Doctor preparing a prescription. PHOTO | FOTOSEARCH
Many organisations are realising that technology must form part
of their operational and strategy mix lest they become uncompetitive in
markets that continue to open up and barriers to entry come down. My
mention of technology here must not be pigeonholed to the usual suspects
like the adoption of
cloud, mobile applications, software as a service, platform as a service et cetera, but looked at broadly as tools, systems, and processes that allow higher efficiency to be realised.
cloud, mobile applications, software as a service, platform as a service et cetera, but looked at broadly as tools, systems, and processes that allow higher efficiency to be realised.
The
term transformation seems to roll off easily from the tongues of
executives as it seems linked key performance indicators require them to
deliver some form of differentiation to commoditised products and
services. The chase of these key performance indicators (KPIs) is
however filled with digital enablement projects that get bandied around
as transformation agendas in what I see a curious case of
misunderstanding.
Digitisation can be part of a
transformation strategy, but singularly it may not amount to long-term
gains and actually runs the risk of making a bad situation worse where
the fundamentals are not addressed. Some examples will drive this point
home better. In the public transport sector, enablement is an industry
attempting to go cashless and pushing multiple transit cards down on
commuters and operators. It is also the creation of beautiful maps of
the current chaotic para-transit networks with weak business cases
beyond visualisation. In healthcare, it is the starting of multi-billion
connected health systems that are supposed to suddenly lift an entire
country’s well-being yet the infrastructure is still ill-developed and
resource leaks abound. In education, it is the adapting of current
curricular for consumption on tablets by primary school students with
huge disparities in learning conditions across the country calling out
for intervention.
Transformation is about flipping
modus operandi and reimagining what could be, tempered for the local
context. In transportation, it would mean learning from global best
practice but doing research on the true pains and desires of every
player in the value chain and determining what works best to deliver
sustained value. For healthcare, it would be to start interventions from
ground zero and look at the paths from farm to fork; how do we keep our
people healthy, followed by first principles thinking on the best paths
to take should they fall ill.
Transformation is bold and often long term, leaving only vestiges of what previously existed.
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