
Most organisations that have spent the last five years claiming digital transformation have not transformed anything. They have taken broken processes, outdated thinking, and dysfunctional ways of working, and moved them online. That is not transformation. That is digitisation with a better slide deck. And the reason it keeps happening is not technology. It is not budget. It is not even capability. It is the fact that real transformation is genuinely uncomfortable, and most leaders are not willing to do what it actually requires.
The Lie We Have Been Telling Ourselves
Somewhere along the way, the industry decided that transformation meant deploying new platforms. Move to the cloud. Implement the ERP. Launch the patient portal. Go live by Q3. And when the system went live, someone in the boardroom called it a success.
McKinsey’s research, tracking digital transformation outcomes across more than 1,500 executives globally, found that fewer than 30% of digital transformation programmes achieve their stated goals. When the definition of success is tightened to organisations that both improved performance and sustained those improvements over time, the figure drops to 16%. The transformation was declared. The programme was closed. The leadership team moved on. And the results did not follow.
The same pattern is now playing out in artificial intelligence investment. Organisations are deploying AI tools at pace, adding automation to existing workflows, and calling the outcome transformation. The underlying question, whether the organisation has genuinely changed how it thinks, decides, and operates, goes unasked. The tools change. The organisation does not.
What actually happened on the ground: the same approval bottlenecks that existed in the paper process existed in the digital one. The same data quality problems that plagued the spreadsheet now plagued the database. The same people who did not trust each other before the system launched still did not trust each other after it. The technology arrived. The transformation did not. Because transformation was never on the project plan.
What You Actually Did
MIT researchers studying digital capability across more than 400 global organisations identified four categories of digital maturity. At the top: Digital Masters. High investment in technology, high investment in leadership and operating model transformation. Consistent outperformers.
At the bottom of the performance curve: what the researchers called “digital fashionistas.” High technology investment. Low operating model and leadership change. They look like digital leaders. They have the tools, the platforms, the dashboards, and the announcements. They consistently underperform the organisations that did both. The research, published in Leading Digital (Westerman, Bonnet and McAfee, Harvard Business Review Press, 2014), found that what separates genuine digital leaders from organisations that merely digitise is not technology investment. It is the depth of change to operating model and leadership capability that sits alongside it.
The fashionista is not a reckless organisation. It is a capable one that solved the easier half of the problem. Technology procurement has clear timelines, visible outputs, and measurable spend. You can point to it in a board presentation. Changing how an organisation makes decisions, how it tolerates uncertainty, how it deploys talent, how it responds to what customers actually do rather than what the strategy assumed they would do, that work is slower, harder, and less photogenic. So the easy half gets done. The hard half gets deferred. And the deferral becomes permanent.
Digitisation has real value. I am not dismissing it. But it does not change what is possible. It does not challenge why a process exists in the first place. It does not ask whether the workflow serving the organisation in 2010 should still be serving it today.
I have walked into healthcare systems where clinicians were still duplicating data entry across three platforms because no one had the political will to consolidate them. I have seen government programmes where the digital portal replicated a form-filling exercise that should have been eliminated entirely. I have watched organisations spend eight figures on enterprise systems and then rebuild their old spreadsheet workarounds alongside them, because the system did not fit how people actually worked, and no one was willing to change how people actually worked. New technology. Old thinking. Zero transformation.
Why Real Transformation Is Harder Than Anyone Admits
Consulting firm BCG surveyed 825 senior executives on their digital transformation experience. Approximately 70% reported falling short of the value they expected. The consistent pattern in that data, and in the broader body of research on transformation failure, is not a technology shortfall. The technology largely worked. What did not work was the organisational and cultural infrastructure around it. Organisations deployed new capability into old structures. New tools into old decision-making patterns. New data into organisations that did not know how to act on it.
Genuine transformation requires something that technology cannot deliver and no vendor will sell. It requires leaders to look at the way their organisation functions and be honest about what is not working, not just inefficient, but fundamentally wrong. Wrong structures. Wrong incentives. Wrong assumptions baked into processes that have never been questioned because they have been there too long for anyone to remember why.
That conversation is threatening. It implicates decisions made by people still in the room. It requires dismantling things that gave people power, status, or comfort. It means telling parts of the organisation that the way they have worked for a decade is the problem, not the solution. Most leaders are not willing to have that conversation. So instead, they commission a technology programme and call it transformation. It feels like action. It produces visible outputs. And it avoids the harder truth entirely. The technology becomes the distraction from the real work.
The Questions That Would Actually Change Something
Real transformation starts before any platform is selected, any vendor is appointed, or any project plan is written.
It starts with questions most organisations never ask.
Why does this process exist? Not how does it work, but why does it exist? What problem was it designed to solve, and is that still the problem we have?
Who benefits from keeping this the way it is? Because in every organisation, there are people whose influence depends on information asymmetry, manual steps, or processes that only they understand. Digital transformation threatens that. And those people will, consciously or not, find ways to make sure it does not fully land.
What behaviour needs to change, not just what system needs to be replaced? Because if that question cannot be answered before go-live, the transformation will fail after it.
What are we willing to stop doing? Every genuine transformation requires eliminating something. A process, a role, a way of making decisions. If nothing has been stopped, nothing has been transformed.
The Leader’s Role Nobody Talks About
This is where most transformation discourse goes quiet.
Because the answer to why transformation fails is almost always leadership. Not IT leadership. Not programme leadership. Senior organisational leadership.
The leaders who delegated transformation to a project team and checked in quarterly. The ones who approved the technology investment but never showed up to the change management conversation. The ones who said they needed to transform in the all-hands and then protected every structural thing that made transformation impossible.
Transformation cannot be delegated. Implementation can. But the decisions that actually change an organisation, who has authority, how work flows, what gets measured, what behaviour gets rewarded, those decisions sit at the top. When leadership avoids them, the project team delivers what they can. They go live. They hit their milestones. And the organisation looks digitised, not transformed.
What Transformation Actually Looks Like
I have seen it done well. Not often, but I have seen it.
It looks like a leader standing in front of their organisation and naming the real problem, not the technology gap, but the cultural or structural one underneath it. It looks like decisions being made that upset people, because those people were benefiting from the dysfunction. It looks like processes being eliminated, not just automated. It looks like the technology arriving last, after the hard thinking has already been done, as an enabler of a new way of working, not a substitute for designing one.
It is slower than digitisation. It is harder to measure. It produces fewer milestone celebrations. But two years later, the organisation actually works differently. Not just faster. Differently.
The Uncomfortable Question
If you are sitting with a transformation programme right now, in progress, recently completed, or about to start, ask one question.
What have we changed about how this organisation thinks, decides, and operates? Not what have we deployed. What have we changed?
If the honest answer is “not much,” you have not transformed. You have digitised.
And until someone is willing to say that out loud, the investment in transformation programmes will keep delivering digitisation results, and the question of why the return never arrived will keep going unanswered.
The technology was never the problem. It was always the thinking.








