Today’s world of business is not just changing—it’s transforming. The difference is that change
is doing something in an incrementally different way, while transformation is doing something so
drastically different that it becomes a qualitative shift. The fact that we began watching movies on VHS
tapes that we’d have to rewind then moved to DVDs that we didn’t have to rewind, followed by Blu-ray
discs for enhanced quality—that’s a change. But going from discs of any kind to a multitude of streaming
services that we can watch both on our smart TVs and our mobile devices, bringing not only our movie
collections but television and Internet videos with us wherever we go? That’s a transformation.
As we all know, technology made this transformation possible. I’ve spoken to CIOs who are not
only using software as a service (SaaS), but who are implementing hardware as a service, connectivity as
a service, collaboration as a service, and security as a service. The real excitement was around
implementing everything as a service (XaaS). Clearly, IT is quickly becoming an integrated collection of
intelligent services that are on-demand, on the move, and on any device.
The visual, social, virtual, and mobile transformations are creating a new golden era of
technology-enabled innovation and the CIO needs to be leading the charge.
So what has enabled the business environment to go from merely changing to transforming? It
has to do with the three change accelerators I often reference in my writing: advances in computing
power, bandwidth, and storage. I have tracked their exponential trajectory for years, and they have
entered a new phase that has transformed every business process.
Based on technology-enabled hard trends that are already in place, how we sell, market,
communicate, collaborate, innovate, train, and educate will continue to transform. If you don’t anticipate
the disruption that comes with this transformation, someone else will. And with all the business processes
technology is transforming, nothing is transforming more than the role of the CIO.
The ability to innovate has never been easier and has never happened faster. In today’s
transformational business landscape, you must anticipate disruption and change, turning it into
opportunity and advantage. If you don’t change the focus of your CIO role, someone else will.
To book Daniel Burrus for your next event, visit his profile at https://premierespeakers.com/daniel-burrus.
Daniel is the author of The Anticipatory Organization: Turn Disruption and Change into Opportunity and Advantage and Flash Foresight: How to See the Invisible and Do the Impossible. To order in bulk for your event, please visit Bulkbooks.com.