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Tags: Project Management, Lang:en
Summary
We have arrived at a significant moment in time –
the dawn of the fourth industrial revolution.This new era
builds on the landmark breakthroughs of the technological age
that began in themiddle of the 20th century – mass
scale computing, unprecedented processing power,
computerstorage, the rise of the internet, etc. – by
blurring the lines between physical, digital, andbiological
frontiers. It will fundamentally alter the way we live, work
and relate to each other. Capitalising on this phenomenon is the key to innovation
and growth. From the rise of AI,machine learning, chatbots
and the Internet of Things, to the mountains of data, mixed
realityand the next frontiers, the challenge for businesses
will be to harness the disruptive force oftechnology to shape
their own destiny. Naturally, this comes while navigating the
expectationsof a changing workforce, addressing evolving
cybersecurity threats, and managing a host ofother
challenges. In response, companies are embarking on digital
transformation journeys that are creatinghuge opportunities.
But digital transformation is not simply about technology.
This transitionto the fourth industrial age is shaping entire
business strategies. Indeed, this study reports thatnearly
half of all UK leaders believe that their business models
will cease to exist within the nextfive years. The threat of
disruptors entering new markets and reshaping entire
industries is alsovery real with more than half of all
organisations expecting disruption to impact their
industrieswithin the next two years. These are core business
challenges requiring urgent attention. So, disruption is very real and heading straight for us.
How will businesses and otherorganisations react? They will
need to fully grasp the concept of digital transformation and
itspotential to more effectively engage customers, empower
employees, optimise operations andtransform products and
services. This report suggests that many organisations are
still limitingthe scope of their digital transformation
strategies to customer experience and operationalprocesses.
This is a missed opportunity – digital transformation
should be regarded as atransformation of business culture in
a digital age. This requires leaders to re-envision
entirebusiness models and embrace a different way of bringing
together people, data, and processesto create value for their
customers. But how do you transform for success in the future
whilerunning your business today? That’s the key objective for this report – to
better understand how UK organisations are thinkingabout
disruption and their own digital transformation journeys.
I’d like to thank all those whohave played a role in
producing it, particularly the research participants and
respondents whohave provided the real-world views and
insights on which this report is based. I hope you find it a valuable guide for your own digital
transformation journey.