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Wednesday, January 22 2020 - 22:11
AsiaNet
Businesses Face a Digital Ceiling in their Transformation Progress, Infosys Digital Radar Reveals
DAVOS, Switzerland, January 22/PRNewswire-AsiaNet/ --

- Infosys Digital Radar 2020 finds that few companies have progressed to the 
most advanced stages of digital transformation this year 

- Companies that centre their transformation initiatives around employees 
achieve the highest levels of digital maturity 

- Top performers also approach transformation as series of rapid-feedback 
loops, rather than a long, linear process 

    Businesses globally face a "digital ceiling" when it comes to digital 
transformation, according to new research from Infosys Knowledge Institute 
(IKI) [https://www.infosys.com/about/knowledge-institute.html], the thought 
leadership and research arm of Infosys [http://www.infosys.com/] (NYSE: INFY), 
a global leader in next-generation digital services and consulting. The study 
reveals that businesses must change their mindsets to achieve sophisticated 
levels of digital maturity.

    Infosys Digital Radar 2020 assessed the digital transformation efforts of 
companies on a Digital Maturity Index and found year-over-year progress in 
basic areas, such as digital initiatives to improve a company's efficiency. 
However, most companies come up against a "digital ceiling" when trying to 
achieve the most advanced levels of maturity. 

    The report, which surveyed over 1,000 executives globally, ranked the most 
digitally advanced companies as "Visionaries", followed by "Explorers" and then 
"Watchers."

    Companies know how to achieve moderate transformation success, with an 18 
per cent increase in companies progressing this year from the lowest tier of 
Watchers to the middle Explorer tier. However, Explorers struggled to move into 
the top Visionary cluster, with the top tier remaining the same, indicating a 
"digital ceiling" to transformation efforts. 

    The Visionary cluster remains unchanged despite companies reporting fewer 
barriers to digital transformation than last year. Human, rather than 
technological, barriers are now the most persistent, with the two of the top 
hurdles being the lack of talent or skills (34 per cent) and a risk-averse 
corporate culture (35 per cent).

    How to break through the digital ceiling?

    The research demonstrates that top performers break through the digital 
ceiling because they think differently. 

    Firstly, successful companies focus strongly on people, using digital 
transformation to make improvements centred on customers and employees.
Most companies (68 per cent) across the spectrum stated operational efficiency 
and increased productivity as a main transformation objective. But successful 
companies in the Visionary cluster are particularly motivated to make 
improvements for their employees. Nearly half of Visionaries describe 
"empowering employees" as a major business objective for transformation, 
compared with less than one third of Explorers and less than one fifth of 
Watchers.
Likewise, Visionaries have an increased focus on customer centred initiatives, 
being significantly more likely than other clusters to undertake transformation 
to improve customer experiences and engagement and in order to respond more 
quickly to customer needs.

    Secondly, successful companies have a different mindset when it comes to 
transformation processes. 

    Traditional linear transformations result in long transformation timelines, 
meaning a company's improvements are out of date by the time the process is 
complete. Instead, top performers demonstrate a cyclical mindset, implementing 
recurring rapid feedback loops to accelerate transformation and keep updates 
relevant. The Visionary cluster is far ahead of others in digital initiatives 
tied to quick cycles: 75 per cent operate at scale in Agile and DevOps, 
compared with an overall average of 34 per cent for the entire survey group.

    Businesses overestimate tech barriers and underestimate the importance of a 
company's mindset

    The importance of culture and a cyclical transformation mindset to breaking 
through the digital ceiling were underestimated by businesses last year.

    In the 2019 Digital Radar report, companies were asked to predict the 
biggest barriers to their transformation progress for the following year. This 
year's Infosys Digital Radar 2020 compares these predictions to the actual 
challenges businesses faced in 2019.

    Businesses reported dramatic declines in the impact that technological 
barriers have on their transformation progress, including:
- Inability to experiment quickly (down 49 per cent); 
- Insufficient budget (down 40 per cent); 
- Cybersecurity challenges (down 40 per cent).

    However, businesses made much less progress against cultural barriers, 
including lack of change management capabilities (down 7 per cent) and lack of 
talent (down 6 per cent).

    Progress across industries and geographies

- The technology and telecom industries continue to rank highest on the Digital 
Maturity Index this year. 
- Consumer packaged goods, logistics, and healthcare achieved strong 
year-on-year improvements. The report's anecdotes from executive interviews 
suggest that the adoption of telematics, the Internet of Things and smart 
medical devices contributed to these increases. Likewise, the automotive 
industry placed fourth by digital maturity and featured the second highest 
percentage of Visionaries (30 per cent of those surveyed). 
- The insurance industry lags significantly behind other sectors, featuring the 
highest percentage of Watchers (17 per cent). 
- The digital ceiling was most dramatic in China, where 23 per cent of 
companies moved from Watcher to Explorer (which rose from 64 per cent to 87 per 
cent), but the percentage in the Visionary category (8 per cent) remained the 
same.

    Salil Parekh, CEO and MD at Infosys, commented: "We've seen enterprises 
successfully employ emerging technologies to optimise productivity and 
efficiency, but struggle at the next stage of digital maturity. Faster, better, 
and cheaper technology alone will not provide the improvements enterprises 
need. Our research has shown that companies which can keep pace with digital 
transformation are those that design digital initiatives to improve customer 
experiences and empower their employees, differentiating themselves and 
propelling their business to the most advanced levels of progress."

    Jeff Kavanaugh, VP and Global Head at Infosys Knowledge Institute 
[https://www.infosys.com/about/knowledge-institute.html], commented: "This 
year's Digital Radar research revealed significant progress across 
transformation initiatives – however, traditional programme models are not 
keeping up with the rapid pace of market change and companies face a distinct 
barrier in reaching top levels of digital maturity.

   "The most successful businesses in our survey have an employee focus and a 
circular transformation mindset, which enable top performers to kick off a 
virtuous cycle in the company. The result is a "living enterprise" that is 
constantly sensing, improving, and attuned to its customers and employees. This 
living enterprise is suited to serving a larger circle of stakeholders – 
employees, customers, suppliers, local communities, and larger society – not 
just shareholders."

    For a full copy of the Infosys Digital Radar 2020, please visit: 
https://www.infosys.com/navigate-your-next/research/digital-radar-report.html

    Notes to Editors

    Survey Methodology
 
    From November 12 to 30, 2019, Infosys used a blind format to conduct an 
online survey that attracted responses from more than 1,000 CXO and other 
senior-level respondents from companies with revenue greater than US$1 Billion. 
Respondents represented multiple industries and hailed from Australia, Canada, 
China, France, Germany, India, New Zealand, U.K. and the U.S. To gain 
additional qualitative insights, phone interviews were also conducted with a 
few practitioners and subject matter experts.

    About Infosys 

    Infosys is a global leader in next-generation digital services and 
consulting. We enable clients in 46 countries to navigate their digital 
transformation. With over three decades of experience in managing the systems 
and workings of global enterprises, we expertly steer our clients through their 
digital journey. We do it by enabling the enterprise with an AI-powered core 
that helps prioritize the execution of change. We also empower the business 
with agile digital at scale to deliver unprecedented levels of performance and 
customer delight. Our always-on learning agenda drives their continuous 
improvement through building and transferring digital skills, expertise, and 
ideas from our innovation ecosystem.

    Visit www.infosys.com to see how Infosys (NYSE: INFY) can help your 
enterprise navigate your next.

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    Source: Infosys