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Before 2021, CIOs were more concerned with cybersecurity; that was very understandable, as threat actors were always developing strategies to harm businesses. Though cybersecurity issues and attacks did not wane one bit, the focus shifted to digital transformation when felt the need to give it the number one spot in their 2021 budgets.
Digital transformation is not a novelty, but the COVID-19 pandemic accelerated its adoption by most organizations. This is largely due to the need to improve customer experience and add more value to businesses, especially with the WFH (work from home) model that has become the norm, with the report that 96% of employees will prefer to work from home even after the pandemic.
The physical workspace will not happen very soon; customers will still need your products or services; if you can’t provide a 24/7 service, your customers will shift ground; incidentally, other organizations are ready to do so and in real-time. They are digitally transforming by integrating technologies such as AI Chatbots that are multilingual and have natural language and contextual understanding to ensure they give customers a real-time experience.
Technology is evolving at a very rapid speed; this has given rise to highly function-specific apps you can use to enhance smooth business operations and processes. By integrating these apps, you can eliminate the stress in workflows. Apps you can use can run into hundreds, hence there is the need to find out what apps are very critical for smooth processes. You must also consider the training and onboarding employees have to go through and the financial implications. If integrating the apps will add more value to your business and improve customer experience, the other angle you must look critically at is how your digital transformation project will impact your organizational culture. Digital transformation is not just integrating new apps and revamping legacy systems; the people who will use these apps must also have a digital-first culture if you want to succeed with your digital transformation initiatives.If your organizational culture is not flexible and adaptable, you may have employees resisting any attempt at the digital transformation; there is always “the way we do things” syndrome among most employees. Your digital transformation strategy must take cognizance of how to overcome resistance from employees from the onset.These are angles you must look into critically before budgeting for 2022.For instance, in 2020, phishing was extensively used by cybercriminals as the entry point for ransomware, it resulted in not less than .Employees who work remotely will continue to use collaboration tools and platforms for communication; it cannot be as at the time they were operating from a physical workspace where customers can easily lodge their pain points; everything must happen online; information will flow, and threat actors will be on the watch out to capitalize on lapses. The prediction that cybercrime will grow at the rate of 15% and cost the world a whopping , is very frightening; it’s a critical area CIOs must look into, but does that mean that we should jettison digital transformation?