CDO Matters Ep. 07 | Digital Transformation through Human Centered Design with Dr. Cheryl Flink

CDO Matters Podcast

Successful companies don’t just withstand disruption, they find ways to innovate throughout technological change.

In this episode of CDO Matters, Malcolm interviews Dr. Cheryl Flink, an author and noted researcher in the field of human-centered design and social psychology.

Dr. Flink shares insights from her upcoming book, “Doing Well and Doing Good — Human Center Digital Transformation Leadership,” set to release in March 2023. She makes the case that digital transformation represents a fundamentally different way of operating, one that represents an optimal intersection of business, social and employee success.

She proposes that a successful digital transformation is one that prepares organizations to withstand — and even prosper from — the constant disruption of technology, where the delivery of human value is as important to financial value.

In addition to making a strong case for a human-centered focus within digital transformations, Dr. Flink also shares some of the keys to digital transformation success — most notably the need for a strong mandate from senior leadership — something many companies still struggle with. Having broad awareness and consensus around the ‘why’ of a digital transformation is the foundational level of a ‘scaffold’ approach to a framework for digital transformation that Malcolm discusses with Dr. Flink — outlined in more detail in her book.

Dr. Flink also makes the case for creating the corporate culture needed to allow for employees to feel safe to highlight imbalances between any of the various tensions that naturally exist within organizations — for example — between speed/agility and governance. The more balanced these forces are — and the more employee or stakeholder needs play an equal role to financial needs — the more human centered the approach will be. This is exactly what Dr. Flink sees as the optimal approach for long-term social and business success.

This episode of CDO Matters is perfect for those CDOs who have been tasked to execute a digital transformation strategy and who are looking for alternatives to more traditional program management approaches to these large-scale business initiatives. This episode explores how using more human-centered design approaches could optimize not only shareholder value, but also employee and social value. Dr. Flink makes a compelling case that ‘doing good and doing well’ is not only preferred, but increasingly required during a time of constant disruption and social scrutiny of business practices.

Key Moments

  • [3:55] What is Human-centered (HC) Leadership?
  • [7:10] Who Should Reap the Profits of AI/Digital Technology?
  • [10:45] Human-centered Leadership’s Role in Environmental, Social Governance (ESG)
  • [13:20] Leadership Benefits of HC Leadership
  • [14:15] HC Leadership in Digital Transformation
  • [16:00] A New Way to Work
  • [19:40] Applying HC Leadership to Data Strategy
  • [24:25] Differences in Approaching a Digital Transformation
  • [28:50] The Decision-Making Process
  • [31:35] HC Leadership Investments

Key Takeaways

The Significance of Human -Centered Leadership [5:40 — 6:50]

“Are we really thinking about how we create human value? Not just financial value...I think that in this human centered leadership world, it is about the ability to think through that calculus...We think about that human value as including two major components: one is the value we are creating for individuals and the corporations we work with and the other is for society at large.” — Dr. Cheryl Flink

Digital Transformation Defined [14:45 — 15:35]

“The ongoing process of strategic renewal that uses advances in digital technologies to build capabilities that refresh or replace an organization's

To listen to explicit episodes, sign in.

Stay up to date with this show

Sign in or sign up to follow shows, save episodes, and get the latest updates.

Select a country or region

Africa, Middle East, and India

Asia Pacific

Europe

Latin America and the Caribbean

The United States and Canada