaches. See the breakout box below.
Even corporate
websites that embodies digitisation efforts are still mostly version 1.0,
designed to be read and made to please senior management with emphasis on good
graphic design. In the digital era, it
should be for engagement and made to please customers, with emphasis on speedy
interactions, minimising glitzy designs.
The best websites 2.0 are conversational,
emphasizing interacting with the audience.
Content should be written for SOE (search engine optimization) so that your
site can be found more easily. Website
1.0 content is taken from their brochures!
Website 2.0 turned into a platform may include private channels like
blogs, messaging and perhaps bots (for automated response). It may link to public digital channels such
social media and public blogs for outreach.
Digitisation is
realised through a digital platform, mobile apps, tech and the public digital
channels. For the latter, besides social
media, YouTube and pubic blogs, do not forget the less obvious ones like maps,
location-based services like Foursquare and review sites like Glassdoor. How and which to use obviously depends on the
task.
As you execute
the plan, continue to think agile.
Listen to your customers then adjust.
We once think we know what’s best for the customers but we don’t, not
fully. The good thing is, now we can,
expansively, carefully by listening with intent or better by having a
deliberate conversation (community model).
Be open.
If it is a
business strategy, have a look at this – how do I create a digital strategy
Some pointers….
Pay particular
attention to externalisation aspects. Digitisation
after all is really about external dynamics or a better way to put it -
externalisation of business. AirBnB uses external resources, the public and their
homes instead of owning them. The public
designs t-shirts for Threadless, saving the costs of designers (see later).
Say, you make
and sell specialty mountain bikes. You
may ask…can the customers be engaged to gauge interest in these new features? Would it be useful for them to play a role in
the product life cycle? Can consumers
(read – would-be customers) be involved to design a new bike? The answer is yes but how can these be built
into the plan? My previous posts,
referenced further below, offer some ideas.
Let’s move on to
another important topic - the effects of
culture. Digital culture is unlike
what we are used to, something to know when executing digital plans. The culture is open and it is this openness
that has led to externalisation, opening up the traditionally closed
organisations.
"Digital culture is all about cooperation, partnerships. Old
culture is about internalisation (tasks mostly done in-house) while new culture
adds a huge dose of externalisation (tasks carried out through partners,
customers, would-be customers, public) to reduce costs but mostly to improve
effectiveness."
Since culture
shapes behaviour and affects decision, the team executing digitisation could
embrace it. Internet startups do.
Culture by definition
reflects the environment. Digital
culture (it should really be referred to as internet culture) evolve from the
environment the internet operates in. Its scale and borderless nature induces a
heightened sense of competitiveness, leading to a customer-centric ethos. Its wide reach makes us think more in terms
of dealing directly, prioritising the direct model in our minds, when
pre-internet we simply left it to the middlemen to bridge the gaps. Similarly pre-internet, we paid little heed
to data. Today, we see value in it. Data
in isolation has little value as is small measure of it.
The internet ecosystem produces prodigious amount of data while
facilitating cross links.
As we apply
digitisation, put the customer in the centre.
Digital culture is customer-centric. Prioritise their engagement experience, iron
out the kinks to make it end-to-end.
Minimise friction to buy, for queries, to complain. Turn them into conversations. Don’t forget to collect data – it helps fine
tune customer experience, continuously.
Organisations tend to favour staff over customers. Multiple-form filling is an example, forcing
customers to replicate the same information.
This culture has to change from making it easier for staff to making it
easier for customers. The aim, always,
is to reduce customer effort. Internet startups instinctively get this, birthed
into a borderless environment of intense competition.
Always have data in mind. Collection should begin at the start. Think through the type of information useful
for the business scheme. Come up with a
data plan.
Finally, develop
a community plan. The community model is especially impactful. Most internet startups have such a plan in
place. In the case of Brian Chesky, Airbnb
co-founder, he is CEO and Head of Community.
When?
Home
entrepreneurs already take to social media or marketplaces to sell as a
given. As they grow into small
businesses, they could build on their client base, catalyse them into
discussions and then open it up by encouraging the public to participate, ie.
applying the community model. Engagement increases sales. Getting their opinion, say, on brands
reinforces relationship and the brands. Conversation
produces data….further aiding sales.
They’ll think in terms of would-be customers rather than the pesky
public.
They’ll use the
data turning them into insights; preferences, likes/dislikes, trends, etc. Data science is the term used to do this,
using clever algorithms to mine the data.
If you are a small firm, don’t be distracted by such big terms, there
are simpler ways to do this.
As engagement
increase, producing more and better data, they may find the use of social media
and other public platforms limiting. The
now mid-sized businesses could decide to build their own platform to have full
control over the process and data. This would be the open platform, designed
for engagement, with tools to collect and analyse data. Algorithms reflecting business processes
designed to meet the firm’s objectives are constructed. They also look for
specific data. Besides information, the
platform can be tapped for business operations eg. to find proven staff (the existing recruitment process can be a
bit hit-and-miss) or experts to help fix a difficult issue.
“No matter who you are, most of the smartest people work for someone
else’
- Bill Joy, co-founder
of Sun Microsystems
The community
model has been emphasized because businesses hardly use it. They should.
It’s a powerful digitisation tool
that can improve business. It helps make
better decisions by tapping customer insights since they are always right!
“Amazon is letting viewers help choose its new lineup of TV shows,
scuttling a secretive, wasteful process once reserved for Hollywood
taste-makers. The online retailing giant will let visitors from the U.S, U.K.
and Germany watch, rate and critique 14 pilot episodes the company has
bankrolled. Viewer comments will help the company decide which shows, if any,
get the green light” - 17 April 2013, shootonline.com
“Threadless, an online merchant sells T-shirts but it does not have
its own designers. Instead it runs
design competitions online. Members
submit their ideas and then voted on the one they liked best. Hundreds of thousands of people use the site
blogging and chatting about designs and socialising with their fellow
enthusiasts. They also buy a lot of
shirts.”
There are
obviously many other ways to apply digitisation. Like science, the foundation is the first
step. Some topics, blog-posted are
listed below. They include numerous use
cases.
internet culture - We’re
experiencing a shift in culture today, top down command-and-control to
one that is more open & inclusive, thus the explosion of creativity we are witnessing today and the new ways to do things. Since culture shapes behaviour, therefore execution, it’s useful for those charged with digitisation to be familiar with it.
one that is more open & inclusive, thus the explosion of creativity we are witnessing today and the new ways to do things. Since culture shapes behaviour, therefore execution, it’s useful for those charged with digitisation to be familiar with it.
externalisation - Single
most significant topic to grasp in order to execute digitisation well
crowdsourcing - A method
to tap previously unused resources – consumers, public.
consumer
economy - The digital economy has redefined the
consumer – once they only consume, now they also produce. Realise the impact of this change on business
as AirBnB have ie. a source of productive resource
community model - Digital
engagement method (clients, would-be clients, partners, public) and a method to
tap consumers to assist the business
datarisation - Spot industries
that are likely to be transformed first.
the.simple model - Internet
startups live & breathe this approach as they carry out their plans.
open source model - Lean
management, agile, mvp, pivot…source of modern mgt principles.
free now has value - Free
as a business tool has moved from the periphery to mainstream.
peer-to-peer model
-The basis of the sharing economy (Uber,
AirBnB), marketplace model (Agoda, Alibaba) and fintech that firms can adapt
for their business.
websites 2.0 = Website
1.0, common today is not effective. Digitisation
emanates from website 2.0, reshaped into an open platform, for business.
Misconceptions that can derail execution
Digitisation, as
with anything new can be confusing.
Digitisation ≠ tech, tech is
one of its tools
Many wrongly
associate digitisation with tech as though digitisation is tech and tech is
digitisation. Business is always first,
then tech. Sure, there is interplay that
likely remake the business model/process but tech is used to then tool it for
the digital channel. The term ‘digital
economy’ which is often spoken in the same breath as digitisation sums it up -
it is about the economy.
Digitisation ≠ social, ≠ marketing & sales, it is much more
Another common
misconception is that digitisation is equated to marketing, sales and social
media. The sell-side dominates our
perception. Perhaps this is because the
marketing folks were among the first to see the sway the internet can do for
marketing. But companies could do better
if they look at it from the angle of business operations, of which, marketing
is part of.
Digitisation ≠ replace, it is another channel for business
Many think in
terms of digital versus traditional
business, a monumental distraction. It’s
best to keep ‘versus’ in perspective and be clear that digital is only another channel
of business, alongside existing means as newsprint is for newspapers or stores
are for retailers.
Instead, and this is important, focus on the core business. For media, it is content. Depending on the audience, they could use a
combination of newsprint, digital site and third party aggregators (Google
news) and the public channels like social media (Twitter for breaking news that
feeds into their digital site) or messaging platforms (WeChat). Strategies must centre on content and their
readers, not the channels, a common error.
Similarly a small retailer could use digital to draw customers to its
shop, its original sales channel on the high street and at the same time expand
the customer base to other towns and beyond.
For a large retailer, digital can be used to engage customers like a
small shop owner can, personalised, friendly, knowledgeable (about the
customer) and to a far wider client base.
They are selling products. They
should use any channel that helps this core business.
Concluding
We have entered
the information age. Like the preceding
industrial era, this changes the way business is done. And the reason staffing at new economy firms
like Amazon (566,000, 2017) are a fraction of the traditional equivalent
Walmart (2.3 million, 2017).
After
computerisation (1960’s) that improved internal operations efficiency, the
introduction of the internet further altered business dynamics. The internet function as an efficient
connector, linking businesses to customers, partners and to the public in ways
that alters the relationship, bringing an external element into business
operations. It is these external
resources, now tap-able, that changed things.
Crowdsourcing is one method, engaging the public to participate directly
and indirectly in an organisation’s operations; in Uber’s case as drivers, with
Quora the knowledge, with Amazon their operations.
‘Early on the company hired a lot of editors to write book and music
reviews—and then decided to use customers’ critiques instead. ‘ - Jeff
Bezos's Top 10 Leadership Lessons, Forbes, 4 April 2012.
It is the
combination of the internet, computing, clever (new) business models and new
culture that brought all these about.
This is digitisation…the way business is carried out over a new channel,
the internet.
The groundwork
is laid here. Pay particular attention
to externalisation, business by definition is outward facing.
Finally, execute
with an open mindset, openness is a critical success factor for digitisation.