Digital Impacts on Business
In a recent article in the Sloan Management Review, it was mentioned that 87% of executives think that Digital will affect their market place. Yet out of the 75% who thought that their enterprises are adequately prepared, only around 10% saw it as a potential threat to their business.
This is only one symptom of the many aspects of CxO behaviour which are affecting the success of organisations which want to adopt a digital business model. Overall, there is often a lack of realisation that the CxOs themselves are inadvertently sabotaging their organisations' efforts.
Executive Behaviour Can be a Problem
In many cases, in the same manner that many executives don't understand what it means to be a project sponsor, CxOs have failed to actually engage with the issue. They don't seem to think that they should spend the time to get involved in deep market analysis and identify real game changing opportunities. They just want to automate yesterday with some sexier technology.
Additionally, they don't get the need for acting as a joined up team or building a positive culture which supports experimentation and innovation. In fact, many executive teams don't seem to understand that innovation means doing something that no one else has done before, so there are bound to be a few issues along the way as a product team discovers what works and what does not.
David Snowdon provided a great framework with the Cynefin model to explain what is involved with emerging practice and chaotic conditions.
This is why the DAF (Digital Adoption Framework) places significant emphasis on cultural change as promoted in The Way of DAU. Culture is a known inhibitor to strategy implementation, as witnessed by the well known quote that Culture Eats Strategy for Breakfast. Culture change starts with the C-Suite and ripples down. So any CxO looking for digital success, should be asking whether he or she needs to reach out work with C-suite peers to build a better team. Otherwise, failure beckons.
Executives Need To Learn How to Promote Innovation
On another tack however, a research based article on innovation and executive behaviour published in the Harvard Business Review, outlines some personal behaviour characteristics of entrepreneurial CEOs and other top executives:
- associating,
- questioning,
- observing,
- experimenting,
- networking.
Their observation was that CEOs in successfully innovative companies take more ownership of innovation, look outwards and provide leadership to the innovation process and get personally involved.
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