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56 percent CEOs say digital deployments have improved profits: Gartner

IT-Related Changes Are No. 2 Business Priority; Highest Ranking since Launch of CEO Survey

An unsettled global political environment has not shifted CEOs’ focus on profits and growth in 2017. Growth is the No. 1 business priority for 58 percent of CEOs, according to a recent survey of 388 CEOs by Gartner. This is up from 42 percent in 2016.

Product improvement and technology are the biggest-rising priorities for CEOs in 2017. “IT-related priorities, cited by 31 percent of CEOs, have never been this high in the history of the CEO survey,” said Mark Raskino, vice president and Gartner Fellow. “Almost twice as many CEOs are intent on building up in-house technology and digital capabilities as those who plan on outsourcing it (57 percent and 29 percent, respectively). We refer to this trend as the re-internalization of IT — bringing information technology capability back toward the core of the enterprise because of its renewed importance to competitive advantage. This is the building up of new-era technology skills and capabilities.”

While the idea of shifting toward digital business was speculative for most CEOs a few years ago, it has become a reality for many in 2017. Forty-seven percent of CEOs are being challenged by the board of directors to make progress in digital business, and 56 percent said that their digital improvements have already improved profits. “CEO understanding of the benefits of a digital business strategy is improving,” said Raskino. “They are able to describe it more specifically. Although a significant number of CEOs still mention e-commerce or digital marketing, more of them align it to advanced business ideas, such as digital product and service innovation, the Internet of Things, or digital platforms and ecosystems.”

CEOs have also progressed in their digital business endeavors. Twenty percent of CEOs are now taking a “digital-first” approach to business change. “This might mean, for example, creating the first version of a new business process or in the form of a mobile app,” said Raskino. “Twenty-two percent are taking digital to the core of their enterprise models. That’s where the product, service and business model are being changed and the new digital capabilities that support those are becoming core competencies.”

Although more CEOs have digital ambitions, the survey revealed that nearly half of CEOs have no digital transformation success metric. “For those who are quantifying progress, revenue is a top metric: Thirty-three percent of CEOs define and measure their digital revenue,” said Raskino.

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