Enterprise transformation bosses: SMEs are important

Mark Lyndersay - Mark Lyndersay
Mark Lyndersay - Mark Lyndersay

BitDepth#1307

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FOUR Caribbean enterprise leaders got together last week to discuss digital transformation at the Caribbean Innovation Ecosystem – An Enterprise Level Outlook, a virtual seminar, and the conversation wasn't only about big business.

Among the group there was a strong sense of collective responsibility for the continuity of the smaller businesses that orbit them.

Julie Avey, SVP at Massy for people and culture, also oversees the company's partnership with Anya Ayoung-Chee, Nudge, which offers small businesses a space in the company's retail stores.

At Massy, Avey oversees the company's move to a model of "servant leadership," which positions the company's managers to support staff. Massy’s leadership teams are encouraged to practise conscious awareness of self and impact on others, cultivate humility and vulnerability and build a space of trust.

Unsurprisingly, she admitted to getting some pushback on this concept from leaders who worked their way through the ranks and are now being asked to listen as leaders.

Nadeen Matthews Blair, chief digital and marketing officer of NCB Jamaica, noted that SMEs employ a big percentage of the workforce on the island.

"We view partnership with startups and SMEs as critical to business evolution and focusing on that sector is critically important."

Blair championed Agile programming principles as a model for both development for digital transformation strategy and for managing business in a fast-changing environment. Agile programming models emphasise continuing responsiveness to changing circumstances and requirements.

At NCB, the company now works with an iterative development model that allowed the company to develop its new SMS alerts system "in faster time, and tied in with the commitment to business transformation."

"E-commerce is a big part of how we have to operate," said Steven Wittingham, COO and head of digital transformation for the Grace-Kennedy Group in Jamaica. "The company has always been focused on digital systems, but it was accelerated with the onset of covid, and we created a centre of excellence that liaised with customers to meet their needs.

"We need to continue reviewing the changes in the business continuously during this time and trying to understanding how it will affect the future of the business."

At Flow/C&W/Liberty Global, Delroy McLean, senior director of business at C&W Business, was already into company transformation when covid19 hit.

The company was already creating Agile teams to manage the company's transformation after successive takeovers, McLean explained.

C&W Business directly supplies broadband access to Caribbean nations, but also delivers bulk broadband access solutions to its competitors. As part of its strategic business planning, the company boosted capacity on its lines by 30 per cent at the beginning of 2020, expecting a rise in use of 15 per cent and allocated another 15 per cent as a buffer.

At the time, Jamaica was using 55 per cent of its broadband capacity and TT was at 77 per cent. When covid19 demand began, the buffer capacity disappeared in a day and the broadband provider moved to double capacity within a month.

With those changes, there was a need for skilled manpower and C&W Business went to universities for interns.

"Interns are great, by the way," McLean said.

The company began asking its customers to have a look at how they use technology, visiting homes and businesses to get first-hand insight into how internet access was being used.

"We found that people who are using digital technologies are using it ten times over, but those who aren't are still at zero, and are asking people to help them get connected or to access the services," McLean said.

Mark Lyndersay is the editor of technewstt.com. An expanded version of this column can be found there

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