Abstract

PurposeThe author reports on the chief obstacle to successful digital adoption, the resistance to change the fundamental way a firm is managed—one requiring a transformation from industrial-era management to digital-age thinking and management.Design/methodology/approachThe author explains that it has become increasingly apparent that the most successful firms at digital transformation are being run very differently from industrial-era management practices.FindingsAs every company becomes a digital company, they need a distributed computing fabric to build, manage, secure and deploy applications anywhere.Practical implicationsThe use of “low code/no-code technology” is now “rapidly becoming a priority for every organization’s digital capability building”.Originality/valueThe crucial learning: At Novartis, digital technology did not initially infuse itself throughout the firm as management initially hoped. Some Novartis managers began to realize that technologists and data scientists alone couldn’t bring about the kind of wholesale innovation the business needed, so they began pairing data scientists with business employees who had insight into where improvements in efficiency and performance were needed.

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