100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached 4.6 TrustPilot
logo-home
Summary

Summary - Digital organisation (1306TEWITB)

Rating
-
Sold
-
Pages
81
Uploaded on
25-01-2026
Written in
2025/2026

This document is a summary of the Digital organization course taught by prof Alexander Naessens (3rd year of UA bachelor). It consists of a combination of the pro's powerpoints and notes from the lessons. In addition to the summary, don't forget to check out the guest lectures and business case.

Show more Read less
Institution
Course

Content preview

1 Definition digital organisation
A digital org = an org that implements IS to realize its strategic objectives in order to achieve
a competitive advantage and create stakeholder value in a rapidly changing environment

1.1 Information systems (IS)
Information technologies:

- Enterprise applications (ERP, CRM, SCM)
- E-commerce and M-commerce
- Collaboration systems
- Business Intelligence and Business Analytics
- Knowledge Management Systems (KMS)
- Cybersecurity
- Emerging digital solutions (AI, Cloud, Augmented and Virtual Reality)

Digitizing orgs is an architectural exercise with 3 building blocks:

- Technology
- Organization
- Management

Implementing IS and information technology alone does not deliver a competitive advantage

1.2 Strategic objectives in order to achieve a competitive advantage
Strategies for a competitive advantage:

- Lowest cost
o FE: Ikea, Colruyt, Ryanair (by making an app where customers can do things
themselves instead of with the help of employees)
- Product leadership
o FE: Apple, Tesla (by making an app with nice features)
- Customer and supplier intimacy
o FE: TikTok, Netflix (by giving personal recommendations)

Role of IS/ technology:

- Supporting the current course/ path
o Support in achieving pre-defined strategic objectives
o Emphasis on optimization and automation: doing better at what you are
doing already
o Technology as a cost center
- Driver for fundamental/ strategic change
o Driver to reshape the path itself
o Emphasis on innovation and transformation
o Technology as source of competitive advantage

, - Source of new companies and industries

Disruptive impact of new industries and business models

- FE: Translators (vs online translators), owning a car (vs car sharing platforms),
cashiers (vs delivery at-home like HelloFresh)
- FE: Kodak: it missed the digital transformation after actually starting it -> bankrupt

1.3 Stakeholder value
Triple P

- The triple bottom line framework goes beyond traditional measures of profit
(“bottom line”) and additionally includes environmental and societal dimensions to
measure investment results in a more comprehensive manner
o Profit: maximizing profit for shareholders
o People: creating value for all stakeholders, highlighting a firm’s societal
impact and commitment to people (including customers, employees and
community members)
o Planet: positive impact on the planet

1.4 Rapidly changing environment
Orgs must continuously monitor technological innovations and their impact on:

- Own org
o What are the opportunities in supporting our current strategy or enabling
new strategies?
- Competitors
o How do our competitors adopt these innovations and what risks does this
bring to our organisation?
- Customers
o How do customer requirements and behaviour evolve?
- Society
o What does society expect from technological innovation?
- Government
o What about evolutions in legislations?

,2 Business and IT Strategy
Investment in IT is growing (FE: hardware, software, communication equipment)

Question of this chapter: ‘Why would a company invest in IT?’

2.1 Strategic business objectives of IS
5 strategic business objectives for which orgs invest heavily in IS:

- Operational excellence
o Orgs in this discipline are known for their reliable, efficient and low-cost P&S
 Lowest cost through improving operational efficiency and increasing
productivity by automating routine tasks and streamlining processes
 Improved efficiency -> higher profits
o IS and technologies help improve efficiency and productivity
- Product leadership
o Orgs in this discipline are known for their cutting-edge technology, superior
quality and high value-add P&S
 Creating innovative and high-quality P&S that set the org apart from
its competitors, pushing the boundaries of performance, and getting
them to the market quickly
o IS and technologies enable firms to create superior/innovative P&S
- Customer and supplier intimacy
o Customer intimacy:
 Orgs in this discipline are known for their personalized customer
service, customized P and strong customer relationships
 Focus on creating a deep understanding of the customer's
needs and preferences, and tailoring P&S to meet those needs
 Customers who are served well become repeat, loyal
customers who purchase more
 IS can improve communication and collaboration with customers ->
better relationships, increased loyalty and enhanced customer service
 FE: Hotel that registers everything you do so that they can personalize
your room when you return for a second time
o Supplier intimacy:
 Orgs seek to work closely with their suppliers to improve quality,
reduce costs and increase innovation
 More engagement with suppliers -> suppliers provide better
vital input
 IS can improve communication and collaboration with suppliers ->
better relationships
- Competitive advantage
o Advantages over competitors

, o Often results from achieving previous 3 business objectives
 Better performance through operational excellence
 Product leadership through new P&S
 Better response to suppliers and customers
o Industry leaders set the golden standard within their respective industries
- Survival
o Businesses may need to invest in IS out of necessity, it is simply the cost of
doing business
o Keeping up with competitors to survive
o Compliance to laws and regulations
o FE: Mobile banking app for banks, SOX that requires keeping all emails for 5y

Value disciplines

- Strategic approaches that orgs can choose to excel in, in order
to gain and sustain leadership positions in their industries
- Superior customer value is achieved by:
o Becoming champion in 1 of the 3 value disciplines, even at the expense of the
other 2 value disciplines
o Meeting industry standards in the other 2 two value disciplines
- All aspects of the org must be aligned to support the choice of a primary discipline
o FE: culture, processes, organizational structures, management systems,
technology
- Choosing value disciplines = choosing customers
- Danger of not choosing: ending up as underperformers, because of confusion,
conflicting priorities & wasted resources
o Exception: some org succeed to excel at more than 2 disciplines (masters of 2)
- Maintaining a leadership position is an ongoing challenge, requiring ongoing focus,
investment, continuous improvement and agility

How can an org make strategic choices?

- The positioning view
o Outside-in: look outside the org and place the org in 1 of the 3 dimensions
- The Resource Based View (RBV)
o Inside-out: look at what the org is good at
o Can be tangible or intangible

2.2 Porter’s competitive forces model
2.2.1 The five competitive forces of Porter
Traditional competitors

- Intensity of rivalry depends on:
o Amount and equality (size & power) of competitors

, o Speed of industry growth
o Size of exit barriers
 Specialized assets or management devotion to an industry
o Commitment of rivals
- Price competition is destructive to profitability
o WHY? It transfers profit from industry to customers
- Price competition occurs when:
o P&S are nearly identical
o Capacity expands in large increments to be efficient
o Perishable products
o Switching costs are low
 Switching costs = the costs (time, money, psychological) that a
customer has to incur in order to switch from one P/S to another
- Competition on other dimensions than price leads to higher customer value and
(often) higher prices

New market entrants

- In a free economy with mobile labor and financial resources, new orgs are always
entering the marketplace
- When new entrants are likely, orgs must hold down prices or boost investment to
deter competitors, putting a ceiling on profitability
- Key entry barriers:
o Supply-side economies of scale: producers of large volumes enjoy lower costs
o Demand-side benefits of scale (network effect): a buyer’s WTP increases with
the number of other buyers
o Customer switching costs
o Capital requirements: invest large financial resources (facilities, R&D,
technology, inventory, advertising)
o Incumbency advantages independent of size
 FE: geographic locations, brand identity, cumulative experience
o Unequal access to distribution channels: relationships and exclusive
agreements with distributors and saturated channels
o Restrictive government policy
 FE: regulated industries (telecom)
o Expected retaliation
- Potential advantages of new entrants:
o Not locked into old plants and equipment
o Younger workers who are less expensive and perhaps more innovative
o Not encumbered by old worn-out brand names
o More hungry
- Weakness of new entrants:

Written for

Institution
Study
Course

Document information

Uploaded on
January 25, 2026
Number of pages
81
Written in
2025/2026
Type
SUMMARY

Subjects

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
Reputation scores are based on the amount of documents a seller has sold for a fee and the reviews they have received for those documents. There are three levels: Bronze, Silver and Gold. The better the reputation, the more your can rely on the quality of the sellers work.
maudtorfs Universiteit Antwerpen
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
116
Member since
1 year
Number of followers
6
Documents
19
Last sold
1 week ago

4.6

13 reviews

5
9
4
3
3
1
2
0
1
0

Trending documents

Recently viewed by you

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their tests and reviewed by others who've used these notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No worries! You can instantly pick a different document that better fits what you're looking for.

Pay as you like, start learning right away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and aced it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Frequently asked questions