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Similar to many businesses globally, organisations in the Middle East are facing challenges with their digital transformation journeys. The recent pandemic has clarified the need for, and greatly accelerated, the move to digital. It has also magnified the risks and challenges.
The impact of COVID-19 was felt across every business sector, with many companies grappling to control their revenue and net income, while their digital transformations are also falling short.
The challenges are manifold, and
many organisations are not prepared for the complexities of such a journey.
Issues with business processes, governance, infrastructure and legacy technology are widespread and complicated further by the need to pivot to new, more agile ways of working and different
organisation cultures, while moving away from traditional top-down hierarchical command and control structures.
The overall business drivers are clear, including digitisation for competitiveness, diversification from the oil economy and the ongoing pandemic. Yet,
transformations are stymied by
insufficient funding and sponsorship, unclear return on investment (ROI), outdated working processes and practices, complex ownership structures,
and issues around acquiring, rewarding and retaining the right talent, while still achieving employee nationalisation goals.
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of Digitally savvy companies are more competitive and perform better , witness by the success of Middle East home grown services, such as Talabat food dellivery, and Souq Marketplace; acquired by Amazon in 2017 for $680 million; and Noon, the e-comm platform that sells apparel, beauty, sports and fitness products.
Yet many business leaders in the
Middle East, having engaged prestigious consulting firms to
help develop their digital business strategies, subsequently waver in their commitment to fully embrace digital transformations and
new ways of working.
Legacy Business Processes, Practices & Systems are Impeding Modernisation
Over the years, organisations in the Middle East have created a mass of processes, practices, infrastructures
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and systems to support their
businesses, however, many of
these are now legacy and less
efficient.
Quite often, the reasons why these
were created have been lost in the
sands of time and disentangling
them is difficult owing to a lack of
documentation, resulting in a
major obstacle to becoming
automated, connected,
omnichannel, data-driven and
agile businesses.
Technologies like robotic process
automation (RPA), intelligent
automation (IA) and natural
language processing (NLP) can
help bridge the gap between
legacy applications and modern
ones, by automating certain
manual, rule-based tasks done by
the human workforce, as well as
moving data between systems.
It is important to understand if
this is worthwhile, or whether it is
just automating inefficiency and it
would be better to start afresh.
Businesses should consider
creating something more attuned
to the current digital business
environment that optimises
technologies, processes and
human resource capabilities, with
the inbuilt agility to quickly evolve
and address future challenges and
opportunities.
Culture, Resistance to
Change and Operating
Models
Digitisation shifts practices,
processes, technology and, of
course, people, who inevitably
need to adapt to new working
practices and dynamics. While line
staff are often (unfairly) identified
as resistors, quite often the real
culprits are managers and leaders.
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This is especially true of the Middle East where family ventures are still run by founding family members. Traditionally, top-down command and control structures served these businesses well, but hierarchical models and cultures do not gel well with the matrixed structures required for agile organisations. The inevitable clash of these two cultures can result in transformation deceleration or even failure.
A parallel twin culture approach
may be appropriate for digital
transformation, that is, legacy
business as usual with a separate
agile, digitally focused initiative.
Businesses should consider
setting up an independent
Digital Transformation function
as a proof of concept (POC) and, perhaps, a separate business with digital resources, staffed
by people with a cross-functional digitisation mindset.
Bahrain’s well-established
Bank ABC did just that, bypassing
its existing regional retail franchises when it set launched
its digital-only Ila Bank.
Organisations should also bring
some open-minded employees from key legacy functions to
work with these new teams, exposing them to doing things digitally while also leveraging their legacy skills and knowledge.
Experiment with small pilot initiatives: fail fast, adapt, learn and create feedback loops as competencies increase.
This will enable employees, managers and leasers to
gradually evolve from command and control to a more open leadership style;
one where leaders and executives
provide resources, direction, advice
and some governance (through
KPIs and metrics) while
delegating much of the decision making, accountability and
initiative to line management and staff.
Leadership Commitment to Full Digital Transformation
While Middle Eastern countries
and populations are embracing
the latest technologies and digital transformation initiatives, Boards and executive leaders in many organisations are either
reluctant to commit to fully-
fledged digital transformations
or their committment gradually declines, due to a lack of clarity around tangible benefits or ROI.
Tech is an enabling tool, but true
digital transformation includes all
aspects of the organisation, from
its macro business environment
and customers to its internal
people, process, practices and
culture.
Enhancing digital literacy
amongst Board members and
executives will broaden their
understanding of digitisation
opportunities, risks and the
consequences of not committing.
This can be further
strengthened by appointing a
digitally savvy business
technology mentor as a non-
executive director, or as a
digital advisor to the Board and
C- suite.
Some legacy transformation can
be achieved through applying
emerging technologies to
streamline and automate
functions such as accounting
administration, HR, customer
services, payroll and others.
Starting with small pilots and
then scaling to an enterprise level
will enable leaders to fully
commit, approve realistic
budgets and support an
organisation-wide commitment
to wider transformation.
When creating a digital business
strategy and subsequent
transformation roadmap,
in addition to financial ROIs which
may be long term, it is important
to identify a broad range of clearly
measurable KPIs.
Metrics should be produced at
various milestones to show
achievements in efficiency
improvement, cost optimisation,
speed and productivity gains,
improved customer engagement
and quality gains. These will
maintain confidence and interest,
while providing leaders with
assurance that the digital
transformation investment is on
target.
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Addressing Digitisation
Skills and Expertise
In addition to digital literacy, tech
and digital skills will need to be
enhanced throughout the organisation. As Middle Eastern economies grow and compete,
there will be more demand
and competition for digitally capable resources, which may, in some cases, clash with employee nationalisation requirements.
This risk can be reduced through training and employee benefits,
such as financial, remote working,
social engagement and commitment to environmental initiatives, all of which are increasingly important,
especially to younger employees.
As digitisation requires a broad range of specialist skills, organisations should consider alternative sourcing models
for some aspects of their operations; for example, helpdesk and customer support as a service (HDaaS), supply chain as a service (SCaaS), replacing in-house tech infrastructure with cloud services, outsourcing cyber security for greater expertise, reduced
risk and economies of scale.
Partnerships and collaborations can
address some of the gaps; for example, early on in the pandemic, Emaar Malls set up a virtual Dubai Mall on noon.com and Majid Al Futtaim (MAF), the developer behind Mall of the Emirates,
rolled out an online marketplace
through carrefouruae.com.
Middle Eastern governments and
authorities can enact laws to support companies with their digitisation and sourcing models.
A leader in this field is KSA’s eCommunications and Information Technology Commission (CITC), which over the last few years has enacted practical and well-thought-out laws governing online transactions, cloud computing, cyber crime and cyber security.
To level the playing field, governments should support the creation of small business hubs
for e-commerce, cross pollinating these with their fin tech and digital hubs resources, solving
opportunity deserts and making online marketplaces easily accessible to SMEs.
Integrating financing, B2B
services and platform
connections, similar to the
UAE’s B2B Tradeling platform,
can make a significant difference
to the potential success of new businesses.
It is clear that digitisation and
digital transformation is an
imperative for most Middle
Eastern business. This is a
significant and
disruptive challenge, as well as a
big opportunity for competitive
advantage, efficiency gain and
higher-quality outputs.
Spending on digitisation has
accelerated significantly
throughout the region, however,
many companies are managing
their digital transformation with a
traditional operating model,
thereby increasing the risks and
failing to fully realise the benefits.
A well-handled, holistic digital
transformation approach
can streamline digital adoption
and be rewarding, rather than
overwhelming.
Contact Fin:
[email protected]