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Organizational Agility Ensures Business Survival

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Organizational Agility Ensures Business Survival

Organizational Agility Ensures Business Survival

by Bernie Bingham, Managing Director

 

Already important before and critical now amidst COVID-19, this is a competency that will remain vital for businesses well beyond the end of the pandemic.

Organizational agility has been described as the ability for organizations to maintain alignment across their departments, teams, individuals and partners, while maintaining transformation and innovation projects that are needed to meet new and evolving challenges.

The pace of technological change and the increasing rate of globalization pose significant threats (and opportunities) to a huge number of organizations and brands. The challenges come from all directions, not least of which is changing consumer or end-user behaviors.

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In normal trading circumstances, these things already had a big impact on macroeconomic conditions. When something like a global pandemic strikes, the threats and challenges are changed, compounded and amplified all at the same time, meaning that organizations that have gone some way to solving their agility problems will be a step ahead and able to react more quickly.

 

A seismic shift

This amplification is referenced by Marco Iansiti and Greg Richards in a recent Harvard Business Review Article titled “Coronavirus Is Widening the Corporate Digital Divide”.

“As workplaces mandate that employees work from home, universities shift fully to online teaching, restaurants transition to online ordering and delivery, and automakers shut down their plants, we’re seeing the most rapid organizational transformation in the history of the modern firm.”

In our industry, most brands had made the move to software tools that enabled them to achieve better organizational alignment, and hence agility, for their own processes. These range from the more corporate deployments of G Suite and Microsoft Office 365/Teams, through to tools like Slack and Workfront. In almost all cases the organizations found themselves more productive and more agile as a result.

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Agencies had typically made investments in their own studio systems to make their own internal processes more efficient, and in a lot of cases to provide an interface point for the clients, typically around the review and approval of files and an asset management function.

 

Weak links exposed

However, there is a missing piece to this picture that has been highlighted and amplified by the current working conditions caused by COVID-19. The issue was always there but wasn’t necessarily causing too many problems in an environment where everyone was largely working from their offices and studios, and where the workday was largely uninterrupted.

The scenarios described above can be termed “Islands of Automation”. Brands have better internal systems; agencies have better internal systems. But where the integration between the two is minimal or non-existent, processes quickly become fragmented and inefficient. This effect is only compounded by the challenges of everyone working from home full-time, with the distractions of children also at home and broadband bandwidth suddenly becoming very contested. It’s no longer WFH (Working From Home), it’s now WWFFH (Working With Family From Home). What seemed simple in the office can become something to wrestle with at home.

Without properly interconnected systems, all these extra steps, no matter how small, become another problem to manage. As brands look to build-out and adjust their continuity plans, all these hand-offs become another action item in a risk-assessment matrix and another problem to potentially solve.

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Organizations are busy looking at their succession plans and making adjustments for scenarios that hadn’t been envisaged before. It’s no longer, what happens if Joe is out sick. It’s now what happens if a whole department is out, or even what happens if a whole region is out. Now, all those disconnections between the islands of automation become a training, user access and security problem to solve that likely needs input from team leaders, HR and IT to solve. When you add in the same scenarios for the agency, continuity of (quality and timely) work becomes a major issue.

More and more organizations these days are classifying their new product projects as secure and confidential. This is natural as time to market and innovation are keys to commercial success. The need for security compounds and amplifies all the issues listed above. How can you maintain security of process, data and digital assets, maintain speed and quality and achieve this throughout the new succession planning scenarios everyone is working on and with everyone working from home? Fair to say, life has changed.

 

So where to now?

Fortunately, there are solutions to these issues. In finding a solution, some of the key questions for a brand or operations manager to ask are: Is there a way of connecting our internal tools to my agency’s tools? Can we eliminate those disconnected touchpoints? Can we reduce training and cross-training requirements by the use of automation, either internally or at the agency? Can we ingest new large digital assets into the workflow, even with people working from home? Can we maintain project security at all points in the process, even with people working from home? Is it feasible to have cross-regional succession planning?

It is possible to find solutions that can be implemented now, while in the midst of these challenging new work scenarios. But also, as business slowly gets back to normal over the next number of months, operations, procurement and IT will be adding these things as “mandatory” to their requirements documents. Just as computer hacking has mandated minimum levels of IT security, this pandemic will mandate a minimum level of supply chain agility. Life has changed.

 

 

Editorial Note: This post was shared by a member of the BXP magazine community using our Community Voice tool.

Our website community uses the tool to post articles, thought-leadership reports and analyses, white papers, case studies, blog entries and op-eds, press releases and events about brand and package design or marketing. These posts are vetted and edited by our editorial staff for editorial relevance and decorum for branding, design, marketing and package design professionals. Approved and edited content then lives side-by-side with other editorial content. Overtly promotional content is not accepted, but we do have advertising options available for those interested in promoting their services or products.  

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