Developing A Digital Mindset
Developing A Digital Mindset
Developing A Digital Mindset
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But what would that look like for an IT giant? Breton began by
scaling and globalizing the company, which provides online
transactional services, systems integration, cybersecurity, and
more. He doubled the size of the workforce to 100,000 people,
hoping to fend off the competitors all around him, including
digital-born start-ups from Silicon Valley, India, and China.
Breton also laid out a plan to integrate AI and other data-driven
technology into company processes and upskill the expanding
workforce.
Developing a digital mindset takes work, but it’s worth the effort.
Our experience shows that employees who do so are more
successful in their jobs and have higher satisfaction at work, they
are more likely to get promoted, and they develop useful skills
that are portable should they decide to change jobs. Leaders who
have a digital mindset are better able to set their organizations up
for success and to build a resilient workforce. And companies that
have one react faster to shifts in the market and are well
positioned to take advantage of new business opportunities.
Accelerating Adoption
Digital change is often radical, and it involves shifting shared
values, norms, attitudes, and behaviors. That’s a tall order, so it is
helpful to kick things off with a bold stroke: an act that commands
attention and prompts everyone in the company to understand
that a new direction is required. (See “What Inexperienced
Leaders Get Wrong [Hint: Management].”) Examples include
doing a major reorg, making an acquisition, reallocating
resources, hiring a digital transformation czar who reports to the
CEO, and announcing that a legacy system is being phased out.
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Change as a Constant
According to change management theory, organizations move
from a current state to a transitional state and then on to a future
state. The transitional state is typically considered to be a fixed
period of time in which an organization shifts from familiar
structures, processes, and cultural norms to new ones. People
understandably experience strong emotions during the
transition, because it requires them to make sense of new
perspectives and ways of behaving. During this temporary state of
ambiguity, everyone’s task is to negotiate between the
organization’s past and its future.
Editor’s note: Tsedal Neeley and Paul Leonardi are the authors
of The Digital Mindset: What It Really Takes to Thrive in the
Age of Data, Algorithms, and AI (Harvard Business Review
Press, 2022), from which this article is adapted.
ABusiness
version Review.
of this article appeared in the May–June 2022 issue of Harvard
@tsedal
PL
Paul Leonardi is the Duca Family Professor of
Technology Management at the University of
California, Santa Barbara, and advises
companies about how to use social network
data and new technologies to improve
performance and employee well-being. He is
the coauthor of the book The Digital Mindset:
What It Really Takes to Thrive in the Age of
Data, Algorithms, and AI.
@pleonardi1
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