Close Cookie Notice

Welcome to the MIT CISR website!

This site uses cookies. Review our Privacy Statement.

The Four Pathways to Future Ready
Research Briefing

Update on the Four Pathways to Future Ready

Future-Ready companies outperform their industry. To get there you must choose a pathway and manage the “explosions.”
Abstract

In 2017 we first observed how almost every big old company was on a digital transformation journey, many without a playbook. We described the goal of business transformation—to become Future Ready—and four pathways we identified in our research that companies can follow to outperform their industry. In understanding how companies successfully get to Future Ready, we pinpointed four significant, disruptive changes common to all of the pathways, which we call “explosions.” In this briefing we update the research and highlight what we have learned over the last four years.

Access More Research!

Any visitor to the website can read many MIT CISR Research Briefings in the webpage. But site users who have signed up on the site and are logged in can download all available briefings, plus get access to additional content. Even more content is available to members of MIT CISR member organizations.

Listen to the Research

Co-author Stephanie Woerner reads this research briefing as part of our audio edition of the series. Follow the series on SoundCloud.

DOWNLOAD THE TRANSCRIPT

In 2017 we first observed how almost every big old company was on a digital transformation journey, many without a playbook.[foot]P. Weill and S. L. Woerner, “Future Ready? Pick Your Pathway for Digital Business Transformation,” MIT Sloan CISR Research Briefing, Vol. XVII, No. 9, September 2017, https://cisr.mit.edu/publication/2017_0901_DigitalPathways_WeillWoerner.[/foot] We described the goal of business transformation—to become Future Ready—and our research identified four pathways that companies can follow to outperform their industry.

When we asked one CEO why he drove development of a playbook at his company, he explained:

Creating a common transformation language that’s embedded and reinforced consistently by the leaders across the organization was an important first step as a CEO, and ultimately critical to gaining [the] momentum needed during the early and difficult phases of the digital journey we are on.

Nathan Bostock, Chief Executive Officer, Santander UK[foot]Nathan Bostock, email message to author, February 6, 2021.[/foot]

Since 2017, we’ve done dozens of workshops with companies that are making big investments in business transformation, and we’ve continued research on the four pathways, including administering surveys to more than 1,500 companies globally. In this briefing we update the research and highlight what we have learned over the last four years.

Future Ready

A future-ready company is ambidextrous, innovating to engage and delight customers while simultaneously reducing costs by means of readily available technologies—for example, cloud computing or APIs, often combined with agile development approaches such as test and learn. Customers get a great experience no matter which of the company’s channels they choose, and the company strives to meet customers’ needs rather than push products.

Additionally, a future-ready company creates modular digitized services to both optimize operations and design and release new offerings. It treats data as a strategic asset—a single source of truth, supported by a set of data monetization capabilities—that is accessible by all employees who need it.[foot]B. H. Wixom and L. Owens, “Digital Data Monetization Capabilities,” MIT Sloan CISR Research Briefing, Vol. XIX, No. 4. March 2019, https://cisr.mit.edu/publication/2019_0401_DataMonetizationCapabilities_WixomOwens.[/foot] The company is ecosystem ready—whether to lead an ecosystem or participate in one—and works with a wide variety of partners via digital services and exposed APIs. And it enables future-ready endeavors by developing and retaining the right talent and facilitating rapid learning throughout the company.[foot]K. Dery, S. L. Woerner, and C. M. Beath, “Equipping and Empowering the Future-Ready Workforce,” MIT Sloan CISR Research Briefing, Vol. XX, No. 12, December 2020, https://cisr.mit.edu/publication/2020_1201_FutureReadyWorkforce_DeryWoernerBeath.[/foot]

Most importantly, a company’s purpose determines the company’s version of Future Ready and helps guide individuals’ behavior.

If you’re not doing [digital] aligned with your core purpose, then it’s really sort of a hobby; it’s something you’re doing on the side. … [Digital] has to be core and completely aligned with your objectives.

Shayne Elliott, Chief Executive Officer, ANZ Banking Group[foot]Shayne Elliott, interview by Peter Weill, MIT CISR Board & C-Suite Online Forum, December 16, 2020.[/foot]

Insight from the Research

This brief video describes the four pathways to Future Ready.

What have we learned since our earlier briefing? The performance premiums for getting to a future-ready state are large and rising. In 2017, 23 percent of companies were Future Ready (relative to competitors) and those companies averaged net margin 16 percentage points above their industry average.[foot]MIT CISR 2015 CIO Digital Disruption Survey (N=413), a series of executive interviews conducted between 2015 and 2017, and case vignettes with CEMEX, TetraPak, Domain, and KPN.[/foot] In 2019, 22 percent of companies were Future Ready, with an average net margin 19.3 percentage points higher than industry average[foot]MIT CISR 2019 TMT and Transformation Survey (N=1,311). Self-reported net profit margin correlates significantly with actual profit margin at the p<.01 level.[/foot] (see figure 1). Getting to a future-ready state is financially rewarding but challenging, and considering that over time we observed the percentage of future-ready companies staying fairly consistent, we propose the bar to achieving Future Ready is rising in step with advancements in practice and technologies. It takes a strong, consistent vision to get there, and even that is not enough. It also requires that the company and its top management team align on both a pathway for the journey and how the company will deal with unavoidable significant, disruptive company-wide changes needed to become Future Ready.

Figure 1: A Comparison of Company Transformation States and Profit Margin in 2017 and 2019
Figure 1: A Comparison of Company Transformation States and Profit Margin in 2017 and 2019

Source: MIT CISR 2019 TMT and Transformation Survey (N=1,311). Self-reported net profit margin correlates significantly with actual profit margin at the p<.01 level. Net profit margin is compared to industry. Customer Experience and Operational Efficiency are each constructed from four measures.

Pathways to Future Ready

As part of this research we identified four possible pathways to Future Ready. Figure 2 shows the percentage of companies exclusively following each pathway in 2019 and the company’s percent complete toward transformation (as reported by executive teams to their boards). We found that most companies begin the journey by choosing Pathway 1, 2, or 3 and following it to Future Ready. Of the 1,311 companies that responded to our most recent survey, the average percent complete, which had been 33 percent in 2017, was 50 percent in 2019. Fifty percent is an important milestone for benefit realization: we found that companies at above 50 percent complete in their transformation had a 14 percent higher average net margin than those below 50 percent complete.

Figure 2: Single Pathway Transformation Choice and Completion Rates in 2019
Figure 2: Single Pathway Transformation Choice and Completion Rates in 2019

Source of pathway choice and completion rates: MIT CISR 2019 TMT and Transformation Survey (N=1,311). 76% of companies responding to the survey reported being on a single pathway. The average transformation completion across all respondents was 50%. 22% of companies were on multiple pathways; 12% were well coordinated and 10% not coordinated. Companies on multiple pathways that were well coordinated were 59% complete, while those that were not coordinated were 30% complete. 2% of companies in our survey had not started on a digital transformation.

Source of mechanism comparing measures of importance: MIT CISR 2017 Pathways to Digital Business Transformation Survey (N=400).

Review the Pathways framework in the MIT CISR Research Briefing "Becoming Future Ready Requires Organizational Explosions"

In our survey, 76 percent of companies chose one primary pathway for their digital transformation. Two percent of companies had not started on a transformation. The other 22 percent were on multiple pathways at once, either by choice (for example, to fulfill the differing needs of distinct business units) or due to lack of strategy. Of those companies on multiple pathways, more than half (12 percent of companies overall) said they were well coordinated on those pathways—sharing data, processes, and/or components across the pathways. These companies had made the most progress, assessing their transformation at 59 percent complete. The companies that were on multiple pathways but not coordinated made the least progress—30 percent complete.

One risk we anticipate in the next few years is that business units or country leaders will start local transformation initiatives due to frustration with slow progress on company-wide transformation. Consequently, the companies will be pursuing multiple pathways at once but not coordinating them—and the financial results will be poor. Choosing multiple pathways might make sense for many multi-business unit companies, but as it requires more coordination, it should be a conscious choice. Otherwise, a company could find itself dealing with conflicting goals, investments, and activities, and making less headway than expected on its transformation.

Organizational Explosions

In understanding how companies successfully get to Future Ready, we identified four significant, disruptive changes common to all of the pathways.[foot]P. Weill, N. van der Meulen, and S. L. Woerner, “Becoming Future Ready Requires Organizational Explosions,” MIT Sloan CISR Research Briefing, Vol. XVIII, No. 8, August 2018, https://cisr.mit.edu/publication/2018_0801_PathwaysExplosions_WeillVanderMeulenWoerner.[/foot] We call these changes “explosions” because that’s what they feel like: companies are blowing up the way they used to do things to remove barriers and move faster. The four explosions are:

  1. Changing decisions rights: clarifying who has the rights to make which decisions and how decision makers will be held accountable[foot]N. van der Meulen, “Decision Rights Guardrails to Empower Teams and Drive Company Performance,” MIT Sloan CISR Research Briefing, Vol. XX, No. 8, August 2020, https://cisr.mit.edu/publication/2020_0801_DecisionRights_Meulen.[/foot]
  2. Developing new ways of working: changing the company culture through new ways of working such as agile methodologies, minimum viable products, co-creating with customers, and remote working
  3. Creating a platform mindset: identifying the organization’s “crown jewels” and converting them into reusable digital services that connect organizational silos for real-time transactions, fast innovation, and easy partnering
  4. Performing organizational surgery: removing organizational complexity, often to achieve better and cheaper multiproduct, multichannel customer experience

Explicitly discussing how to manage the explosions and who will do so helps keep the enterprise focused. Managing these changes was a high priority at CEMEX, which followed Pathway 2 and significantly improved its customer experience with the introduction and success of CEMEX GO.

Deciding which particular pathway to follow was just the first step in our business transformation journey; the bigger challenge as a CEO was to closely manage the organizational changes required to build a truly digital enterprise. Beyond the technological implications, change management efforts need to be at the top of the CEO’s agenda.

Fernando Gonzalez, Chief Executive Officer, CEMEX[foot]Fernando Gonzalez, email message to author, January 30, 2021.[/foot]

Companies in our research whose transformation was a higher percent complete were statistically more effective at dealing with each of the four explosions. In figure 3 we show the percent effectiveness on each of the four explosions for both average and top-performing companies (based on margin). None of the explosions are easy to navigate, but top performers achieve around 70 percent effectiveness on all four. How do you compare?

Figure 3: Average Company vs. Top Performers on Effectiveness of Dealing with Explosions
Figure 3: Average Company vs. Top Performers on Effectiveness of Dealing with Explosions

Source: MIT CISR 2019 TMT and Transformation Survey (N=1,311). Top Performers are the top quartile of firms on net margin, adjusted for industry. Self-reported net profit margin correlates significantly with actual profit margin at the p<.01 level. Net profit margin is compared to industry.

In our workshops and presentations, we are often asked which of these explosions should be dealt with first. The results of our analysis of case vignettes and survey data suggests that, no matter which pathway you are on, the first explosion to focus on is decision rights. We hear of many companies starting their transformation with a reorganization—performing organizational surgery. Putting a stake in the ground too early risks making changes that stabilize the wrong parts of the enterprise. While a reorganization is a strong signal to all of your employees, we find in most instances the result of reorganizing first is that subsequent changes could immerse the company in conflict, eventually provoking additional organizational surgery. Instead, we’ve found that clarifying who is responsible for the key decisions on digital, such as how to invest, is critical and the best place to start.

Actions to Become Future Ready

Digital transformation is urgent for most companies. And while digital transformation is doable, achieving a Future Ready state is more challenging. The bar of what Future Ready means is rising as every company improves. It takes a strong, consistent vision to become Future Ready—but even that is not enough. It also requires that the top management team and the company agree on a pathway for the journey and expertly and proactively deal with the organizational explosions.

© 2021 MIT Sloan Center for Information Systems Research, Woerner and Weill. MIT CISR Research Briefings are published monthly to update the center's patrons and sponsors on current research projects.

About the Authors

MIT CENTER FOR INFORMATION SYSTEMS RESEARCH (CISR)

Founded in 1974 and grounded in MIT's tradition of combining academic knowledge and practical purpose, MIT CISR helps executives meet the challenge of leading increasingly digital and data-driven organizations. We work directly with digital leaders, executives, and boards to develop our insights. Our consortium forms a global community that comprises more than seventy-five organizations.

MIT CISR Patrons
AlixPartners
Avanade
Axway, Inc.
Collibra
IFS
Pegasystems Inc.
The Ogilvy Group
MIT CISR Sponsors
Alcon Vision
Allstate Insurance Company
Amcor
ANZ Banking Group (Australia)
AustralianSuper
Banco Bradesco S.A. (Brazil)
Banco do Brasil S.A.
Bank of Queensland (Australia)
Barclays (UK)
BlueScope Steel (Australia)
BNP Paribas (France)
Bupa
CarMax
Caterpillar, Inc.
Cemex (Mexico)
Cencora
Cochlear Limited (Australia)
Commonwealth Superannuation Corp. (Australia)
Cuscal Limited (Australia)
CVS Health
Dawn Foods
DBS Bank Ltd. (Singapore)
Doosan Corporation (Korea)
Fidelity Investments
Fomento Economico Mexicano, S.A.B., de C.V.
Fortum (Finland)
Genentech
General Mills, Inc.
Gilbane Building Co.
Johnson & Johnson (J&J)
Kaiser Permanente
King & Wood Mallesons (Australia)
Koç Holding (Turkey)
Mercer
Nasdaq, Inc.
NN Insurance Eurasia NV
Nomura Holdings, Inc. (Japan)
Nomura Research Institute, Ltd. Systems Consulting Division (Japan)
Novo Nordisk A/S (Denmark)
OCP Group
Pacific Life Insurance Company
Posten Bring AS (Norway)
Principal Life Insurance Company
QBE
Ramsay Health Care (Australia)
Raytheon Technologies
Scentre Group Limited (Australia)
Schneider Electric Industries SAS (France)
Stockland (Australia)
Tabcorp Holdings (Australia)
Telstra Limited (Australia)
Terumo Corporation (Japan)
Tetra Pak (Sweden)
Truist Financial Corporation
UniSuper Management Pty Ltd (Australia)
Uniting (Australia)
USAA
Webster Bank, N.A.
Westpac Banking Corporation (Australia)
WestRock Company
Wolters Kluwer
Xenco Medical
Zoetis Services LLC

MIT CISR Associate Members

MIT CISR wishes to thank all of our associate members for their support and contributions.

Find Us
Center for Information Systems Research
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Sloan School of Management
245 First Street, E94-15th Floor
Cambridge, MA 02142
617-253-2348