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Adam Rubin Headshot
Adam Rubin is the head of innovation enablement at Capgemini Invent.
Capgemini

The coronavirus pandemic may have turbo-charged innovation efforts across corporate America, but in many ways the tough part is just beginning. 

It’s one thing to successfully transition a workforce to the remote setting by upgrading cloud licenses or investing further in security measures. It’s another to overhaul the technology that underpins entire operations, spanning multiple regions and business units. 

The difficulty of scaling IT projects is one reason why digital transformations continue to fail. In fact, just 13% of organizations that have deployed artificial intelligence have successfully scaled it, according to research from French consulting giant Capgemini.

And it’s not because the tech itself is faulty. Instead, organizational and cultural hurdles often act as the biggest barrier. 

“It’s easy to just create an innovation lab because it’s the flavor of the month,” Adam Rubin, one of Capgemini’s innovation heads, told me. “It’s much harder, but much more rewarding, to treat innovation overall as a discipline.”  

That's why many technology leaders increasingly view themselves less as IT heads and more as change-agent-in-chief for their organization as a whole. 

Rubin outlined three areas that companies looking to scale successful pilot projects should consider: establishing scaling as its own discipline, creating an innovation governance structure, and cultivating a resilient culture. 

You can read more about each here. And below are a few other stories that you may have missed from the last two weeks. 

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Read the original article on Business Insider