This discussion paper examines the cultural effect or influence on the development, introduction, and successful implementation of a digital strategy from four key areas; home culture, generational culture, gender culture, and senior management culture.
Through the examination of these four areas, the reader will be able to determine the alignment of their current cultural environments, and use said understanding as a predictive tool for determining their organization's digital readiness and as a result the likelihood of initiative success.
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ABSTRACT
In what Gartner has called the Postmodern ERP Era eProcurement technology, and technology, in
general, has become more accessible from both an availability and ease-of-use standpoint than it has
been historically. However, does increased technological accessibility ensure success if cultural
misalignment within an organization exists?
This discussion paper examines the cultural effect or influence on the development, introduction, and
successful implementation of a digital strategy from four key areas; home culture, generational
culture, gender culture, and senior management culture.
Through the examination of these four areas, the reader will be able to determine the alignment of
their current cultural environments, and use said understanding as a predictive tool for determining
their organization's digital readiness and as a result the likelihood of initiative success.
The digital revolution has and will continue to permeate all areas of everyday life bringing with it the
promise of greater efficiencies, conveniences, and savings. Everything from self-driving automobiles
to at your fingertip (or voice) assistance for managing all facets of your world is now becoming a
reality.
The impact of technological breakthroughs in the emerging digital age is no different for the business
world from the standpoint of streamlining important processes and reducing costs. However, the
successful introduction of new and exciting technologies into the work environment comes down to
recognizing and managing four distinct digital cultures.
Digital
Strategy
Home Culture
Generational
Culture
Gender
Culture
Senior
Management
Culture
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THE HOME CULTURE
Experience buying a product for personal use at home through a computer or other
device has influenced procurement’s understanding and expectations for how
technology can be better utilized to streamline the buying process at work. In fact, it
would be reasonable to conclude that collective individual at-home buying experiences
across all organizational hierarchies have contributed to the acceptance of today’s
pay-by-the-drink SaaS or on-demand platforms.
Based on the above, there is little doubt that home experience regarding technology utilization will to
a certain extent continue to influence digital advancements in the workplace. This home experience
including a sound bring-your-own-device to work policy is an essential starting point because it can
remove the potential barriers to adoption of a digital transformation strategy at work as long as said
workplace strategy mirrors the home experience from the standpoint of ease-of-use and anticipated
outcomes. In other words, if an employee is digitally comfortable at home, then it would be logical to
conclude that they would also be digitally comfortable at work even though the latter’s technology
may be somewhat different and expansive. Therefore, it is important to understand the digital home
culture of procurement professionals as it is a potential indicator of adaptability to technological
change and advancement in the workplace.
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GENERATIONAL CULTURE
Depending on the source and age breakdown, there are either four or five different generations that
are simultaneously employed within the same organization today. Suffice to say, that a multi-
generational workforce creates both complexities from a management standpoint, as well as
opportunity relating to experience and diversity. The key to finding the right balance of engagement
towards achieving maximum productivity and a collective organizational outcome is dependent on
knowing the actual demographics of the organization’s workforce and the corresponding roles of each
generational group including their core competencies.
For example, the Millennial group (generally those born between 1981 and 1997) who are also known
as The Net Generation, “have been surrounded by advances in digital technology” since a young age,
that they are almost to the point where they cannot do their work without utilizing technology. In fact,
and unlike the majority of Boomers and Generation X constituents (born between 1946 to 1964, and
1965 to 1980 respectively), whose first experience with technology likely occurred in the workplace, a
“Netters” first touch was early in their school career with some starting as soon as Kindergarten. The
advantages of this experience in the new age of digital transformation are obvious. However, what
isn’t obvious is the impact this early exposure has had on their approach to learning and interaction
across generational boundaries within the same organization.
MILLENNIALS SURPASS GEN XERS AS THE LARGEST GENERATION IN U.S. LABOR FORCE
U.S. Labor Force by Generation, 1995-2015
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When I interviewed Geoffrey Tumlin on my radio show about his book Stop Talking Start
Communicating, out of the many points that stood out, was his assertion that even though we are
through the Internet “more connected than ever before, we communicate less.” While Tumlin did not
specifically refer to The Net Generation regarding diminishing communication abilities, Ben McNeely’s
article Using Technology as a Learning Tool, Not Just the Cool New Thing, would suggest that this
group surprisingly does better working with peers in person as opposed to in isolation surrounded by
computers.
According to McNeely, who is the managing editor of Technician, the student newspaper at North
Carolina State University, The Net Generation, at least from a learning standpoint, does much better
through the “social interaction that comes with being in class with their peers.” He then suggests that
even though “they may use technology in their daily lives, relationships are a driving force in the
learning process.” It is, therefore, reasonable to conclude that this same social tendency would also
carry over into the workplace. For organization leadership, many of whom may believe the countless
articles and reports that Millennials are “insecure and needy,” recognizing this social proclivity can
serve as a critical bridge to introducing technology across their internal generational divides.
Returning to the McNeely article, in it, he suggests that when it comes to learning, it is “usually older
(people), in their 30s or 40s,” who are the ones “learning to use technology, like the Internet and
computers,” to train for a new career. Mcneely further disputes older generation technophobia by
referring to how his grandfather “a man who never had much formal technical education, built not one,
but two, computers from parts” with the help of his (McNeely’s) cousin.
It is within the context of this last statement that organizations can seek ways to capitalize on the
Millennial relationship need to facilitate greater interaction with the older generations, in which the
latter demonstrates both the willingness and practical knowledge to learn new technologies.
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GENDER CULTURE
During a recent interview, Microsoft Canada’s new President Kevin Peesker talked
about a just-released ICTC Study which reported that there are 216,000 open roles
in technology, but that less than 10 percent is the “actual population of females in
the tech space.” He then went on to say that “digital transformation will not happen
without women.”
It was a bold statement about the important role that women play in business that echoed similar
sentiments to those of Warren Buffett. In a 2013 Fortune article Buffett said the following; “In the flood
of words written recently about women and work, one related and hugely significant point seems to
me to have been neglected. It has to do with America’s future, about which — here’s a familiar opinion
from me — I’m an unqualified optimist. Now entertain another opinion of mine: Women are a major
reason we will do so well.”
The words of the President of a global technology powerhouse and an American icon who is
considered to be one of the most successful investors in the world with a net worth of $87.5 billion is
sufficient in demonstrating the increasingly important role that women play in the workplace. That
said, the following insight from "the founder of modern management" will further illustrate why
business in general – and not digital transformation alone requires greater participation and
engagement with women.
216,000
Open Roles
in
Technology
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Regarding organization performance, Peter Drucker said that “companies with at least one female
director were 20% less likely to file bankruptcy,” than those with none. He then went on to say that
those with “higher representations of females on their boards,” overall had better financial
performance.”
Microsoft’s Peesker indicated that 75% of the executives in his company are women, but then added
that this is the exception to the general rule in the high technology world. The only way to address this
disparity and critical need according to Peesker is to bring more women into the Science, Technology,
Engineering, and Mathematics or STEM fields.
The above statements raise important questions regarding present organizational culture, and
whether or not it is conducive to both attracting and retaining top female talent?
Elizabeth Ames, Vice President, Strategic Marketing, and Alliances at the Anita Borg Institute believe
that the answer starts with a commitment. Specifically, a commitment that is born out of a
requirement as opposed to being the “fair thing to do.” In the case of digital transformation, companies
need technical talent. According to Ames, “women represent half of the intellectual capital. If they
want to attract the best and the brightest, there has to be a commitment from the top to increase the
percent of women at their companies.”
From the standpoint of the gender culture, the real question is not so much one of simply finding ways
to bring more women into the fold, but one of leadership willingness to create the environment that
draws more women to the digital field.
10 Percent Is the Actual Population of Females in The Tech Space
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SENIOR MANAGEMENT CULTURE
A high level of senior management commitment to creating a culture that brings more women into
the digital world is not the only area on which leadership should focus if they want their organizations
to implement a digital strategy successfully. There needs to be a greater commitment to what a
December 2017 Harvard Business Review article called “digital reinvention.”
In their article What Successful Digital Transformations Have in Common McKinsey’s Jacques Bughin
and Tanguy Catlin talked about their research on how digitization can hurt companies that “neglect to
embrace digital innovations.”
According to McKinsey’s research involving
1,650 incumbent or industry-leading firms from
around the world, less than 20% of these
companies take the path of “digital
reinvention.” Based on these results, the
management consulting firm concludes that
“despite warnings from ourselves and others,
most incumbent firms are failing to adjust to
the digital era.”
When it comes to an organization’s supply
chain, and despite what McKinsey cited as the
recognition on the part of participating firms
regarding the potential impact that digital
reinvention will have on the growth of revenues
and profits, only 2 percent report that the
supply chain is part of their “forward-looking
digital strategies.”
Despite the clear returns on digital reinvention,
a transformation in senior management
culture must occur before digital
transformation, and the associated benefits
can become a reality.
20%
2%
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CONCLUSION
In his article Transform Or Be Transformed: The New Digital Reality Microsoft’s Peesker talked about
how digital transformation is “one of the hottest topics globally,” and that the World Economic Forum
“predicts that the digital economy will be worth over $100 trillion by 2025.” He then goes on to say
that with this great promise, there is an even greater responsibility for business leaders to be
champions for digital reinvention.
However, to become their organization's digital champions, senior leadership must first oversee a
cultural transformation along the lines of a Lenovo and look beyond the technology to ensure that the
right people are in place to transform objectives into the initiatives that will lead to tangible outcomes.
The need for cultural alignment in the four key areas within an organization discussed in this paper is
the first and most important step to not only procurement’s digital transformation but business in
general.
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$20
$40
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2018
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Trillions