The Digital Transformation Playbook: Rethink Your Business for the Digital Age
Download 1.53 Mb. Pdf ko'rish
|
The-Digital-Transformation-Playbook-Rethink-Your-Business-for-the-Digital-Age-PDFDrive.com-
Step 5: Defining Impact
At this point, you should bring each of your ideas back to the business objectives you set for yourself in step 1. For each strategic concept, you need to answer these questions: If you do proceed with this, how will you know if you have achieved the objectives you set? For example, if your objective is to reduce customer attrition, will the strategy you have developed address this? If so, how will you measure its impact? If your objective is to drive product awareness and discoverability and you have developed a series of content initiatives as part of an engage strategy, how will you know if they are achieving your goal? The point here is to articulate a measurable benefit to your company and clarify how you think the strategic concepts you have developed will achieve this outcome. Having completed all five steps, you should now have a set of compel- ling new customer strategies for your team to consider for implementation. These should be strategies rooted in a deep understanding of your specific customers, based on their own networked behaviors, designed to add real value for these customers, and able to drive the objectives most important to your business. 46 H A R N E S S C U S T O M E R N E T W O R K S This tool has been designed for strategic ideation. Still to come would be any planning to test your strategic concepts, validate them, allocate resources to them, refine their metrics, and (if appropriate) move to a public launch. We will talk more about how to test and learn from new strategic ideas in chapter 5. Before we leave the domain of customer strategy, though, let’s consider some of the challenges that a traditional, pre-digital-era enterprise may face in rethinking its assumptions about customers. Organizational Challenges of Customer Networks Joseph Tripodi knows something about customer networks. Over the course of his career, he has served as the chief marketing officer at All- state Insurance, The Bank of New York, MasterCard, Seagram, and Coca- Cola. When I spoke to him about his view of the changing relationship of organizations to customers, he told me, “For any large organization, this is definitely a journey. We’re waking up to the fact that we’ve been too passive by trying to engage with consumers in more traditional ways. How do you build an infrastructure for ongoing, real-time consumer engagement? It’s a challenge for behemoth companies who operate around the world.” 17 For some time, Tripodi has been thinking about customer networks in terms of three different networks. One network is end consumers. Another is business customers, whether retailers, analysts, or opinion elites who influence your industry and regulations. The third is your own employees. Enabling the Network Inside A firm’s internal customer network—its own employees—is critical to the digital transformation of a business. That transformation begins with applying the same customer network strategies we have seen to help inter- nal teams achieve their goals. As workforces become more mobile, busi- nesses need to help employees access their work more easily and flexibly. Employees need to be able to engage with the right content, information, and resources to stay informed for their job. They need tools that allow them to customize their workflow around flexible travel, roles, and sched- ules. They need to connect with each other—to share knowledge and to ask and answer questions—using various modes of communication (e-mails, H A R N E S S C U S T O M E R N E T W O R K S 47 instant messages, videoconferences) without confusion. And they need to be able to collaborate using tools that allow them to share projects and files while working remotely and asynchronously. As big a challenge as all this may be, the bigger challenges are often cultural. As Tripodi told me, “We have to evolve to be a much more per- meable hierarchy, where information is collected, gathered, analyzed, and shared at all levels.” Reducing hierarchical control is rarely easy. Many times, distrust of employees and fear of risk can lead organizations to wall off digital con- nections and restrict employees from using online tools effectively. The head of human resources for a billion-dollar business unit of a large multi- national firm confessed to me that even she was not able to access YouTube while at work. The IT department forbade tablet computers and sealed off employees behind a tight firewall. If she wanted to find educational content for her own staff, she had to search from her home computer on the weekends. So much for using technology to educate and connect your workforce! Walling off employees because you fear their freedom to con- nect digitally is a losing strategy. Nurturing an effective employee network is all the more important as the size of a firm increases, as its geographical disparity increases (making casual face-to-face interactions more difficult), and as its employees’ and executives’ jobs change more rapidly. Download 1.53 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
Ma'lumotlar bazasi mualliflik huquqi bilan himoyalangan ©fayllar.org 2024
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling