Transformation and innovation are big buzzwords in today's corporate culture. According to a 2020 Garnter report, 60% of businesses mention that digital transformation is a topic of conversation in almost every board meeting. Where you focus your innovation efforts can be just as impactful as your methods of implementation. The end goal is the same: to implement changes that have a positive impact both within your company and in the industry as a whole. So, in this C-Suite viewpoint, we ask you to share your views on how specifically YOUR organization deals with transformation and innovation.

Have you documented your innovation goals along with a dedicated annual budget? Where and how does the process start... and what are the critical success factors that turn great "ideas" into actual implementation?

IDeaS - A SAS Company

This viewpoint is co-created with IDeaS a SAS company
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Charlie MacGregor
Charlie MacGregor
CEO & Founder of TSH and a Student of Life

Transforming company culture is something that must be done genuinely and with respect for the values on which your company was founded. We used the pandemic as an opportunity to assess our current set-up, operations and teams, utilising the time to embark on a journey of innovation and transformation that better caters to the needs of our customers.

We know that there are two things our (largely Millennial and Gen Z) community of students, co-workers, and travellers all seek: simplicity and community connection. We know that our audience wants to move seamlessly through F&B, the hotel, and co-working space. The aim is to use technology to remove or simplify non-value-adding transactional activities for both guests and team members, while ensuring we still have experiences and opportunities in place to foster genuine human connections, be it through events, staff-and-guest interactions, and our physical spaces.

Taking a customer-first approach to mapping a plan for innovation is critical to success. Create genuine and relevant value, and they'll stay loyal to your brand. After identifying our own customer needs and values, we could map all the interactions, transactions, and data sharing of TSH experience, highlighting the most impactful moments into user journeys, which become unique selling points of our brand. We then drafted the operational processes to deliver these journeys, and determined the parallel employee experience. Only then could we determine appropriate technologies that can facilitate these journeys and experiences for both staff and customers, without compromising emotional connection. From this technology architecture, we defined a multi-year budget to cater for our evolution.

Ultimately, we're building one team and focusing on one community. I know that this is what customers are looking for today and have no doubt that it will strengthen our underlying business model, while reducing complexity and allowing us to become a global brand.

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