CA Technologies Study Finds Need for Digital Transformation Has Reached Critical Level Across Asia Pacific & Japan

However, Only 17 Percent of Organizations Have Fully-formed Digital Transformation Strategies
MUMBAI, February 28, 2018 – CA Technologies (NASDAQ:CA) today unveiled an Asia Pacific & Japan (APJ) study that showed the need for digital transformation has reached a critical level. Eighty percent of business and IT leaders surveyed agreed that their industries have been impacted by digital disruption. However, most organizations are lagging when it comes to staying relevant and competitive in this digital economy as only 17 percent surveyed have fully-formed digital transformation strategies.
Enterprise Social Networking | <strong>Digital Transformation</strong>The CA Technologies Asia Pacific & Japan Digital Transformation Impact and Readiness Study, which was carried out in late 2017, examined the digital transformation strategies of 900 business and IT leaders across nine APJ markets: Australia, China, Hong Kong, India, Japan, Malaysia, Singapore, South Korea and Thailand.

Click here to download the infographic summarizing key findings of the surveyAccording to the survey findings, 78 percent of respondents felt that theirorganizations have been impacted by digital disruption. Similarly, 78 percent of respondents felt that their jobs have been changed due to digital disruption. The majority also agreed that these changes will be augmented in the next three to five years.
Mismatched Pressures and Priorities for Digital Transformation in APJ
In a new world that is defined by digital engagement, the competitive differentiation for organizations, and even governments, is increasingly determined by their ability to transform themselves digitally and build software into their business strategies.
The survey found that fast evolving economic conditions, meeting of changing customer expectations and using digital transformation as a new edge in winning against traditional competitors were listed as the biggest pressures for digital transformation in the region.
However, only 17 percent have fully-formed digital transformation strategies, and only 9 percent are looking at fully digitizing their entire organizations. While just a little over half (51 percent) of the organizations surveyed have launcheddigital transformation projects with clear corporate goals, such as increasing productivity and boosting revenue.
This finding mirrors the top three business priorities that organizations in APJ are focused on solving today, namelyoptimizing operational efficiencyimproving workforce collaboration, and reducing operational costs.
According to the findings, priorities such as creating different business models and/or revenue streamsdeveloping new products and servicesimproving customer experience; and attracting and retaining workforce are deemed to be less important. This demonstrates a clear misalignment between the business priorities that leaders are focused on achieving today and the top pressures that are driving their organizations’ digital transformation journey. 
The discrepancy between business priorities and the pressure to change is particularly evident when it comes to customer experience. Although changing customer expectations is highlighted as one of the main drivers for digital transformation, improving customer experience has been ranked sixth out of the seven priorities.
“In an era where brands are defined by the digital experiences they offer, it is imperative that companies put customers at the heart of their business,” said Martin Mackay, president and general manager, Asia Pacific & Japan, CA Technologies. “When software is built into their business strategies, organizations will be able to deliver an enhanced customer experience; and have the insights and tools to shape and predict new customer demands, create new services, revenue streams and business models.”
“To thrive in the application economy, organizations need to move IT, especially software, from a supporting role to a central enabler by reinventing their software development and delivery processes so that they can consistently develop high quality applications that can enhance customer experience and deliver business value at scale,” added Mackay. “In short, organizations need to build a Modern Software Factory where agility, automation, insights and security work together to power their digital transformation.”
About the CA Technologies Asia Pacific & Japan Digital Transformation Impact and Readiness Study
CA Technologies commissioned and completed a survey of 900 business and IT leaders across nine markets in the APJ region - Australia, China, Hong Kong, India, Japan, Malaysia, Singapore, South Korea and Thailand - in late 2017. The objectives of the study were to measure the impact of digital disruption in the region and understand how organizations are managing their digital transformation.
All survey respondents came from mid- to large-sized organizations with more than 250 employees, with almost half (47 percent) of those interviewed representing large organizations with more than 1,000 staff. All respondents were decision makers – 74 percent for business decisions and 26 percent for IT decisions. All surveyed leaders were also involved in digital transformation initiatives in their organizations, with 74 percent being key decisions makers in digital transformation projects.
About CA Technologies
CA Technologies (NASDAQ:CA) creates software that fuels transformation for companies and enables them to seize the opportunities of the application economy. Software is at the heart of every business in every industry. From planning, to development, to management and security, CA is working with companies worldwide to change the way we live, transact, and communicate – across mobile, private and public cloud, distributed and mainframe environments. Learn more at www.ca.com.

Subscribe to receive free email updates: