DEVELOPING DIGITAL CAPABILITIES NIKOLAUS OBWEGESER INNOVATION ENTREPRENEURSHIP - INFORMATION SYSTEMS

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DEVELOPING DIGITAL CAPABILITIES NIKOLAUS OBWEGESER INNOVATION ENTREPRENEURSHIP - INFORMATION SYSTEMS

AGENDA What is digital and what are the challenges? The digital economy The difference between digital and IT What does it take to be successfull in the digital economy? Who is successfull some stories What do they do differently? Developing digital capabilities Dynamic capabilities The role of IT organization for dynamic digital capabilities 2

WHAT DOES DIGITAL MEAN? 3

WHERE DOES IT ALL COME FROM: THE DIGITAL ECONOMY Digital innovation: new realities shape the digital economy Digital innovations are? more radical } faster than usual disruptive causing shifts in consumer s apprehension of value blurring the line between physical and digital Common examples for disruptive digital innovations? 4

IT VERSUS DIGITAL Traditional IT organizations In-house systems Increasing efficiency of production and administration Modern IT organizations Integration of suppliers (SCM) and customers (CRM) Optimization of the value chain Is that enough for digital success? 5

THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN IT AND DIGITAL IT traditionally focused on penetrating everything across organizations apart from one area: the products and services offered by the organizations How well is your IT department suited to go out of the comfort zone and contribute directly to product and service innovation? How well is your organization aligned to work with IT on new developments? 6

FRONT-END SYSTEMS VS. BACK-END SYSTEMS Focus shifts from back-end to front-end: from IT to digital Back-end Front-end Raskino & Waller,2015 7

HOW TO REACT OR PREPARE? IT strategy is NOT a digital strategy IT capabilities are NOT digital capabilities IT departments are (probably) NOT digital departments A digital edge is more than automation of processes: new combinations of physical and informational resources to create value in the form of innovative products or services Focus: not automation but transformation of processes Organizations have to develop digital capabilities to successfully compete in the digital economy 8

DYNAMIC CAPABILITIES Dynamic capabilities are described as an organization s ability to create new products and processes and respond to changing market circumstances (Teece and Pisano 1994) In the digital economy, markets are changing fast, abruptly and radically Sustainable competitive advantage is no longer achievable Dynamic capabilities are a vague concept based on three specific foundations Sensing Seizing Transforming 9

FOUNDATIONS Sensing The ability to identify and shape opportunities and threats through local and global scanning, searching and exploring across technologies and markets (Teece 2007) Seizing The ability to address the opportunities sensed by mobilizing existing resources to create new products, processes and services and preceding commercial activities such as business model design (Teece 2014) Transforming The ability to renew the resource base, assets and organizational structure through transformation (Teece 2007) 10

DYNAMIC CAPABILITIES IN A NUTSHELL 11

DYNAMIC DIGITAL CAPABILITIES? Dynamic digital capabilites are related to the sensing, seizing and transforming with regard to new digital business opportunities Crucial point for organizations: who is in charge of digital? In many cases the IT department lacks competence / capability New models are required to organize for the digital economy 12

EXTRACTS FROM SUCCESS STORIES On the basis of multiple cases studies across various industries Banking, Manufacturing, Real-estate, etc. Three models to learn from The startup/sme model The bi-modal/multi-modal model The digital IT-department model 13

THE STARTUP SME MODEL Everybody collaborates, IT is everywhere = digital Driver: size, entrepreneurship culture Traditional approach: growth requires standardization and functional structures Digital economy: keep structures out as long as possible and aim for constant collaboration (NOT cooperation) Risks: growth requires organizational structure, too big too collaborate 14

THE STARTUP SME MODEL 15

THE BI-MODAL/MULTI-MODAL MODEL Create a two-speed IT architecture: stability and innovation are separated Driver: path-dependency, financial concerns, industry pressure Traditional IT department keeps business as usual, development and maintenance of stable back-end systems, focus on quality Front-end department ( R&D, Digital, etc.) focuses on innovation: free from constraints, focus on time-to-market Risks: easy to say, hard to do; translation of innovation into stable architecture is critical (tri-speed architectures ) 16

THE BI-MODAL/MULTI-MODAL MODEL 17

THE DIGITAL IT-DEPARTMENT MODEL Develop traditional IT department to include digital capabilities Driver: no time pressure (perceived), institutional/organizational pressure, politics IT department keeps business as usual, development and maintenance of stable back-end systems, focus on quality AND IT department develops front-end competencies to support digital innovation of products and services: IT department becomes involved in many decision processes and activities Risks: breaking up organizational inertia; cultural change in IT and Business necessary; blamegame, misalignment 18

THE DIGITAL IT-DEPARTMENT MODEL 19

GENERAL CONSIDERATIONS All models try to answer the same underlying questions: How can organizations prepare or react to rapidly changing markets (to new digital business models)? Who is allowed to/encouraged to/in charge of sensing, seizing and transforming new opportunities? BUT: all three models have to be broken down into actual operational processes = microfoundations of dynamic digital capabilities 20

ONGOING AND FUTURE WORK Can we learn more about the actual microfoundations and processes that make organizations digitally agile? Our case studies provide some rich insights but more work necessary; currently ongoing in insurance, banking, retail; interested? > nikolaus@mgmt.au.dk Particular focus area: decision process for evaluating new threats and opportunities intersection between sensing and seizing Any questions and comments are welcome! 21