(Still) Winning in Digital as a (Fast) Follower

13.03.18 02:15 PM - By Raghuram S

As digital becomes central to achieving growth, organizations that are generally slow in uptake can still manage to realize reasonable gains if only they can adopt a fast-follower strategy; learning from the environment and  engaging in short but continuous digitization.


The advancements in digital technologies and emergence of new-age businesses have forced the traditional companies to rethink their strategies and defend their positions in order to survive in the increasingly dynamic and competitive environment. While the leaders among them have realized the need to reinvent themselves and become digital, many others have struggled to hit the right path and withered away in the market place. The reasons for the failures are many but the common ones are:


  • Leadership disconnect – Inability of the top tier to comprehend the threats of competition and adequately connecting with their ecosystem to understand changes.
  • Legacy drag – Compulsion to sustain archaic IT systems and processes that are high on maintenance and demand more management attention.
  • Lack of champions – Dearth of brave hearts in the second line of leadership who can challenge the top tier/ Board on their outdated strategy and showcase the path to recovery.
  • Siloed structures – Very functional and siloed organization structure that operating towards conflicting objectives thus preventing collaboration amongst the employees.


These negative forces weigh them down to be laggards in digital adoption and they tend to scramble to keep pace with the leaders. Instead of giving up, they can still recover and reap rewards of credible performance- if not superlative - if only they can adopt a smart follower strategy. However, this comes with a rider that they need to be FAST at that. Once they establish a momentum as a fast-follower, they can accelerate their digital quest and aspire to be among the leaders.


This article presents some actions companies can practice as a fast follower. Any business wanting to gather pace of digitization needs to strengthen one or more of the fundamental building blocks; a digital strategy that aligns with the overall direction of the company, market and customer orientation to understand and influence customer decisions, a collaborative culture among the workforce and an understanding of the applicability of digital technologies such as Cloud, Analytics, IoT etc. However, there are certain specific considerations fast followers should focus on to accelerate their digital pursuits.


Galvanize Support


The success of a fast follower strategy depends on, without doubt, the conviction of the CEO who is best placed to lead a digital transformation by setting direction and fixing responsibilities for actions. If the CEO is not on board, the battle is lost even before it has begun. He/she may, however, wish to appoint the CMO, CIO or any influencer to be the ‘chef de mission’ to take charge of execution. The first step is to build a small team –may be just 3 to 4 – of likeminded influences across functions that can together impress upon the leadership and peers to act. The team will be involved in all aspects of digital programs and involve their colleagues and subject matter experts as per need.

A blunder companies commit is to expect an individual such as a CIO or a management executive who may not have the authority within the organisation to spearhead the digitization. By appointing a small set of cross-functional influencers, the chances of furthering an idea to execution is much higher.  The team could make the right interventions and support each other to promote the ideas for organization buy-in.


Listen to the Environment 


Fast followers‘s strategy should be built on learnings from diverse sources.  Engaging with customers, connecting frequently with employees, observing competitors’ actions - not just traditional but also non-traditional, enlisting the industry experts, assessing the outcomes of digital ventures of leaders are crucial to constructing their own digital programs. These actions require one fundamental quality to be perfected – listening, a deep listening that goes beyond mere understanding but results in constructive ideas and plans.  Participating in industry events, focus groups and other platforms that bring leaders and experts together can be useful sources of inspiration.  The learnings will have to be contextualized to company’s needs and translated into actionable programs that feed into the Learning Lab.  


Institute a Learning Lab


Establishing a lab that actions on the learnings from the industry should be the next focus area for Fast Followers. The lab can develop prototypes of solutions or test third-party solutions to evaluate the fitment to the organization’s context. The lab can also be used to demonstrate to relevant stakeholders to get their feedback. It should be made to work with minimum resources to avoid high outlays. A common approach that can be considered is to run pilots using open source tools where relevant and move to enterprise specific products when proven.


Keep it Simple


Digital leaders tend to take high risks in improving existing solutions or deploying new ones in a ‘fail-fast’ mode and continuously augment their digital offerings. Followers may not have the organisation backing to take such risks. Instead they should execute short projects that are built and executed in multi stages than as a big-bang. Drawing from the labs, the team should cherry pick small bets that can leverage on the traditional strengths of the organization but brings in a digital swap.  They should showcase wins to gain more support from the management and the organisation.


Engage with the People


The success of digital programs hinges on acceptance of the employees and their buy-in can hardly be overemphasized. The senior management should be on-board at every stage. Towards this, the team should continuously engage with the key stakeholders; the management and the employees to enhance awareness, seek ideas and suggestions and encourage participation in the on-going programs.  The team may do well to consider deploying platforms that bring the employees together for collaboration and also bring in a sense of competitiveness among the functions. They should evaluate leveraging social influence and gamification tools to drive change in attitudes and behaviours by integrating such principles into the collaborative platforms.


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By continuously studying the digital successes of the leaders and contextualizing them for their businesses, fast followers can still achieve gains and be in a position to thwart competition reasonably well. The success lies in the perseverance of the fast-follower strategy and bringing changes that are in line with the organisation capacity.

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Raghuram S