Digital transformation has its own physics. Three bodies, three gravities, one shared orbit.
- The organization in its transformational journey — pulling for control and efficiency.
- The transformation partners — the force that can accelerate or destabilize the efforts.
- The talent — orbiting with its own velocity, shaped by ambition, life stage and opportunity.
If organizations set the orbit and partners influence its motion, then talent is the force that decides whether the system holds — or quietly comes apart.
In Part 1, we explored the transforming organization — the body trying to set direction while wrestling its own culture and constraints. In Part 2, we looked at transformation partners — external forces that can stabilize or shake the orbit depending on intent, timing and trust. This final part turns the lens inward — to talent itself.
Strategies can be rewritten, partners can be swapped and technologies can be replaced. But talent, once misaligned, destabilizes everything quietly and permanently.
Talent is not passive in the orbit
Most transformation narratives tend to assume that talent adapts to the organization.
In reality, talent choices are known to actively reshape the orbit:
- The wrong kind of experience hired too early creates dependency.
- The right depth brought in too late creates frustration.
- People in the wrong phase of their own journey resist change — not out of incompetence, but because the fit isn’t right.
This is not a failure of intent. It’s a failure of alignment.
McKinsey research has consistently shown that capability alignment between talent and technology is one of the strongest predictors of transformation success. Transformation doesn’t just require good people. It requires the right set of people, in the right phase of their life, at the right moment in the transformation journey. Fighting this reality is futile. Leveraging it can be productive.
Careers aren’t climbed. They’re crafted.
Careers are still described like ladders. Always upward, linear and predictable.
Digital transformation breaks that illusion. What actually unfolds looks more like a delicately crafted arc. One that is shaped by seasons, skills and situational fit. An arc that has a propensity to bend differently based on the organization’s maturity, the partner ecosystem around it and the phase of transformation underway.
Some phases reward builders, some reward stabilizers, some reward translators, while others reward stewards. The mistake many professionals make is assuming that excellence in one phase automatically carries into the next. It doesn’t. Pretending otherwise can make the talent destabilize the very orbit it wants to thrive in.
Just as transformation unfolds in phases, so do careers. Over time, most professional journeys move through recurring arcs. Not as a hierarchy. Not in order. But as natural modes of contribution.
The axis of continuity
Every transformation phase naturally favours a distinctive kind of talent.
- Early transformation needs people who can tolerate ambiguity, absorb chaos and build conviction before certainty exists. These environments reward curiosity, resilience and systems thinking — but punish those who need structure too early.
- Mid-phase transformation needs translators. People who can bridge vision and execution, business and technology, intent and delivery. This phase exhausts lone heroes and exposes those who rely purely on personal brilliance.
- Late-stage transformation values operators and stewards. Those who can scale, standardize, reduce noise and make the system predictable — in the best possible way.
Talent that joins an organization out of sync with its transformation phase often feels frustrated, underutilized or invisible. Not because they lack capability — but because the orbit doesn’t need their kind of gravity yet.
Talent that is conscious of its arc becomes the quiet axis of continuity. Professionals who invest in depth, timing and judgement stabilize transformation ecosystems. They reduce friction. They preserve memory. They help organizations and partners move forward without constantly relearning the past. This doesn’t happen by accident. It happens when talent treats its career as an organic system, not as a series of loosely coupled reactions.
The crosses we bear
Every orbit gives something. Every orbit takes something away.
Inside a transforming organization, Talent gains continuity, context and consequence. You see decisions travel end to end — from intent to impact — and you develop judgement that only comes from staying with problems long enough to watch them evolve. You gain institutional memory, influence and the chance to shape systems that endure.
What you give up is velocity. Learning curves can flatten. Exposure narrows. If the organization stabilizes faster than you grow, comfort can quietly replace relevance.
Inside a transformation partner, Talent gains range, intensity and accelerated exposure. You work across industries, technologies and problem spaces at speed. You build adaptability, pattern recognition and market-facing credibility fast. The learning curve is steep — sometimes brutally so.
What you give up is continuity. Context resets often. Ownership is thinner. Work is episodic. Without intention, the arc can fragment into projects rather than compound into mastery.
Neither orbit is superior. Each rewards a different phase of the arc. The mistake isn’t choosing one. It’s staying too long — or leaving too early — without understanding what the orbit is still giving you and what it has quietly stopped offering.
Where the orbits wobble
Transformation struggles when organizations hire for speed when they need sense-making, when partners deploy delivery muscle when clarity is missing, or when talent stays in roles that no longer match their arc.
These mismatches create friction that looks like resistance, attrition, quality erosion or “execution issues.” But the root cause is usually simpler: the arc of the individual and the phase of transformation are pulling in different directions.
The shared responsibilities
This is where the human angle becomes unavoidable.
According to Gartner, fewer than half of digital transformation initiatives reach their intended outcomes — underscoring why leadership alignment and people strategies are central to success, not peripheral.
- Organizations need to be honest about what phase they are truly in, not what they think they should be in.
- Partners need to deploy teams that match cultural and transformation readiness, not just contractual scope.
- Talent on its part needs to recognize when its own arc aligns — and when it no longer does.
When all three act with awareness, the system stabilizes. When any one of them pretends alignment doesn’t matter, the orbit destabilizes quietly and then suddenly.
Myth of loyalty
Loyalty is often romanticized in transformation narratives. In reality, it’s misunderstood.
- Organizations invariably change direction.
- Partners are forced to rotate teams.
- Markets tend to shift faster than job descriptions.
Expecting loyalty without alignment is naïve. Expecting growth without reinvention is dangerous. Talent that assumes “good times will continue” simply by staying put, without evolving skills, perspective or relevance, slowly drifts off-curve. The decline isn’t dramatic. It’s quiet. A missed opportunity here. A delayed learning loop there. Until one day, the market moves on!
Taking charge of one’s career early isn’t disloyalty. It’s responsibility.
The healthiest posture is simple: As long as the road aligns — stay, build, commit. When the fork arrives — recognize it, respect it and move along with grace.
Staying in the orbit too long out of comfort is just as risky as leaving too early out of fear.
The other trap: Chasing growth
There’s an equal and opposite danger lurking on the other side — one the market actively encourages. Chasing growth simply because demand exists. Talent that keeps saying yes — to every new role, every stretch assignment, every new adventure— often confuses velocity with growth.
What follows is predictable. Existential crisis: Burnout sets in, judgment goes for a toss and reputation erodes. Overextended professionals begin cutting corners. They over-promise. They move faster than their trust can keep up. And in transformation environments, trust compounds faster than delivery metrics.
The irony can be cruel: people who chase demand without discretion often become overexposed and under-anchored — tired, replaceable and perceived as risky rather than dependable. Growth that isn’t integrated and sustainable becomes noise. Acceleration without pause and recovery quickly turns into liability.
For a talents personal orbital stability, knowing when not to chase growth is as critical as knowing when to lean into it.
When the arcs align
When organizations hire talent that is rightly aligned to their transformation phase, when partners deploy teams that complement — not replace — internal intelligence and when individuals choose roles that match their season rather than their ego —the orbit stabilizes.
Transformation stops feeling adversarial. Momentum compounds instead of leaking and progress feels lighter. Fight the arc and the system resists. Work with it and the system carries you.
The quiet truth
In the end, digital transformation is not held together by strategy decks, contracts or methodologies. It’s held together by aligned human arcs. Fighting those arcs creates friction. Ignoring them creates drift. Leveraging them creates momentum.
The orbit doesn’t fail because people lack skill. It fails because the system forgets that people, like transformations, move in phases. And when all three bodies — organization, partner and talent — choose with that awareness, the orbit doesn’t just hold. It starts to move…with grace.
This article is published as part of the Foundry Expert Contributor Network.
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Read More from This Article: The 3-body problem of digital transformation — Part 3: The talent
Source: News

