ITIL 4 Strategic Leader Certification Course: Implementing a Digital Strategy - Parallel Operating Models (POMs)

During digital transformation, an organization must still deliver and support existing products and services:

  • Many organizations fail when digitally transforming, they must continue to deliver the norm while progressing through transformation efforts
  • Often the goals of the old and new conflict or contradict (creates its own level of chaos that is hard to predict and harder to manage)

Must include a mechanism to maintain a steady state while transforming like parallel operating models (POMs) (approaches to executing digital strategy while maintaining a steady state):

  • Cannibalism
  • Erosion
  • Concurrence
  • Synergism

1. Cannibalism

Focus: the rapid destruction of the existing business model and complete replacement with a new digital business model:

  • Most forms aim to reduce the degree of parallel operation as much as possible
  • Most aggressive of POMs and is an extreme reaction to threats
  • Driven by overcrowded market spaces (e.g., many competitors, reducing consumer base)

Examples:

  • Moving from print to fully digital information (PagesJaunes)
  • Proactive cannibalism: DVD rentals, consumer provider, streaming video, content creator (Netflix)
  • Continuous cannibalism: Apple (Mac with iPad; iPod with iPhone)

2. Erosion

Kinder, gentler form of cannibalism:

  • Intent is to use the revenues of an existing and still profitable business model to fund a new digital business model
  • Eventually destroy existing business model (slow decay, measured destruction)

Characterized by three basic conditions:

  • The existing business model does not benefit from the new digital business model
  • The new digital business model needs the existing business model for a time (for its revenues)
  • The new digital business model tends to destroy the old business model over time

Example: New York Times

3. Concurrence

An approach where the new digital business model neither helps nor harms the existing business model. Works best when:

  • Organization is attempting to increase/gain market share
  • Consumers are difficult to reach via existing channels

Example of Brick-mortar clothing store:

  • Small market of loyal clients but new clients can’t physically shop
  • Open an online shop
  • Result: expanded customer base, both models exist equitably

4. Synergism

Two models combined produce a greater or different result than they could have produced individually (1+1>2):

  • Works best in situations with existing adjacent or complementary sales channels
  • No competition within channels
  • Customers prefer omnichannel delivery (e.g. sometimes in store, other times, online)
  • Most mature/advanced POM, most benefit, most difficult to execute (customer excellence and operational excellence dichotomy, need both)

Example of Sephora:

  • Selling make-up is the ability to try it first, but customers influenced by reviews, videos, recommendations
  • App allows in-store customer to scan a product and view the media
  • Product can then be re-ordered online

5. Ineffective models

Worst POM is none at all:

  • Some organizations fall into a POM reacting to change
  • Others adopt a model that is inappropriate

Characteristics of ineffective models:

  • Being constructed without an outcomes-based view
  • Not accounting for alternative models or realistic scenarios
  • Being constructed as a response to extreme risk attitudes
  • Being based on a misunderstanding of the current business model
  • Not being sufficiently flexible, and not accounting for the potential need for repositioning

6. Transition pace between old and new

Factors to determine transition pace:

  • Consumer demand: when in doubt, ask the consumer
  • Organizational capabilities and culture:
    • Two approaches: jump in feet first or be more pragmatic
    • Use digital positioning to help understand
  • Maturity of supporting digital technologies: don’t base a strategy primarily on technology but rather on what the organization wishes to achieve
  • Threats from competitors and emerging technologies: monitor competitor to ensure digital business model is paying off before investing

7. Continual improvement

Organizations that have successfully transitioned, enjoy an appetite for change: change is the norm, there is no fear of failure or satisfaction with leading the pack

Change equates to continual improvement and it’s the way business is accomplished: look for opportunities to tear apart current digital model and replace with a model that will further sustain them in the future

Go back to ITIL 4 Strategic Leader Certification Course: Implementing a Digital Strategy to finish this chapter or to the main page ITIL 4 Strategic Leader Certification Course.

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