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Digital disruption and your workforce

Being anticipatory can mean many things.

In some cases, it’s about identifying opportunities for major disruptions that you yourself can introduce (think Uber, Kickstarter and other innovations that set entire industries on their ear).

Digital disruption and your workforce

But being anticipatory also means being aware of outside disruptions that may impact you—and how to prepare accordingly.

To that end, let’s consider the relationship between digital disruption and the people in your organization.

The continuing digital disruption

Research by Accenture Strategy found that 82 percent of business leaders anticipate that their organizations will be digital businesses within the next three years.

On one hand, leaders see that as a decidedly positive trend, boosting productivity, innovation and other workplace attributes.

But there is a perceived disconnect as well.

Acknowledging the expected benefits of being digital is by no means the same thing as being digital.

It is also not the same as having a workforce that is adequately prepared to learn new digital tools to drive innovation and uncover opportunities.

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That, said the Accenture report, begins at the top.

Strong leadership should encourage a positive, constructive future outlook (a solid “Futureview,” one of the cornerstones of my Anticipatory Organization model) and actively support that through collaborative technologies and widespread employee engagement and education.

6 realities about a digitally driven workforce

The Accenture study also identified a number of other positive aspects having to do with increased use of digital applications.

If you’re not yet prepared for a digital transformation, here are six reminders why it’s time to advance.

And it’s not just millennials.

According to the Accenture study, more than 70 percent of all employees said they are proactively learning new digital tools and skills to better adapt to digital change.

A changing mind-set

These and other factors are also building a very different mindset regarding the workplace, one that leaders need to anticipate and prepare for.

As many commentators have pointed out, younger employees often value their working environment as much as their salary.

To me, this comes down to a different expectation of leadership.

Since technology can make work more independent and flexible by nature, younger employees expect a new level of autonomy and freedom from their leaders.

They value control of where and when they work and a reasonable amount of freedom in what they do.

In my consultations with organizations of all sorts, it’s evident that digital disruption is driving pervasive change.

What are you doing to anticipate those changes and prepare accordingly?

Get more insights about the multi-generational workforce, the power of digital, the importance of disruption and more with the Anticipatory Organization Learning System at www.AnticipatoryOrganization.com. You can also get the book by the same title, “The Anticipatory Organization,” on Amazon.com right now.


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