17 minute read 26 Mar 2021
reframe your future rainbow bridge
The CEO Imperative series

How can today’s leaders realize tomorrow’s opportunities?

By John de Yonge

Director, Global Insights, Research Institute | Global Markets – EY Knowledge

Analyst and thought leader focused on the CEO agenda, sustainability and the bioeconomy. Proponent of innovation for meeting global resource challenges. Skier. Fly-fisher. Tae kwon do black belt.

Contributors
17 minute read 26 Mar 2021

Show resources

  • 2021 CEO Imperative Study report part 2 (pdf)

The pandemic demands a new DNA for business success. By embracing three interconnected value drivers, CEOs can reorient for transformation.

In brief

  • The global pandemic has accelerated long-standing trends, bringing the nature and characteristics of the future successful enterprise into finer resolution.
  • Evolving the DNA of the future enterprise will require CEOs to close key capability and execution gaps as well as embrace a mindset of continuous transformation.
  • To realize sustainable competitive advantage CEOs must embrace three interconnected value drivers: humans at the center, technology at speed and innovation at scale.

The full-force arrival of long-standing trends in the wake of the global pandemic demands a new enterprise DNA for business success. Leaders have no choice but to quicken the pace of organizational change, seizing this moment to not only become market leaders but market makers, creating exponential long-term value for all stakeholders.

Our CEO Imperative study, a survey of 305 chief executives of Forbes Global 2000 companies, reveals while leaders intend to transform their organizations, they face key capability and execution gaps. These range from incomplete digital transformation efforts to actions not meeting intentions when it comes to generating long-term value, data and data trust shortfalls threatening transformation objectives and investments, culture and organizational structures inhibiting agility, and sluggish investment in ecosystems hampering agility and resilience.

  • What kind of CEO are you?

    Our CEO Imperative and Capital Confidence Barometer studies look at now, next, and beyond the pandemic to how leaders can reframe the future of their organizations.

    Where was your company when COVID-19 struck? It’s tempting to assume strategy, in the broadest sense, mattered little in the past 12 months. After all, extraordinarily well-run organizations overnight found markets had disappeared, while a rising tide in other sectors lifted all boats. Yet our research into how companies weathered the short-term impact of the pandemic, are now navigating the medium-term, and where that leaves them in the long-term reveals a universal truth: leadership matters.

    This CEO Imperative study finds the performance of companies is highly correlated with their trajectory before the pandemic. Thrivers (34% of organizations surveyed) were growing before the crisis and are leaning into this pivotal moment, accelerating their existing transformation agenda. Survivors (32%) were already experiencing declining revenue, will keep seeing flat or declining growth over the next three years, and are slowing their transformation priorities. Between them are maintainers (34%), which are companies more likely to have had low or flat growth before the pandemic and whose growth will remain flat or grow moderately over the next three years.

    Does that mean companies are trapped on their current trajectory? No. But for survivors to narrow the gap to thrivers, CEOs must urgently accelerate their transformation efforts. The CEO cut of our latest EY Global Capital Confidence Barometer provides a window into that effort. It finds 13% of CEOs – what we call “value visionaries” – have embraced new practices to reframe their enterprises. They view COVID-19 as a wake-up call to fuel their bold growth ambitions, which will yield value for a broader range of stakeholders, not just shareholders. The remaining 87% – “pragmatists” – are leaders who recognize the need to re-orient for a post-pandemic business landscape but have not fully committed to action plans.

    So, where’s your company? And which kind of CEO are you? Where you are today isn’t necessarily where you’ll be tomorrow. But our research shows the importance of moving from intention to execution, and closing the key capability gaps to acquire the DNA of the future enterprise: one built around human-centered transformations that increase ability and innovation while driving long-term value.

Closing these gaps and achieving their growth ambitions requires CEOs to fundamentally shift. They must reorient their organizations for continuous transformation in order to generate sustainable growth and deliver long-term value for all stakeholders from customers to employees, society and investors. We believe market makers can realize exponential value and competitive advantage through three interconnected value drivers:

  • Humans at the center: Radical customer-centricity – as well as a purposeful, nurturing company culture – embeds the agility to move at the speed of market and customer changes.
  • Technology at speed: Advanced technologies are increasingly impacting how companies advance business models, and customer and employee experiences. Leveraging technology for creativity and deploying it faster are critical.
  • Innovation at scale: Companies must cultivate an agile innovation competency and collaborate with an ever-evolving ecosystem, commercialize, and move quickly into new markets. 

Embracing these three value drivers, along with an agile organizational culture, can help enterprises deliver superior long-term stakeholder value, maximize their growth potential and position themselves to capitalize on emerging opportunities.

We are keenly aware that the challenge confronting CEOs is monumental and a stern test of leadership mettle. That’s why our CEO Imperative Series is designed to help leaders reframe the future of their organizations by equipping them with insights that will help them arrive at critical answers and define tangible actions.

man walking over suspension bridge in the fog
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1

Chapter 1

The future enterprise is coming into focus

Leaders face significant barriers to evolve and acquire the characteristics of the future successful enterprise.

Where have you traditionally focused your transformation initiatives? Most companies target isolated areas of the business, aiming for efficiency, optimization or remaking a specific function. Yet the transformation being demanded now is different, and of greater urgency, compelling leaders to shift gears and effect meaningful change for the opportunities that lie ahead.

Our CEO Imperative Study suggests best-in-class CEOs are already pivoting toward new investments and poised to extend the lead over their peers. We also found enterprise transformation is poised to accelerate as we exit the pandemic, with businesses becoming more confident as they’re buoyed by greater economic tailwinds. If history is a guide, investments in growth now will pay outsized returns in the post-pandemic recovery.

But the starting point is different for each company. Some, “thrivers,” entered the pandemic with stronger growth and are poised to extend their lead over their peers. Others, “survivors,” were already on a weaker footing and lost ground as the pandemic unfolded. Where thrivers are accelerating transformation and investing in new growth initiatives, survivors have tended to slow the pace of organizational change and focus more on cost reduction.

Now, as the thrivers look to extend their lead and others look to improve their position, they must adopt a continuous transformation mindset, constantly evolving new capabilities that will underpin the DNA of the future enterprise. So, how can CEOs steward their organizations through the wave of converging forces reshaping the business landscape and build the capabilities to deliver long-term stakeholder value?

The purpose, structure and role of the enterprise has been coming into focus over the last decade. From the need to self-disrupt and reimagine business models to digitalization and changing customer expectations, companies are being compelled to evolve how they operate and deliver value. These forces have now arrived in full force, bringing the nature and characteristics of the future successful enterprise into finer resolution.

The following five attributes stand out as essential elements of the new DNA for business success.

Data as strategic and operational enabler

The role of data as a competitive advantage and strategic enabler in customer engagement, innovation and agility has surged to prominence. Indeed, data-powered, intelligent technology-enabled products and services are creating new ways of living and working, reshaping markets and connecting growing ecosystems.

Business leaders are becoming keenly aware of the role data-centricity will play in the future successful enterprise. However, only 34% of the study’s respondents say customers trust them with their data, illustrating the trust gaps appearing between what intelligent technologies and data can do and what people are willing to let it do. If left unaddressed, this trust gap will limit growth, slow innovation and stall transformation efforts.  

The vast majority (88%) of respondents said it is likely using data science to anticipate and fulfill individual customer needs will be a key differentiator in the next five years. Additionally, 87% of respondents say it is likely the most competitive companies in the next five years will be defined by delivering data-driven experiences.

CEOs and C-suite executives need to not only understand the importance of data, but also reframe how they obtain, manage, use and scale it. Taking a value-first approach and embedding trust into data, business models and advanced technologies will power the intelligence running through the enterprise and ultimately provide targeted, sustainable value creation. 

New talent models and structures for continuous transformation

Embracing and operationalizing an ethos of continuous transformation hinges on instilling a culture of agility, innovation and diversity. Attracting diverse talent, while also upskilling and reskilling existing talent, requires new metrics and organizational structures. Galvanizing and inspiring the workforce while enabling employees to be nimble in the face of relentless change will be essential to delivering growth.

Three-fourths (75%) of CEOs see empathy and soft skills coming to the fore as key management capabilities in the next five years. Additionally, 76% believe it is likely new performance metrics and rewards will be needed for onboarding, promotion, succession planning and leadership. And 70% say small, autonomous teams working in a flat organization structure will deliver the best outcomes.

The way we work is changing dramatically, and CEOs as well as chief human resource officers will need to refresh their talent strategy to earn the loyalty and commitment of employees, ultimately delivering the agility and continuous transformation being demanded.

A focus on ecosystems

Integrating into ecosystems will be a defining feature of the future successful enterprise. Over the past several years, we have seen industry boundaries erode and threats emerge from non-traditional competitors. Increasingly companies are shifting to “coopetition,” cooperation between competing companies, as well as adopting ecosystem business models in an effort to deliver superior customer value and achieve market leadership. 

One of the ways we'll see value created is by being able to go over the boundaries of the firm to work really fluidly and co-create with an ecosystem of partners.
Nathan Furr
Professor at INSEAD

Nathan Furr, Professor at INSEAD, observes: “One of the ways we'll see value created is by being able to go over the boundaries of the firm to work really fluidly and co-create with an ecosystem of partners and sometimes even with uncommon partners. These are the kind of firms you never even think about working with, they might actually have best-in-class solutions for you and are likely the most innovative organizations.”

The CEO respondents in our survey largely affirm the growing importance of ecosystems, with 88% agreeing the ability to lead and manage ecosystems will define successful leadership teams. And being embedded in ecosystems emerged as the second most important characteristic of the successful future enterprise. 

To fully integrate with and realize the value from ecosystems, companies will need to make it an essential part of their enterprise strategy, build the skills to orchestrate within ecosystems and perhaps even name a chief ecosystem officer to take ownership and drive the desired outcomes.

A focus on long-term stakeholder value

We have seen growing demand for organizations to take greater responsibility and operate in the best interest of employees, customers, suppliers and society at large. The views of the CEOs in the study indicate the shift to long-term stakeholder value creation is gaining momentum and importance. Long-term value surfaced as a cross-cutting priority across the study and emerged as the most important characteristic of the future successful enterprise.

Ninety-one percent of respondents expect business models will increasingly incorporate circular economy dimensions over the next five years, while 87% agree long-term value creation across stakeholders will be rewarded by the market. And 80% agree there is likely to be a global standard for measuring and reporting long-term value creation. Still, as we explored in our first article, a pronounced gap exists between intent and action around long-term value. This gap may indicate a lack of clarity around the definition of long-term stakeholder value and how to progress this objective.

At EY, we view long-term stakeholder value across four pillars or dimensions: financial, customer, people and societal. Creating, measuring and communicating enterprise value across these dimensions is becoming a strategic and management priority. CEOs need to embrace this new governance model, using the fundamentals of long-term stakeholder value to vault their companies toward growth and resilience.

Falling further behind brings the risk of deteriorating stakeholder trust. To catch up, CEOs must embed purpose objectives into all aspects of their business, from finance and operations to sales and marketing, to drive value creation for all. They should embrace stronger governance supporting stakeholder objectives, including better aligning incentives by tying remuneration packages to a wider range of metrics beyond the share price, such as Paris Agreement targets and measures of employee satisfaction.

Identifying and responding to stakeholder needs requires new capabilities alongside mechanisms to deepen engagement, strengthening feedback loops between stakeholders and management.

Leadership anchored in the human imperative

The challenge of delivering value to a widening range of stakeholders requires strong, decisive, empathetic and human-centered leadership, with a focus on innovation, fostering trust and modeling desired traits. Increasing digitalization, the prominence of data and analytics in decision-making and the ongoing shift to remote work are making the human qualities of leadership rise to the forefront.

Leading with compassion, setting an example of experimentation and risk-taking, and driving a transformative mindset across the company emerged as the top three characteristics of the most effective CEOs to manage the challenges and opportunities over the next five years and beyond. In addition, 89% of respondents agree the CEO must lead disruptive innovation and business reimagination, while 80% agree establishing stakeholder trust will become an increasingly important part of the CEO’s job.

Although CEOs show willingness to transform for these new imperatives, gaps remain in their organizations’ capabilities, focus areas and translating intent into action (explore a detailed discussion of these gaps in our first article).

From the long-term value “say-do” gap to the continuing challenge of digital transformation, and from underinvestment in ecosystems, the data trust chasm and the climate blind spot, leaders face significant barriers to evolving and acquiring the characteristics of the future successful enterprise.

aerial shot of a bridge over sea strait near tromso sommaroy norway
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Chapter 2

Embracing three interconnected value drivers

Embedding these value drivers into every aspect of cross-functional, continuous transformation will enhance your company’s ability to adapt.

So, how CEOs and C-suite leaders formulate, orchestrate and reframe their organizations for the future? We recommend CEOs and their teams work backward and plan their future strategy by embedding three core interconnected value drivers: putting humans at the center, leveraging technology at speed, and driving innovation at scale.

Embracing these value drivers, while building agility into the ethos of organizational culture, allows companies to create exponential value, equipping them to pivot and respond quickly to future existential risks and drive long-term stakeholder value. “By grounding in these critical value drivers, organizations can ensure that transformation efforts connect across the enterprise, which is what thrivers always do,” said former EY Global Consulting Transformation Leader Bill Kanarick.

Human centricity

At its core, successful transformation must be driven by the desire to improve the human experience. The best laid strategies can come to nothing without the right talent and mindset to execute on it. The most advanced innovations or cutting-edge technologies can fail if they lose sight of human values. As leaders advance their strategies, they must view every decision, every technology implementation, and every product or service innovation through the human lens. 

It makes an incredible difference when you have a very fast feedback loop that doesn't come through layers internally, but actually comes directly from the market. The speed and agility within the organization takes on a very different pace.
Jon McNeill
CEO and Co-Founder at DVx Ventures

Companies need to focus on how they make or deliver the products and services to delight customers and offer them compelling value propositions. Inherent in this is the understanding personalized experiences have now become far bigger drivers of consumption, requiring a different approach to innovation and customer engagement.

Jon McNeill, CEO and Co-Founder at DVx Ventures says “Future creators are impatient. They're dissatisfied, not in a negative way but always looking to make it better. The C-suites that are very engaged with the front lines, very engaged with their product, actually walked the customer journey frequently with their own product, they are very dialed in. And it makes an incredible difference when you have a very fast feedback loop that doesn't come through layers internally, but actually comes directly from the market. The speed and agility within the organization takes on a very different pace.”

Driving this type of human-centered personalized innovation requires diversity at all levels of the organization. It has been proven more diverse teams drive better innovation. This includes diversity not just in age, gender and ethnicity but also background and skills. Companies need to acquire talent beyond their industry boundaries, reaching to adjacent markets and competencies to bring fresh thinking and new ideas into the organization.

Yet diversity remains elusive. Only 28% of respondents to the study said they create diverse and inclusive teams at all levels. The gap is more pronounced at the very top: when asked about the most important changes that could be made to the C-suite, only 8% cited greater diversity and 7% said talent from outside the company.

As companies race to adopt cutting-edge technologies and drive breakthrough innovations, they must carefully consider the human impact to mitigate risks and create trusted relationships with customers, employees and ecosystem partners. Consistently and persistently putting humans at the center of every decision helped CEOs galvanize and motivate employees as well as attract customers, giving them a competitive edge and ultimately leading to growth and a stronger market position.

Responsibly accelerate technology adoption

The pandemic has catapulted us into the digital-first era literally overnight. Unsurprisingly, the results of the study bear out the conclusion that technology acceleration has become one of the most significant drivers of transformation. A majority of respondents (68%) anticipate significant investment in data and technology over the next year, while 63% said accelerating technology and digital innovation is having the greatest impact on their company.

With new technologies emerging and maturing more quickly, companies that can leverage them as instruments of creativity will inherently perform better. Apart from leveraging these technologies, companies will need to deploy technology faster as well in order to serve the ever-evolving needs of customers, employees and ecosystem partners. Perhaps unsurprisingly, digital driven business transformation (56%) and AI/data science (41%) emerged as top competencies requiring new or increased C-suite attention.

However, companies need to carefully consider the human impact of every technology before widescale deployment, as public awareness of the security, privacy and ethical risks grows. CEOs need pay particular attention to building trust with stakeholders to reap the full benefit afforded by AI and data science.

Successfully leveraging and implementing technology at speed requires upskilling and reskilling employees as well as diffusing a transformative mindset across the entire organization at all levels. Forward-looking risk management practices and strong cybersecurity capabilities will be linchpins in fully realizing the value of technology to improve the human experience in our increasingly virtual world.

Thoughtfully scaling innovation

The pandemic is forcing companies to reimagine every aspect of their business – product and service design, business models, operating model and more – re-engineering each for innovation and agility. While all companies need to protect and reinforce their core business, they also need to get into the habit of continuous and rapid innovation.

Leaders must begin with a “future-back” approach. Start by asking whether your company will be relevant in 5, 10 or 15 years and how you might expand your competitive advantage through bold risk-taking. With this in mind, you can then explore the future and potential scenarios to adapt your innovation agenda and enterprise strategy.

 

EY Megatrends

The EY Megatrends framework exposes business leaders to trends and forces far outside their usual scope of analysis, reducing the risk of missing out on, or being sidelined by, the “next big thing.” Building your transformation journey on future, not current state, has never been more crucial.

Companies must also look outside themselves to enrich their innovation potential. Collaboration with ecosystem partners and cultivating a deep understanding of pain points can help unearth ideas that will be embraced by customers, employees, markets and societies. They must also leverage data, cutting edge intelligent technologies and cloud infrastructure to scale innovation more rapidly.

But perhaps most important of all is ensuring the engine of innovation – human talent – is front and center. The study shows 38% of respondents expect to implement change in their innovation processes over the next three years. These respondents are focused on faster idea generation and trialing as well as reorienting their organizations toward greater risk taking. Humans are intrinsic to these objectives, and achieving them requires embedding innovation as part of the transformative mindset and equipping employees with the tools and permission to appropriately take risk.

Moreover, as companies look to leverage large volumes of data and cutting-edge technologies as part of their innovation engines, they must ensure they safeguard human privacy and security. To truly unlock the value of innovative products, services and solutions, stakeholders must trust them. Demonstrating a commitment to improving the human condition through innovation will be critical for success.

Interweaving and embedding these three value drivers into every aspect of the cross-functional, continuous transformation being demanded enhances your company’s ability to adapt. That makes your operating model more agile which, married to the fundamentals of long-term stakeholder value creation, ultimately maximizes growth potential.

blue bridge at night in dubai
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3

Chapter 3

Four ways to build the future enterprise

Understand key considerations that need to be taken into account as you reboot and rebalance your organization to realize transformation.

The COVID-19 pandemic has compounded and magnified forces already reshaping business and operating models, in the process recasting the very purpose of organizations. What lies beyond the pandemic is a more dynamic future requiring companies to continuously innovate, mobilize and scale new business models, operating models and capabilities. Organizations will need to embody agility in all aspects of their enterprise, while adopting a continuous transformation mindset rooted in and motivated by the desire to improve the human experience.

If that sounds ambitious, it is. CEOs must boldly and decisively take steps to rewire, retool and reorient their organizations for this new working world. They must tolerate ambiguity, become nimbler, increase their appetite for risk-taking and cultivate agility to pivot quickly toward new opportunities. Embracing the three interconnected value drivers of humans at the center, technology at speed and innovation at scale allows companies acquire the DNA of the future successful enterprise, helping them realize their growth potential and driving the creation of long-term stakeholder value.

Here are key considerations as you reboot and rebalance your organization to realize transformation:

  1. Embark on a future-back approach, using your corporate purpose to guide exploration and begin laying the strategic groundwork to build the capabilities necessary to ensure long-term relevance and resilience.
  2. Adopt a mindset of impatience and dissatisfaction, seeking constant improvement in every aspect of your organization. Walk in the shoes of customers, employees, and ecosystem partners, getting direct feedback to inform decision-making across every aspect of the enterprise.
  3. Drive a human-centered mindset into innovation processes, technology adoption and deployment as well as every aspect of your culture. Ground your decision-making in asking how it will impact your employees, customers, partners and community.
  4. Reframe how you obtain, manage, use and scale data by embedding trust at the core to make the intelligence being delivered trusted by customers, employees, ecosystems and regulators.

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DNA of the future enterprise

2021 CEO Imperative Study part one:
Uncover CEOs’ views of what’s driving change in their organizations; their transformation objectives and capability gaps and what will comprise the DNA of the future enterprise.

Download PDF

How to realize transformation

2021 CEO Imperative Study part two:
Discover how to overcome organizational gaps to realize transformation objectives while laying the foundation for long-term value creation.

Download PDF

Summary

The COVID-19 pandemic magnified forces already reshaping the business landscape, in the process recasting the very purpose of organizations. Companies are faced with a more dynamic future where being nimbler, tolerating ambiguity and increased risk-taking will be critical to pivot quickly towards new opportunities. CEOs must seize this moment by adopting a mindset of continuous transformation and weaving the three interconnected value drivers of humans at the center, technology at speed and innovation at scale to help them realize their growth potential and drive the creation of long-term stakeholder value.

About this article

By John de Yonge

Director, Global Insights, Research Institute | Global Markets – EY Knowledge

Analyst and thought leader focused on the CEO agenda, sustainability and the bioeconomy. Proponent of innovation for meeting global resource challenges. Skier. Fly-fisher. Tae kwon do black belt.

Contributors