The survey – which polled more than 400 executives across Europe – found that more than half (52 percent) of companies are increasing IT spending levels within the next year to achieve the significant benefits of digital transformation. In addition, the majority of organisations are making progress with planning and implementing their digital transformation projects – almost half (47 percent) have a formal strategy and are actively digitising business processes, and 25 percent have started on siloed projects without an overarching strategy.
“In a global business economy dominated by disruption, innovation and cyber threats, speed to market is of the essence,” said Richard Warley, CenturyLink managing director, EMEA. “While it’s encouraging to see the majority of enterprises in Europe increasing their investment in digital transformation, the associated complexities can result in numerous roadblocks. Moving to a superior network and employing agile cloud technologies are foundational elements to simplifying the transformation process.”
“Digital transformation programs in Europe are now being viewed as strategic, long-term initiatives and typically receive the support of top-level executives,” said Nick Patience, founder & research vice president, software at 451 Research. “A critical aspect of these transformation projects is entrusting some of the fundamentals to external service providers. More than 90 percent of companies surveyed are using or expect to use a third-party transformation partner. This enables business leaders to refocus internal resources on developing new services and applications to support innovative business initiatives.”
The study also found nearly 40 percent of respondents expect digital transformation to cause ‘major disruption’ over the next three years. The top factors driving digital transformation are reducing operational costs (51 percent), improving customer experience (41 percent), and creating new services or revenue streams (37 percent).
The Pace of Transformation
Despite more companies focusing on digital transformation, they acknowledge it will take significant time to successfully complete these projects. The majority (55 percent) of respondents estimate it will take three to six years to achieve company-wide digital transformation, largely due to how long it takes to overcome business and IT complexities.
Barriers to a Successful Transformation
The primary barriers respondents identified are inflexible IT systems and lack of operational agility (36 percent), overcoming organisational silos/outdated work practices (35 percent), and inability to migrate legacy IT and business applications to the cloud (33 percent).
The Growing Importance of Cloud
The study confirmed the increased importance of cloud, with 57 percent of respondents rating cloud services as a ‘very important’ enabler for digital transformation and 29 percent rating it as ‘important’.
Choosing the Right Partner
In addition to long-term commitment, choosing the right partner is critical to achieving success. Forty-three percent of companies are using or expect to need an IT services (including communications services) provider in support of their digital transformation programs, and 38 percent use or expect to use a cloud service provider, the study found.