Repeat any word or phrase enough, and it can lose all meaning. For many years, the term “digital transformation” has felt increasingly hollow; mere window dressing for any business initiative involving digitizing existing operations. Then the pandemic hit. Suddenly, we had an obvious definition focused on areas of urgent need, such as remote working and learning, digital commerce, robotic process automation, chatbots, and cybersecurity. For organizations that acted with urgency, digital transformation has a newfound meaning and purpose moving forward.
The overnight shift to digital-first work and living forced years of digital acceleration in a matter of months, signaling the death of the multi-year transformation. Finally, after many difficulties and even failed attempts over the past decade, organizations overcame politics, bureaucracy, and fear, to march on a clear path forward to compete in a new world. The whole organization came together and oriented around one clear goal: supporting customers, and employees, as everything changed and continued to evolve in new directions. There was no choice if they wanted to fight for survival against digital Darwinism. “Adapt or die” was now the rallying cry of business and IT leaders!
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Source: News