May 6, 2012 Raising your Digital IQ – Why it’s important for all the C-suite ResponsibilitySocial Media Share this post: It is my belief that a company’s Digital IQ – the way it integrates and leverages digital technology to service the business needs – will be a key driver and competitive advantage over the next decade. A 2012 Price Waterhouse Cooper report suggests that “… excellence in IT has not been commoditized and is still differentiating as a competitive advantage.” For a CEO, much less all members of top management, being part geek should no longer be optional. If your company is to evolve today, top management needs to “get” digital As companies transition to digital platforms and marketing, there are three very important reasons why top management must understand better the digital world and become more comfortable with new technology and terminology. Business – As the opportunities in digital increase, so, too, has competition become fiercer. Creating a successful digital strategy and allocating the appropriate resources requires full understanding of the changing environment. Management – Digital is becoming a burgeoning component of internal management, whether it be for knowledge and digital asset management, bandwidth, mobile platforms, CRM and customer service, firewalls & security, communications, intranet or video conferencing. Moreover, with the new generation coming into the workforce, the attractiveness and effectiveness of your organization are at play. Talent – Notwithstanding the demographic pressure, there is a very real battle for good digital talent. How to find and evaluate the best talent requires new skill sets. Geek Quotient Raising Your Geek Quotient I have written previously about the opportunity to raise your company’s “geek quotient.” On the one hand, this involves the company culture whereby the “geek” is accepted. For certain companies, this borderlines on the concept of diversity management. On the other hand, improving the geek quotient means that everyone should be part geek. I firmly believe, it would be better that 100% of the personnel were 5% geek than to rely on hiring 5 people that are 100% geeks. Raising your Digital IQ Sending the entire ExCom to a week of off-site digital training is not the answer, although having a strong digital education program is, at a minimum, necessary. Being digital is different from doing digital. It must be a part of the everyday business. There are three vital components to the Digital IQ of the entire upper management team. Online reputation and network – lead by example and measure against objectives. Top management of bigger companies — especially if they are publicly traded — are generally all present online. The question is whether that online presence represents the optimal image. Top management should all be able to audit their own presence and have a good idea of the impression they would like to leave. The same is true of their [visible] online network. Digital tools – know what is out there and appreciate why & how to use them. Taking Twitter and Facebook alone, there are around 3/4 million different related tools and applications, with more being born every day. Knowing how to keep up with the changes, and to identify the latest and best of these could be a full time job. A strong network and a good monitoring process are key. Digital strategy – Last, and not least, management must decide on the appropriate digital strategy, to be integrated as a part of an overall strategy. Whether this involves eCommerce, mobile or social media marketing, a successful digital strategy must be deeply embedded not just in the marketing mix, but in the very fabric of the company. In order to drive the business forward using digital means requires selecting the best partners, allocating the right resources and understanding fully how to measure the return on investment of your digital strategy. The Digital IQ is relevant for all areas of the business and, therefore, for all members of the executive committee. Some (non exhaustive) quick examples: HR = the Linkedin revolution; eLearning for permanent education; personal versus professional time; social media policies Finance = new digital marketing line in the P&L; investments in IT equipment (mobile, tablet, laptops…) Sales = sales 2.0 (e.g. use of a connected iPad as a sales tool) and the learning organization I.T. = data security issues, bandwidth needs, video conferencing Production = safety and protection learning (see this wonderful example from Japan: Wearable Behavior Navigation System) Customer Service = the inclusion of social media in the mix is increasingly essential Marketing = customer relationship management requires mastering multi-channel communication; digital asset (image and video) management The CEO = learning to read/listen to what is being said by clients on the web and to consider it as, if not more, vital than “telegraphed” customer round tables; what about a CEO blog? Your reactions please! NEWSletter Subscribe to Minter’s Bi-Weekly NEWSletter and receive a free copy of the exclusive and updated 8 Golden Rules of an eReputation Your Gift For Signing Up 8 Golden Rules of an eReputation SUBSCRIBE! You have Successfully Subscribed! business, customer service, Digital Education, digital IQ, ecommerce, geek quotient, leadership, price waterhouse, sales 2.0, social media Minter Dial Minter Dial is an international professional speaker, author & consultant on Leadership, Branding and Digital Strategy. After a successful international career at L’Oréal, Minter Dial returned to his entrepreneurial roots and has spent the last ten years helping senior management teams and Boards to adapt to the new exigencies of the digitally enhanced marketplace. He has worked with world-class organisations to help activate their brand strategies, and figure out how best to integrate new technologies, digital tools, devices and platforms. Above all, Minter works to catalyse a change in mindset and dial up transformation. Minter received his BA in Trilingual Literature from Yale University (1987) and gained his MBA at INSEAD, Fontainebleau (1993). His newest book Heartificial Empathy, Putting Heart into Business and Artificial Intelligence, bowed in December 2018 and won the Book Excellence Award 2019 as well as being shortlisted for the Business Book Awards 2019. It's available in Audiobook, Kindle and Paperback. He is also co-author of Futureproof (Pearson, Sep 2017) and sole author of The Last Ring Home (Myndset Press, Nov 2016), a book and documentary film, both of which have won awards and critical acclaim. Minter has a new book on leadership, You Lead, How being yourself makes you a better leader, published by Kogan Page, that released January 2021. It's easy to inquire about booking Minter Dial here. View all posts by Minter Dial Previous post Next post
Money is no object? How to find the funds for digital marketing | Branding and digital marketing strategy | The Myndset by Minter Dial July 30, 2012 at 5:20 pm […] key to building a successful digital marketing strategy is improving the organization’s digital IQ, especially of the senior management teams who control the purse strings. Click to tweet if you […]
Who do you need to drive digital in your company? | Branding and digital marketing strategy | The Myndset by Minter Dial September 20, 2012 at 12:44 pm […] and sinker the concept and its consequences. And it would certainly help if he/she had a high digital IQ! I’d be very curious to hear your thoughts? Digg Diggvar dd_offset_from_content = 40; var […]
What every CEO needs to know about Digital Marketing | Branding and digital marketing strategy | The Myndset by Minter Dial September 26, 2012 at 1:01 pm […] culture and its limitations relative to speed, agility, cross-departmental collaboration and digital IQ. To what extent is the client listened to in an authentic and lucid […]
How best to manage your social media across multiple platforms? | Branding and digital marketing strategy | The Myndset by Minter DialBranding and digital marketing strategy | The Myndset by Minter Dial December 16, 2012 at 11:52 am […] on IT and the need to invest in IT and in infrastructure. Hence, my regular demand to improve the digital IQ of top management, and to avoid the “museum-like” mindset that remains […]
Digital marketing budgets: Why executives spend money the wrong way? March 14, 2013 at 5:41 pm […] or delegate to a lower ranking person. {Click to Tweet if you agree!} Smart as one might be, a digital IQ is not something you can raise just by reading. {Click to tweet} The old marketing habits do […]
Catch the wave - The right mindset on how to improve your digital IQ May 21, 2013 at 4:19 pm […] in making the next wave a better ride. For me, this is about enhancing the executive’s digital IQ, a subject I hold dear. Here’s to learning to catch the […]
Digital IQ - Upping executive digital ebility versus intelligence May 29, 2013 at 4:17 pm […] have been using the term Digital IQ for quite some time as a way to describe a person’s digital aptness. It has a singular flaw […]
college essay July 16, 2013 at 5:52 am on IT and the need to spend money on IT and in facilities. Hence, my frequent requirement to enhance the electronic IQ of top control, and to prevent the “museum-like” attitude that remains
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Lessons for business from the Obamacare site catastrophe October 28, 2013 at 4:30 pm […] Walk the talk. Top leadership has a habit of thinking that using and getting comfortable with the internet and social media might be beneath them. By walking the talk, there’s a better chance that, as the boss, he/she will ask the right questions. This is what I refer to as upping senior management’s Digital IQ. […]
Let's get digital - Why the human finger points to digital November 4, 2013 at 4:54 pm […] Whatever one’s belief system about the digital / online world, top executives need to get more comfortable with using digital tools, devices and platforms, surfing on their mobile, buying online, learning code. The better able top executives are living the digital world, the better equipped they will be to understand the digital transformation. In short, it’s about helping to increase leadership’s digital IQ. […]
ken smith November 25, 2013 at 12:56 pm I remember first meeting Paul in 1988 when I was a postdoc visiting from Germany. I had asked if I could learn an experimental procedure in his lab. He took a good part out of his busy day to teach me hands-on. Later, I was fortunate to become his faculty colleague here at the UW. I will never forget Paul’s generosity, integrity and intelligence. scholarships for mba women
Can a CEO "get" the digital mindset without "being" digitalBranding and digital strategy | The Myndset by Minter Dial April 8, 2014 at 3:33 pm […] abstraction of digital in the broader sense, when I look at a company’s digital mindset and digital IQ, there are a number of recognizable […]
How to be the best salesperson in the future - 4 key steps| Branding and digital strategy | The Myndset by Minter Dial April 22, 2014 at 3:43 pm […] tools. However, I firmly believe that the best salespersons in the future will have a raised digital IQ, able to use the digital tools and the Internet to his/her advantage. {Tweet this} Each step […]
Digital mindset - how to start on the right footing?Branding and digital strategy | The Myndset by Minter Dial May 22, 2014 at 6:57 am […] the leadership needs to “be” digital. Does the leadership team need to have an elevated digital IQ? But, what is a digital IQ? In reality, it is not a number on a scale of 0 to 150 of how much […]
Social media is vital for politics and for business leaders October 8, 2014 at 1:55 pm […] causes so much eye-rolling and induces entropy when the entire C-suite is lacking in digital IQ, is not present on any of the social networks and continues to use a Blackberry. In such cases, the […]
Wifi No Longer an Option - Management Digital IQ upgrade needed June 18, 2015 at 9:03 am […] to understand the true digital opportunities out there. Managers must upgrade their de facto Digital IQ. What does this mean? It means that managers must go beyond the stiffer corporate hardware and […]
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