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Part II
Digital
Business
2020:
Getting there
from here!
Commentary
From ‘Being Digital’ to
Becoming a ‘Digital Being’
CognizantiAn annual journal produced by Cognizant
VOLUME 8 • ISSUE 1 2015
Cognizanti is an annual journal published by Cognizant. Our
mission is to provide unique insights, emerging strategies and
proven best practices that globally-minded companies can use in
their quest for business and IT performance excellence.
All articles published in Cognizanti represent the ideas and
perspectives of individual Cognizant associates and contributors
who have documented expertise in business-technology strategy
and implementation. The content of the articles published in
Cognizanti represents the views of the individual contributors
and not necessarily those of Cognizant. They are put forward
to illuminate new ways of conceptualizing and delivering global
services for competitive gain. They are not intended to be, and are
not a substitute for, professional advice and should not be relied
upon as such.
For more insights, and to continue the conversation online, please
visit our e-community at http://connections.cognizant.com or
download our Perspectives app from the Apple App Store or
Google Play at http://cogniz.at/itunescognizantperspectives or
http://cogniz.at/googleplaycognizantperspectives, respectively.
© Copyright 2015, Cognizant Technology Solutions
No part of this publication may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written
permission of Cognizant.
From 'Being Digital' to Becoming a 'Digital Being'
Sure, digital transformation
requires strong top-down
leadership and impeccable
technical skills, but high-
performing organizations go
one step further: They find
the wherewithal to acquire,
nurture and retain the talent
necessary to lead the charge.
“Numbers don’t mean nuthin, it’s people that
count.”
— Will Rogers
One of my favorite technology visionaries is
Nicholas Negroponte, co-founder of MIT’s
Media Lab and author of 1995’s Being Digital,
a best-selling manifesto on digital’s growing
impact on global business and society.
Viewed from a 2015 lens, Negroponte’s
narrative appears quaint, perhaps even
rudimentary. Take his PoV on how “bits will
replace atoms,” and “instructional manuals
for computer hardware and software will
become obsolete.” This isn’t surprising, given
how quickly technology has evolved – faster
than even the most astute pundit could have
predicted. Yet while digital technology has
already exceeded our wildest dreams (think
smartphones, 3-D printing and software bots),
most corporations have barely harnessed
its full potential. In fact, you could say IT
organizations are just finding their way, and
like Negroponte’s thinking, their strategies are
only now entering adulthood.
Remember when you were 20 years old? You
did some things well, other things not so
well. You were excited about the future but
uncertain of the path you would follow. You
were curious, you often took ill-advised risks,
but you were always learning.
Those attributes describe how, in my view,
captains of the corporate world are managing
the process of digitally transforming their
businesses. They do some things well, other
things not so well, they often take on too
much risk, but they are always learning.
So, on the 20th anniversary of the digital
transformation revolution, as companies
around the world accelerate their embrace of
digital technology, the time is ripe for CIOs
and their IT leadership teams to step up and
truly lead in this vital transformation.
Separating Winners
from Also-Rans
If the results published in a recent Harvard
Business Review report are on the mark, most
companies are still struggling with the digital
business mandate.1
The report was produced
from a survey that asked chief executive
officers worldwide to rate various aspects of
their company’s digital maturity. In response,
19% claimed they were leaders, strong in
both digital leadership and management;
47% classified themselves as followers,
with digital leadership being a partial
strength; and 34% categorized themselves
as “laggards,” with weak management in all
areas of digital leadership.
How would your CEO classify your company’s
digital progress?
From ‘Being Digital’ to
Becoming a ‘Digital Being’
By Gary Beach
Commentary
11
Cognizanti • 12
For CIOs at companies considered to be
“followers” or “laggards,” the study makes
clear that they have a lot of work to do.
Look around: One in five corporations has
gained the digital high ground – and it is
more than likely that several competitors
in any given industry have already broadly
deployed digital technology to effectively
transform their companies. Many have done
so by mandating that “digital knowledge” is
a company-wide, cross-functional priority,
whether in IT, research/development,
marketing, customer service or sales.2
From my vantage point, this mandate
requires a strong digital culture that spans the
enterprise and defines, if not informs, nearly
every aspect of strategic decision-making.
So, how does the CIO create a strong digital
business culture? In my view, this requires:
OO Strong, top-down leadership that
considers digital transformation as a major
business opportunity to engage with
customers in meaningful new ways.
OO Great technology, although as Nicholas
Carr warns – in his 2004 book Does
IT Matter? – information technology,
in and of itself, doesn’t matter. After
all, Salesforce.com, Workday, Oracle,
Microsoft, Cisco and Amazon Web
Services will sell their technology to
anyone with a check! IT only matters
when it is deeply embedded in all facets of
the business.
OO Great talent. Being digital is not just
about technological competency; it’s about
harnessing the creativity and constructive
problem-solving that is uniquely human.
Leading companies, in fact, find and retain
people who are facile with the necessary
digital tools and techniques that blend
the physical with the virtual, and create
intuitive and meaningful experiences that
not only deeply engage customers but also
deliver significant competitive advantage,
as measured on many fronts (ease of use,
cost, revenue, etc.).
Transforming with
Digital Talent
As noted by Dr. Klaus Schwab, co-founder of
the World Economic Forum, the global socio-
economic conference held each year in Davos,
Switzerland, the key to succeeding with digital
transformation is embracing “talentism” as the
new capitalism.3
Ponder that for a moment. The digital talent
you hire, and the digital talent you retain,
will do more to determine the success of your
company’s digital transformation than CEO
leadership or the technology you maintain,
purchase or use.
For the past eight years, I have focused on
the topic of human “talent,” with particular
emphasis on the “business-IT skills gap.” And
I am not alone in my pursuit of this business
challenge. In fact, the Society for Informa-
tion Management’s 2015 IT Trends Study
claims that the skills gap is the number two
“most worrisome” issue for IT executives,
after security (no surprise there!). While
most CIOs have a technology strategy in
place, few in my experience have taken time
to develop a strategic human capital plan.
That’s a big mistake.
Being digital is not just about technological
competency; it’s about harnessing the
creativity and constructive prob­lem-solving
that is uniquely human.
13
So here’s an idea.
Conduct an audit of your entire staff, splitting
people into two talent groups: those with
legacy tech skills pertaining to technology
installed prior to 2010, and those with
“emerging” skills – skills related to technology
installed after 2010. I often get pushback from
CIOs on the 2010 demarcation line. But I
hold my position. And so must you.
Next, determine what percentage of your IT
technology investment budget, excluding staff,
is allocated to legacy technology and what
percent is pegged for emerging technology,
such as social business, cloud, analytics,
mobility and cybersecurity.
Now compare your technology and human
allocations. The goal is to get to an end
state at which 60% of your staff skills and
60% of your tech investment are dedicated
to “emerging,” transformative, digital tech-
nologies. It won’t be easy. But it can be done
by retiring legacy infrastructure, moving
compute, storage and network to the cloud,
and porting legacy applications via an
aggressive application modernization plan.
Moreover, it must be done, or your orga-
nization is destined to remain a “follower”
or “laggard” and struggle to keep pace with
leaders in your industry.
On the human side of the ledger, this exercise
will reveal wide gaps in your human skill sets,
particularly exposing critical shortages in
emerging technology skill sets. At the very
least, this approach leaves your organization
with a straightforward, strategic plan on which
skills to hire, train and retain staff members.
But that’s only step one. Hiring digital tech
talent is not easy.
The CEB, formerly known as the Corporate
Executive Board, reports that in the past two
years, the number of days it takes to fill an
open IT job has increased from 40 days to 70
days. What’s more, this delay results in a 10%
hit on overall corporate productivity.
So here’s some more advice: Make your job
searches for digital talent as inclusive as
feasibly possible.
According to the U.S. Census Bureau’s
American Community Survey,4
68% of U.S.
citizens aged 25 or older are not college
graduates. So why do CIOs, according to
Boston-based research firm Burning Glass
Technologies, include “bachelor’s degree
required” in 92% of their job postings, when
only 56% of currently employed IT workers
have college diplomas?5
This is hiring lunacy.
Of course, some emerging technology
positions in areas such as data analytics and
information/cybersecurity will require college
degrees. But not 92% of your open positions!
Direct your HR department to produce
an audit of all jobs posted in the past year,
separating the jobs into two groups: those that
mandated “bachelor’s degree required” and
those that didn’t. I guarantee your split will be
close to the 92% level carrying the bachelor’s
mandate. Then ask HR the million-dollar
question: Why is a college degree needed to
do a specific job?
While most CIOs have a technology strategy
in place, few in my experience have taken
time to develop a strategic human capital
plan. That’s a big mistake.
Cognizanti • 14
Prioritizing Digital Skills;
Finding the Best and
Brightest
Bachelor’s degree or not, which digital skills
are most difficult to hire for? I often get asked
that tactical question by CIOs, and I respond
by citing Computerworld’s latest skills report,6
which lists jobs such as application developers,
security, big data/analytics, networking and
mobility.
That’s a good start. But it does not begin to
adequately address the strategic skills that
organizations need in order to transcend the
follower and laggard categories, and differenti-
ate in an increasingly global, digital economy.
To discover those skills, I highly recommend
the Institute for the Future’s “Future Work
Skills 2020,”7
which introduces new skills, like
how to master “cognitive load management”
(i.e., processing and making sense of massive
amounts of data), how to develop “cross-cul-
tural competencies” (increasingly important
in a global economy), how to leverage “new
media literacy,” how to “think in a novel and
adaptive manner,” and how to “collaborate in
virtual work environments.”
Granted, these are tough skills to acquire,
master or showcase on a resume. So here’s a
tip: Require every candidate you interview,
for both legacy and emerging technology
positions on your staff, to showcase a portfolio
of projects, preferably digital ones, that they
have demonstrated, either in an education or
work environment, that address the drivers
and key skills highlighted in the Institute
for the Future’s report. And to accelerate
the hiring process, spend time on the candi-
date’s LinkedIn, Facebook and Twitter home
pages. As one chief marketing executive who
embraces this approach shared with me, “In 60
seconds, I can tell if a person will be a cultural
fit for my company.”
All this advice on talent is important. But
what makes it even more important is a data
point from Cognizant’s Center for the Future
of Work. The Center asked IT executives in
November 2014 to rate the “overall quality
of a customer’s experience and engagement”
with their company through two lens: at
the present time and three years out. Sadly,
only 3% of respondents claimed the digital
experience their companies deliver today is
“excellent,” and only 14% see this situation
improving by 2017.8
Interpreted another way,
this means that by 2017, 86% of companies
see their investments in digital technology
resulting in experiences that are “good” or
worse. That’s not “good” enough.
Fixing this will require the contribution
of talented IT professionals and insatiable
customers, who will drive digital technology
deeper into every aspect of their business. If
Nicholas Negroponte were to write a sequel
to Being Digital in 2015, he might be advised
to flip the title to Digital Being to more aptly
describe the human nature of today’s digital
business imperative.
Without knowing it, American journalist Will
Rogers did a good job of framing the priorities
of this digital revolution in the early 20th
century when he said, “numbers don’t mean
nuthin, it’s people that count.”
People like you. People like your staff. People
like your customers.
George Westerman, a research scientist at the
MIT Sloan School, recently addressed a group
of CIOs at a conference on digital transfor-
mation, offering these words of advice and a
stark warning: “There has never been a better
time to be a great technology executive. Nor a
worse time to be a mediocre one.”9
Here’s to greatness in your quest to transform-
ing your firm into a “digital being.”
15
Footnotes
1	
“Driving Digital Business Transformation: New Skills for Leaders, New Role for the CIO,”
Harvard Business Review Analytic Services, 2015, http://red.ht/1G9mrnP.
2	
Ibid.
3	
Klaus Schwab, “The End of Capitalism – So What’s Next?” The Huffington Post, April 4,
2012,
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/klaus-schwab/end-of-capitalism----_b_1423311.html.
4	
“American Community Survey,” U.S. Census, http://1.usa.gov/1CFdPoP.
5	
Burning Glass Technologies, April 2015.
6	
Mary Pratt, “10 Hottest Skills for 2015,” Computerworld, Nov. 18, 2014,
http://bit.ly/1NRCj3T.
7	
“The Re-working of Work,” Institute for the Future,” 2011, http://bit.ly/1KRILdu.
8	
“Putting the Experience in Digital Customer Experience,” Cognizant Technology Solutions,
November 2014, http://www.cognizant.com/InsightsWhitepapers/putting-the-experience-in-
digital-customer-experience-codex1180.pdf.
9	
George Westerman, 2015 MIT Sloan CIO Symposium, Cambridge, MA.
Author
Gary Beach is the Publisher Emeritus of CIO Magazine. He is also a guest columnist for The Wall Street
Journal and author of the best-selling book “The U.S. Technology Skills Gap.” He can be reached at Garybeach-
cio@gmail.com and on Twitter @gbeachcio.
About Cognizant
Cognizant (NASDAQ: CTSH) is a leading provider of information technology,
consulting, and business process outsourcing services, dedicated to helping
the world’s leading companies build stronger businesses. Headquartered in
Teaneck, New Jersey (U.S.), Cognizant combines a passion for client satisfac-
tion, technology innovation, deep industry and business process expertise, and a
global, collaborative workforce that embodies the future of work.
To learn more about Cognizant, please visit: www.cognizant.com.
U.S. Headquarters:
211 Quality Circle
College Station, TX 77845
Tel: +1 979 691 7700
Fax: +1 979 691 7750
Toll Free: +1 855 789 4268
Email: inquiry@cognizant.com
India Operations Headquarters:
#5/535, Old Mahabalipuram Road
Okkiyam Pettai, Thoraipakkam
Chennai 600 096 India
Phone: +91 (0) 44 4209 6000
Fax: +91 (0) 44 4209 6060
Email: inquiryindia@cognizant.com
China Operations Headquarters:
Cognizant Technology Solutiions
(Shanghai) Co.
Zhangjiang Hi-tech Park
Building No. 5, No.
3000 Longdong Avenue
Shanghai, Pudong China 201 203
Phone: +86 21 6100 6466
Fax: +86 21 6100 6457
Email: inquirychina@cognizant.com
World Headquarters:
500 Frank W. Burr Blvd.
Teaneck, NJ 07666 USA
Phone: +1 201 801 0233
Fax: +1 201 801 0243
Toll free: +1 888 937 3277
Email: inquiry@cognizant.com
European Headquarters:
1 Kingdom Street
Paddington Central
London W2 6BD
Phone: +44 (0) 20 7297 7600
Fax: +44 (0) 20 7121 0102
Email: infouk@cognizant.com
Philippines Headquarters:
Cognizant Technology Solutions
Philippines, Inc.
5th & 6th Floor,
8/10 Upper McKinley Road Building
10 Upper McKinley Rd.
McKinley Hill, Fort Bonifacio
Taguig City 1634 Metro Manila
Philippines
Phone: + 63-2-976-2270
Email: inquiry@cognizant.com
Global Delivery Centers:
Budapest (Hungary), Buenos Aires (Argentina), Guadalajara (Mexico), London (UK),
Manila (Philippines), Shanghai (China), Toronto (Canada); Chennai, Coimbatore,
Kolkata, Bangalore, Hyderabad, Pune, Mumbai, New Delhi, Cochin (India);
Bentonville, AR; Boston; Bridgewater, NJ; Des Moines, IA; Minot., ND; Phoenix, AZ;
Tampa, FL (U.S.).
Regional Offices:
Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, Dallas, Los Angeles, Norwalk, Phoenix, San Ramon, Teaneck
(U.S.); London (Canada); London (UK); Frankfurt (Germany); Paris (France); Madrid
(Spain); Helsinki (Finland); Copenhagen (Denmark); Zurich, Geneva (Switzerland);
Amsterdam (The Netherlands); Hong Kong, Shanghai (China); Tokyo (Japan);
Melbourne, Sydney (Australia); Singapore (Singapore); Bangkok (Thailand); Kuala
Lumpur (Malaysia); Buenos Aires (Argentina); Dubai (UAE); Manila (Philippines).
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From 'Being Digital' to Becoming a 'Digital Being'

  • 1. Part II Digital Business 2020: Getting there from here! Commentary From ‘Being Digital’ to Becoming a ‘Digital Being’ CognizantiAn annual journal produced by Cognizant VOLUME 8 • ISSUE 1 2015
  • 2. Cognizanti is an annual journal published by Cognizant. Our mission is to provide unique insights, emerging strategies and proven best practices that globally-minded companies can use in their quest for business and IT performance excellence. All articles published in Cognizanti represent the ideas and perspectives of individual Cognizant associates and contributors who have documented expertise in business-technology strategy and implementation. The content of the articles published in Cognizanti represents the views of the individual contributors and not necessarily those of Cognizant. They are put forward to illuminate new ways of conceptualizing and delivering global services for competitive gain. They are not intended to be, and are not a substitute for, professional advice and should not be relied upon as such. For more insights, and to continue the conversation online, please visit our e-community at http://connections.cognizant.com or download our Perspectives app from the Apple App Store or Google Play at http://cogniz.at/itunescognizantperspectives or http://cogniz.at/googleplaycognizantperspectives, respectively. © Copyright 2015, Cognizant Technology Solutions No part of this publication may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission of Cognizant.
  • 4. Sure, digital transformation requires strong top-down leadership and impeccable technical skills, but high- performing organizations go one step further: They find the wherewithal to acquire, nurture and retain the talent necessary to lead the charge. “Numbers don’t mean nuthin, it’s people that count.” — Will Rogers One of my favorite technology visionaries is Nicholas Negroponte, co-founder of MIT’s Media Lab and author of 1995’s Being Digital, a best-selling manifesto on digital’s growing impact on global business and society. Viewed from a 2015 lens, Negroponte’s narrative appears quaint, perhaps even rudimentary. Take his PoV on how “bits will replace atoms,” and “instructional manuals for computer hardware and software will become obsolete.” This isn’t surprising, given how quickly technology has evolved – faster than even the most astute pundit could have predicted. Yet while digital technology has already exceeded our wildest dreams (think smartphones, 3-D printing and software bots), most corporations have barely harnessed its full potential. In fact, you could say IT organizations are just finding their way, and like Negroponte’s thinking, their strategies are only now entering adulthood. Remember when you were 20 years old? You did some things well, other things not so well. You were excited about the future but uncertain of the path you would follow. You were curious, you often took ill-advised risks, but you were always learning. Those attributes describe how, in my view, captains of the corporate world are managing the process of digitally transforming their businesses. They do some things well, other things not so well, they often take on too much risk, but they are always learning. So, on the 20th anniversary of the digital transformation revolution, as companies around the world accelerate their embrace of digital technology, the time is ripe for CIOs and their IT leadership teams to step up and truly lead in this vital transformation. Separating Winners from Also-Rans If the results published in a recent Harvard Business Review report are on the mark, most companies are still struggling with the digital business mandate.1 The report was produced from a survey that asked chief executive officers worldwide to rate various aspects of their company’s digital maturity. In response, 19% claimed they were leaders, strong in both digital leadership and management; 47% classified themselves as followers, with digital leadership being a partial strength; and 34% categorized themselves as “laggards,” with weak management in all areas of digital leadership. How would your CEO classify your company’s digital progress? From ‘Being Digital’ to Becoming a ‘Digital Being’ By Gary Beach Commentary 11
  • 5. Cognizanti • 12 For CIOs at companies considered to be “followers” or “laggards,” the study makes clear that they have a lot of work to do. Look around: One in five corporations has gained the digital high ground – and it is more than likely that several competitors in any given industry have already broadly deployed digital technology to effectively transform their companies. Many have done so by mandating that “digital knowledge” is a company-wide, cross-functional priority, whether in IT, research/development, marketing, customer service or sales.2 From my vantage point, this mandate requires a strong digital culture that spans the enterprise and defines, if not informs, nearly every aspect of strategic decision-making. So, how does the CIO create a strong digital business culture? In my view, this requires: OO Strong, top-down leadership that considers digital transformation as a major business opportunity to engage with customers in meaningful new ways. OO Great technology, although as Nicholas Carr warns – in his 2004 book Does IT Matter? – information technology, in and of itself, doesn’t matter. After all, Salesforce.com, Workday, Oracle, Microsoft, Cisco and Amazon Web Services will sell their technology to anyone with a check! IT only matters when it is deeply embedded in all facets of the business. OO Great talent. Being digital is not just about technological competency; it’s about harnessing the creativity and constructive problem-solving that is uniquely human. Leading companies, in fact, find and retain people who are facile with the necessary digital tools and techniques that blend the physical with the virtual, and create intuitive and meaningful experiences that not only deeply engage customers but also deliver significant competitive advantage, as measured on many fronts (ease of use, cost, revenue, etc.). Transforming with Digital Talent As noted by Dr. Klaus Schwab, co-founder of the World Economic Forum, the global socio- economic conference held each year in Davos, Switzerland, the key to succeeding with digital transformation is embracing “talentism” as the new capitalism.3 Ponder that for a moment. The digital talent you hire, and the digital talent you retain, will do more to determine the success of your company’s digital transformation than CEO leadership or the technology you maintain, purchase or use. For the past eight years, I have focused on the topic of human “talent,” with particular emphasis on the “business-IT skills gap.” And I am not alone in my pursuit of this business challenge. In fact, the Society for Informa- tion Management’s 2015 IT Trends Study claims that the skills gap is the number two “most worrisome” issue for IT executives, after security (no surprise there!). While most CIOs have a technology strategy in place, few in my experience have taken time to develop a strategic human capital plan. That’s a big mistake. Being digital is not just about technological competency; it’s about harnessing the creativity and constructive prob­lem-solving that is uniquely human.
  • 6. 13 So here’s an idea. Conduct an audit of your entire staff, splitting people into two talent groups: those with legacy tech skills pertaining to technology installed prior to 2010, and those with “emerging” skills – skills related to technology installed after 2010. I often get pushback from CIOs on the 2010 demarcation line. But I hold my position. And so must you. Next, determine what percentage of your IT technology investment budget, excluding staff, is allocated to legacy technology and what percent is pegged for emerging technology, such as social business, cloud, analytics, mobility and cybersecurity. Now compare your technology and human allocations. The goal is to get to an end state at which 60% of your staff skills and 60% of your tech investment are dedicated to “emerging,” transformative, digital tech- nologies. It won’t be easy. But it can be done by retiring legacy infrastructure, moving compute, storage and network to the cloud, and porting legacy applications via an aggressive application modernization plan. Moreover, it must be done, or your orga- nization is destined to remain a “follower” or “laggard” and struggle to keep pace with leaders in your industry. On the human side of the ledger, this exercise will reveal wide gaps in your human skill sets, particularly exposing critical shortages in emerging technology skill sets. At the very least, this approach leaves your organization with a straightforward, strategic plan on which skills to hire, train and retain staff members. But that’s only step one. Hiring digital tech talent is not easy. The CEB, formerly known as the Corporate Executive Board, reports that in the past two years, the number of days it takes to fill an open IT job has increased from 40 days to 70 days. What’s more, this delay results in a 10% hit on overall corporate productivity. So here’s some more advice: Make your job searches for digital talent as inclusive as feasibly possible. According to the U.S. Census Bureau’s American Community Survey,4 68% of U.S. citizens aged 25 or older are not college graduates. So why do CIOs, according to Boston-based research firm Burning Glass Technologies, include “bachelor’s degree required” in 92% of their job postings, when only 56% of currently employed IT workers have college diplomas?5 This is hiring lunacy. Of course, some emerging technology positions in areas such as data analytics and information/cybersecurity will require college degrees. But not 92% of your open positions! Direct your HR department to produce an audit of all jobs posted in the past year, separating the jobs into two groups: those that mandated “bachelor’s degree required” and those that didn’t. I guarantee your split will be close to the 92% level carrying the bachelor’s mandate. Then ask HR the million-dollar question: Why is a college degree needed to do a specific job? While most CIOs have a technology strategy in place, few in my experience have taken time to develop a strategic human capital plan. That’s a big mistake.
  • 7. Cognizanti • 14 Prioritizing Digital Skills; Finding the Best and Brightest Bachelor’s degree or not, which digital skills are most difficult to hire for? I often get asked that tactical question by CIOs, and I respond by citing Computerworld’s latest skills report,6 which lists jobs such as application developers, security, big data/analytics, networking and mobility. That’s a good start. But it does not begin to adequately address the strategic skills that organizations need in order to transcend the follower and laggard categories, and differenti- ate in an increasingly global, digital economy. To discover those skills, I highly recommend the Institute for the Future’s “Future Work Skills 2020,”7 which introduces new skills, like how to master “cognitive load management” (i.e., processing and making sense of massive amounts of data), how to develop “cross-cul- tural competencies” (increasingly important in a global economy), how to leverage “new media literacy,” how to “think in a novel and adaptive manner,” and how to “collaborate in virtual work environments.” Granted, these are tough skills to acquire, master or showcase on a resume. So here’s a tip: Require every candidate you interview, for both legacy and emerging technology positions on your staff, to showcase a portfolio of projects, preferably digital ones, that they have demonstrated, either in an education or work environment, that address the drivers and key skills highlighted in the Institute for the Future’s report. And to accelerate the hiring process, spend time on the candi- date’s LinkedIn, Facebook and Twitter home pages. As one chief marketing executive who embraces this approach shared with me, “In 60 seconds, I can tell if a person will be a cultural fit for my company.” All this advice on talent is important. But what makes it even more important is a data point from Cognizant’s Center for the Future of Work. The Center asked IT executives in November 2014 to rate the “overall quality of a customer’s experience and engagement” with their company through two lens: at the present time and three years out. Sadly, only 3% of respondents claimed the digital experience their companies deliver today is “excellent,” and only 14% see this situation improving by 2017.8 Interpreted another way, this means that by 2017, 86% of companies see their investments in digital technology resulting in experiences that are “good” or worse. That’s not “good” enough. Fixing this will require the contribution of talented IT professionals and insatiable customers, who will drive digital technology deeper into every aspect of their business. If Nicholas Negroponte were to write a sequel to Being Digital in 2015, he might be advised to flip the title to Digital Being to more aptly describe the human nature of today’s digital business imperative. Without knowing it, American journalist Will Rogers did a good job of framing the priorities of this digital revolution in the early 20th century when he said, “numbers don’t mean nuthin, it’s people that count.” People like you. People like your staff. People like your customers. George Westerman, a research scientist at the MIT Sloan School, recently addressed a group of CIOs at a conference on digital transfor- mation, offering these words of advice and a stark warning: “There has never been a better time to be a great technology executive. Nor a worse time to be a mediocre one.”9 Here’s to greatness in your quest to transform- ing your firm into a “digital being.”
  • 8. 15 Footnotes 1 “Driving Digital Business Transformation: New Skills for Leaders, New Role for the CIO,” Harvard Business Review Analytic Services, 2015, http://red.ht/1G9mrnP. 2 Ibid. 3 Klaus Schwab, “The End of Capitalism – So What’s Next?” The Huffington Post, April 4, 2012, http://www.huffingtonpost.com/klaus-schwab/end-of-capitalism----_b_1423311.html. 4 “American Community Survey,” U.S. Census, http://1.usa.gov/1CFdPoP. 5 Burning Glass Technologies, April 2015. 6 Mary Pratt, “10 Hottest Skills for 2015,” Computerworld, Nov. 18, 2014, http://bit.ly/1NRCj3T. 7 “The Re-working of Work,” Institute for the Future,” 2011, http://bit.ly/1KRILdu. 8 “Putting the Experience in Digital Customer Experience,” Cognizant Technology Solutions, November 2014, http://www.cognizant.com/InsightsWhitepapers/putting-the-experience-in- digital-customer-experience-codex1180.pdf. 9 George Westerman, 2015 MIT Sloan CIO Symposium, Cambridge, MA. Author Gary Beach is the Publisher Emeritus of CIO Magazine. He is also a guest columnist for The Wall Street Journal and author of the best-selling book “The U.S. Technology Skills Gap.” He can be reached at Garybeach- cio@gmail.com and on Twitter @gbeachcio.
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