“Every company is a software company.” Or at least according to Forbes in 2011, and this was not by any means the first eye-catching headline in the market. Technology companies and sector verticals are converging rapidly: retailers are now eCommerce platforms, traditional automotive companies are experimenting with autonomous vehicles and telematics software, primarily holding a digital bank account is no longer considered quirky, and physicians are a mere Zoom call away.
To advance technology, organizations initially focused their efforts on innovation (to meet disruption head-on) and customer functions (to build out omnichannel and digital go-to-market strategies). Organizations began to remove the divide between their digital programs and traditional IT delivery systems by consolidating them into a single technology operating model.1 In 2018, 18% of technology leaders said their companies had either converted their digital and IT teams to a single operating model or developed a fully digital model; by 2020, this number had almost doubled.2 However, organizations are quickly realizing that this is not enough. Simply creating a single technology operating model does not necessarily build the right customer activation platforms, nor does it guarantee a streamlined integration. Technology and customer functions are often misaligned as platforms are opportunistically created. Furthermore, digital complexity is creating confusion; organizations are uncertain how to embed digital capabilities and discern what type of technology leader is needed, often hiring a flashy technology leader without additional thought to scope or structure. A deeper, more complex, and intentional integration is required today, one that simultaneously considers structure and talent, to ensure that customer and technology functions partner effortlessly and design a frictionless end-to-end customer journey for increasingly sophisticated customers.
Organizations need to implement an appropriate structural archetype, aligned to their business model, that ensures cross-functional connectivity across the customer lifecycle, from technology and digital solutions to product offerings, marketing, and sales. This connectivity will enable flatter, faster teams to prioritize creativity, speed, and accountability – three non-negotiables for innovation and technological advancement.3 In determining the right structure, it is also important to simultaneously discuss roles and responsibilities and streamline reporting lines. This means focusing accountability on one or two prominent leaders, instead of having an array of executives with overlapping remits, causing teams to answer to multiple bosses.4 Go-to-market leaders are key here; these leaders need to harness their unique perspective on customer demands, behaviors, and digital platforms and champion cross-functional connectivity across the broader organization.
To understand how technology and customer functions can be advanced meaningfully, Russell Reynolds evaluated market-leading organizations, distinguished in their technology structure, customer-activation capabilities, and/or go-to-market digital platforms. The analysis highlighted four structural archetypes, each with a distinguishing balance of power between core considerations: a technology-weighted model, a consumer-weighted model, an equally-weighted model (between technology and consumer), and a product-weighted model. Each structural archetype has its own talent implications around accountability and role responsibility spanning a spectrum of core expertise, including the chief information officer (CIO), chief technology officer (CTO), chief digital information officer (CDIO), chief technology digital officer (CDTO), chief digital officer (CDO) or multichannel leader, chief digital marketing officer (CDMO), or chief marketing officer (CMO) or brand leader. These structural archetypes are continuously shifting with the business landscape; organizations that initially began with the technology-weighted model may have evolved to an equally-weighted model, depending on consumer demand and business strategy. Roughly a third of the organizations included in this analysis have since shifted their model in the past four months. Using the concept of balance of power, with an agile culture, organizations will be able to better integrate technology and customer functions.
What leaders feared…is that their companies were organized for a world that is disappearing—an era of standardization and predictability that’s being overwritten by four big trends: a combination of heightened connectivity, lower transaction costs, unprecedented automation, and shifting demographics.5Organizing for the Future: Nine Keys to Becoming a Future-ready Company, McKinsey & Company |
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Figure 1: Integration of customer and technology functions
In the customer functions, there has been an influx of new roles. Over the past six months, 17% of appointments were to newly created roles in a given organization, such as chief growth officer, chief customer officer, or chief revenue officer. As digital transformation becomes a top priority for organizations, leaders are forced to not only have frontend capabilities but also the ability to understand data, analytics, and back-end systems more fluently.
In the technology functions, single leaders are taking on the remit of all technology and digital from data, security, engineering, and IT to digital customer touchpoints and occasionally digital product development. This requires customer-centric leaders capable of stepping up to a leadership role, often sitting on the executive committee and reporting to the CEO. The titles of these roles are almost irrelevant, with the difference between CIOs, CTOs, CDOs, and any combination of the three dematerializing over time.
50% of chief customer officer appointments over the last six months were to newly created roles.6The Pandemic has Created New Opportunities for Customer-Centric Leaders, Russell Reynolds Associates |
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Russell Reynolds proposes using the concept of balance of power as organizations discuss the realignment of functions to flatten the hierarchy and streamline accountability. The balance of power between technology, consumer, digital, and product most commonly take place in one of four core ways:
This structure is increasing in popularity due to the elevation of the technology role and the increased importance of technology to company strategy. The technology leader has an expansive remit covering IT, technology and engineering, data management and occasionally analytics, product management, and digital. The role is then supported by a marketing officer who is brand and creative focused, and who may or may not sit on the executive committee. The tech role almost always sits on the executive committee, reporting to the CEO.
Pros
Cons
The digital transformation is not a goal in and of itself, and it is so much more than technology. We are transforming our business: We are exploring potential new offers to customers, new ways to bring our offers to customers, and new ways to operate our business. In order to be successful, digital needs to be embedded in every aspect of IKEA.7Inside IKEA’s Digital Transformation, Harvard Business Review |
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As the least common of the structural archetypes, this structure sees a combined marketing and digital function, or a holistic omnichannel leader sitting on the executive committee. This role owns all marketing from digital/performance to brand as well as all go-to-market strategy, customer experience across both digital and physical touchpoints, sales, and product management. In this archetype, the marketing organization is more centralized with one leader reporting to the CEO as opposed to having the marketing function distributed across business lines and regions. The technology leader may have a more expanded remit, but is largely internally focused on covering IT/tech, business services, and/or operations.
Pros
Cons
This structure allows for deeper expertise of each area but has the downside of splitting accountability at the executive level. Most commonly, the technology leader will own IT & technology, engineering teams, and in telecoms, sometimes network infrastructure. The “middle” leader – often a chief digital or product officer – will focus on customer-facing technology and digital products / digital touchpoints. The marketing leader then acts as a brand and channel leader. Typically two of the three roles sit on the executive committee. The technology leader may report into a COO or CFO, given its smaller remit, although this is becoming less common. Russell Reynolds analysis showed that in 2020, approximately 40-45% of all FTSE or Fortune 500 technology officer leaders sit on the executive committee. In the last 18 months, this percentage has doubled to 85%, highlighting the elevation of the role.
Pros
Cons
Pure technology organizations and digital platforms have adopted a model in which the development and management of the digital product is split between a technology officer and a product officer. The combination typically consists of 1) an engineering-focused chief technology officer with the remit to build platforms and products, 2) a chief product officer to handle product management, strategy, design, roadmaps, and customer experience, and 3) a brand and creative orientated chief marketing officer. The CTO and CPO are almost always on the executive committee. In larger organizations, the CTO is often supported by an internally focused engineering leader (vice president) on the senior leadership team. Sixty-five percent of the technology sector’s customer appointments last year were CMOs or chief revenue officers – suggesting that these are more growth enabling mandates than customer experience, which would likely be held in the product remit.
Pros
Cons
As the right structural model is being identified and built out, talent archetypes also need to be taken into consideration. It is important to crystallize which roles are needed and what the scope of each role is (see Figure 2). Traditional technology roles encompass data and analytics, data management, cyber security, and/or software engineering; emerging customer activation roles spearhead brand awareness, storytelling, and marketing platforms and operations. New areas include product design and strategy, customer analytics, user experience/interface, ventures, and/or P&L management – these competencies can be shifted to the left or right to fall under the chief technology officer, chief product officer, chief market officer, or a new role, depending on the business model, organizational design, and reporting lines.
Figure 2. Talent competencies along the technology-customer activation spectrum
There is no one-size-fits-all solution; organizations need to be intentional and thoughtful around what capabilities to prioritize, and what type of leader brings the right skill set and comfort with change management. Russell Reynolds has identified considerations to prioritize as organizations navigate this process (see Figure 3). Organizations should understand the unique impact of each role and the spectrum of core expertise that falls under each position. This knowledge allows the organization to engage in informed discussions, not only internally with key stakeholders, but also externally in the market with candidates.
Figure 3. Identifying the right tech-enabled go-to-market leader
To respond to sophisticated customer needs, integrating technology and customer activation functions is an imperative; the question is no longer if and when, but how. It is important to strategically and intentionally discern what the right balance of power is, between technology, consumer, digital, and product, in order to drive meaningful growth and innovation. Organizations can advance their go-to-market platforms by customizing a core structural archetype to business models and growth strategies and focusing on the most relevant section of the technology-customer activation talent spectrum.
George Head is a member of Russell Reynolds Associates’ Consumer Sector. He is based in London.
Katelyn Schoenholtz is a member of Russell Reynolds Associates’ Consumer knowledge team. She is based in New York.
Sources
1, 2 Products and Platforms: Is Your Technology Operating Model Ready? Frazier, Ross, Naufal Khan, Gautam Lunawat, Amit Rahul. McKinsey Digital, February 28, 2020.
3, 5 Organizing for the Future: Nine Keys to Becoming a Future-ready Company. De Smet, Aaron, Chris Gagnon, Elizabeth Mygatt. McKinsey & Company, January 2021.
4 Beyond Matrix Organization, the Helix Organization. De Smet, Aaron, Sarah Kleinman, Kirsten Weerda. McKinsey & Company, October 3, 2019.
6 The Pandemic has Created New Opportunities for Customer-Centric Leaders. Russell Reynolds Associates.
7 Inside IKEA’s Digital Transformation. Stackpole, Thomas. Harvard Business Review, June 4, 2021.