Straddling two worlds – digital and physical
Organisations need to embrace digital acceleration without ignoring traditional enterprise systems
A few months ago, the promoter of a consumer
goods company was contemplating how to disrupt his business model through
digital interventions. Omni-channel, digital store, augmented reality, were all
in play. The chief information officer of the company was duly entrusted the
task of delivering the same, in conjunction with the chief marketing officer.
It was perceived to be a big challenge.
The challenge was about hooking up the
digital enhancements to the enterprise backbone to realise the end-to-end outcomes
such as ordering, fulfilment, payment and invoicing.
And therein lies the challenge for a modern
day CIO — how to balance the digital world’s demand for speed with the more
traditional enterprise system turnaround times. Add to this how non-traditional
players (Airtel Money or Paytm) compete with traditional ones (banks) and the
speed at which they deploy technology solutions.The reality that we are living
in what we call a “two-speed world” is now starker than ever. So how do
organisations navigate through this rapidly changing landscape? It requires a
fundamental shift in thinking, especially in four areas:
Enhance enterprise backbone
Digital solutions do not take a long time to
develop; stitching them to the enterprise systems does. The problem is even
more accentuated when an organisation has a traditional “tightly coupled” IT
architecture. This is where service oriented architecture (SOA) comes in.
First, we break a traditional application
down into common, repeatable “services”. These services can be used by other
applications, internal and external and this is independent of the computing
platforms on which those “other applications” reside.
And, second, by building a middleware layer
(ESB), to host these repeatable services. This reduces time to market,
increases RoI on incremental IT spend, lowers risk of defects and increases
chances of on-time delivery.
Another increasingly important benefit of SOA
is the ability of your systems to link up to third parties. As banks and
financial institutions look to integrate with the wider SME ecosystem, the
agility to plug-and-play third party applications without touching your
enterprise core becomes a big source of competitive advantage.
Change procurement process
The vendor management department of a large
public sector bank recently modified the way it had been evaluating vendors for
past 20 years.
It moved from traditional cut-off criteria,
which was heavily biased towards larger IT services companies that ruled out
“garage vendors” — young, non-traditional digital vendors and start-ups. It
appreciated the need for ‘horses for courses’ — breadth and scale for large
enterprise wide systems transformations and agility and creativity for fast
turnaround digital applications, in order to deliver it more expeditiously.
Time is of essence
A leading institution recently spent 24
months trying to build an advanced analytics capability, but was unable to do
so. The reasons were many-fold. An acute lack of understanding of the “advanced
analytics” space, lack of knowledge of the skill-set needed, inability to hire
good people… the list can go on.
Essentially, an organisation needs to decide
if the capability (e.g. analytics) that they intend to build is strategically
important for them or not. If it is, then there is no point nipping away at the
edges.
Either get the right team onboard quickly or
outsource the capability and then bring it back in-house subsequently. If there
is a need, it has to be acted upon immediately.
Be Agile
The relevance of the so-called Agile software
development in today’s two-speed world, involving digital solutions and big
data analytics, is more than ever before. The business executive is more
comfortable seeing outcomes come through in a series of sprints. The scrum
manager’s ability to translate unstructured requirement into a cogent algorithm
and the digital agency’s ability to turn around real solutions in weeks have
created a sense of urgency different from the large enterprise transformations
over the decades.
Organizations do need to treat Agile with
maturity or else the resurrection will be short lived.
In this two speed world, organizations need
to embrace digital and the acceleration it brings; however, they cannot ignore
enterprise systems and their intricacies. They therefore need to have
capabilities to cater to both.
Source | Business Line | 16 March 2016
Pralhad
Jadhav
Senior
Librarian
Khaitan
& Co
Upcoming Event | National Conference on Future
Librarianship: Innovation for Excellence (NCFL 2016) during April 22-23, 2016.
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