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Harvard
Business
Review
Strategy
Inside IKEA’s Digital
Transformation
by Thomas Stackpole
June 04, 2021
Employees seare fr ‘Click & Collect” goods ordered online for contactless pickup at an IKEA store in Ouesseldor,
Germany on January 12,2021, Relf Vannenbernd/pictue alisnce via Getty Images
‘Summary. How does going digital change a legacy retail brand? According to
Barbara Martin Coppola, CDO at IKEA Retail, it's a challenge of remaining
fundamentally the same company while doing almost everything differently. In this
Q8A, Martin Coppola talks about how... more
What does it mean for one of the world’s most recognizable retail
brands to go digital? For almost 80 years, IKEA has been in the
very analogue business of selling its distinct brand of home goods
to people. Three years ago, IKEA Retail (Ingka Group) hiredBarbara Martin Coppola — a veteran of Google, Samsung, and
Texas Instruments — to guide the company through a digital
transformation and help it enter the next era of its history. HBR
spoke with Martin Coppola about the particular challenge of
transformation at a legacy company, how to sustain your culture
when you're changing almost everything, and how her 20 years in
the tech industry prepared her for this task.
How is the digital transformation at IKEA changing how the
company actually operates in the day-to-day?
In practical terms, we've approximately tripled ecommerce levels
in three years. We have transformed our stores to also act as
fulfilment centers. To make that work, the flow of goods needed
to change, the supply mechanisms needed to change, and also the
floorplans of the store needed to change. Ecommerce is open 24
hours a day, while traditional stores are not, which means we've
needed to learn how to operate at two speeds, while operating
from one space. Goods can be delivered from the stores, or from
different distribution centers — and algorithms are helping figure
out where the goods are being sourced from. We're rapidly
expanding data and analytics and changing how they're
embedded in decision making.
With the pandemic and with the closure of approximately 75% of
our stores, we ramped-up and accelerated even more as
people turned online and towards digital solutions. Things that
would normally take years or months were carried out within days
and weeks.
The digital transformation is not a goal in and of itself, and it is so
much more than technology. We are transforming our business:
We are exploring potential new offers to customers, new ways to
bring our offers to customers, and new ways to operate our
business. And in order to be successful, digital needs to be
embedded in every aspect of IKEA. Digital is a way of working,
making decisions, and managing the company.How would you describe what it is you’re trying to do through
this process?
To realize our mission, we need to stay relevant, and we need to
evolve with the ever-changing needs of our customers.
Now, this process is a bit like an iceberg. At the top of the iceberg,
we have the customer needs and adaptation — revamping
everything around customer interaction and new purchasing
journeys — and under the surface we are making huge changes to
our business and operating model. And what is under the surface
is a much bigger change than what we see above.
Tl give you an example. We are revamping customer interactions
both digitally and, in the store, and we're connecting them. For
instance, you might start planning your new kitchen by yourself
at home on ikea.com, and then you come to the store or connect
with a remote customer meeting point, and we should be able to.
meet you where you are. Another example is the “Shop & Go”
feature in the IKEA app — available in a few countries — which
allows you to use your own mobile device to scan, pay for items
and skip the checkout line in the store. That requires a complete
modernization and reengineering of all the tech landscape within
IKEA. It also requires a different way of operating to fulfill the
goods to be bought. It requires reengineering of the full value
chain, which needs to be governed by data and become more
flexible than before. The result is meant to be a seamless,
consistent customer experience.
‘These transformations are happening at many layers within the
company, and they require a multi-year strategy and a clear North
Star to follow.
How has your strategy changed as you moved through this
process? What did you think it was going to be like at the
beginning, and what has surprised you and what has changed
along the way?‘The scope of the strategy has increased significantly over time as
the company realized that digital needs to be embedded into
everything we do. Our first focus was on revamping all meetings
with the customer, especially online with new and improved
navigation and search function, We secured high growth for
ecommerce which went from 7% of revenue to 31% in 3 years.
Inventory management, logistics, fulfillment, and supply chain
overall had to be modernized through data, which in turn brought
in new ways of working and operating, For example, stores
became fulfillment centers. We're also embedding new skills and
people who bring new agility.
Substantively, what does digital transformation mean for a
company like IKEA? How does it change the company’s DNA?
‘The DNA of IKEA doesn’t change, and it's important that it
doesn’t. Operating model wi
, it means we're adding data,
increasing speed, using analytics in all our decision-making. Also,
the skills we're using are changing. I recall when I started at IKEA,
my boss, Jesper Brodin said, “We're changing everything —
almost.” ‘To me, this means we're changing how we do things, but
the soul of the company stays the same.
Can you elaborate a bit on how to make sure the vision for the
company remains consistent, even as you're enacting
fundamental changes?
We are reinventing IKEA for the future, no less than that. At the
beginning, this meant we needed to ensure that the
transformation kept the IKEA DNA intact — that is, the culture,
the values and the vision of creating a better everyday life for the
many people. The question then became; how do we express
these in the digital environment? And this led to the notion of
human-centric technology. How to embed ethical behavior,
respect diversity, how to treat people fairly — without bias —through technology. This means that we are focusing more on
what we should do with data, rather than what we could do with
data.
IKEA has been gaining consumer trust for 78 years by having the
unique opportunity and privilege to be invited to people’s home.
‘This means we have built a lot of trust. And we want that same
level of trust, if not higher, in the digital world. We know that data
in the digital world is not being treated with the level of respect
people require, and we are working on a new way that puts people
and their privacy at the core.
So, we're taking a new approach. Our starting point was asking
ourselves the most fundamental question: How do people react
when they have more control over their own data, specifically on
how and when they interact with a company? Our first step to
tackle this was the Customer Data Promise, our commitment to
putting people first in all data-driven processes. We want to
provide customers with understanding, control, and the ability to
make decisions about their data, so we added a functionality that
lets consumers edit their data in the app at any given time. They
see a centralized data control panel in the app, where they can
change and personalize their inspirational feed and get
contextual access to their data settings.
And what we have seen thus far is that first, the data we are
capturing is more relevant. When people decide what data they
share with you, what you get is more relevant to their needs.
Second, that there is more trust, therefore more engagement, and
people are coming back and interacting with us more.
How does your experience at a place like Google shape how
you think about a task like this digital transformation at
IKEA?I’ve worked in the technology industry for over 20 years for many
innovative companies. And during that time, every single
experience has given me learnings that I’m applying to IKEA's
transformation today.
If think about Google specifically, I'd say that speed, agility, and
a strong customer focus, are important learnings I took with me.
So, when you think about how to create products in the unknown,
it’s really about fast iterations, learning through those iterations,
and giving consumers the chance to gift it back, so, little by little,
we build the product together with customers.
Another learning from Google is that people are the most
important asset a company has. You need to take care of people,
and make sure that the right skills are present. This is what
attracted me to IKEA, people here always come first, and they are
the number one priority for the business. Recently we've been
hiring for skills we didn't have, as well as reskilling a lot of people
so that together, we can become a high-performing team, caring
for people's wellbeing whilst continuously learning and growing.
And the last thing I learned, I would say, is purpose. At Google, I
was going to work with the deep belief that I was making people’s
lives better — at that time we were revolutionizing how
technology could help people. And I have that same feeling at
IKEA. This has helped us a lot when going through our
transformation. We know there will be challenging times, but we
also know there is something bigger than our own reality, it helps
us put energy and heart into creating an IKEA for generations to
come.
Culture plays a huge role in how successful digital
transformations are, right? How much of being a successful
CDO is addressing cultural and human issues?Transformations are about moving large numbers of people, not
just a few people who have the necessary digital skills. That’s why
culture is so important.
Coming in at a top executive level, I had to first become accepted
as part of the community. IKEA originates from the south of
Sweden. The company values are about hard work, humbleness,
being down to earth, and a strong entrepreneurial spirit — people
want to go the extra mile for the company. I had to show through
my behavior that I share the same values. Then, it was about
meeting people and communicating an inspiring vision. Finally, it
was about putting forward simple steps that people can see
themselves following.
Another part of leadership in transformation is having an open
mind and believing that many things are possible, as well as.
knowing the importance of people and bringing them along in
that journey with you. I always say to people “We're going to do
this and succeed at it,” which is not unrealistic, but rather a push
to the teams to know that they can achieve the goals they set out
to accomplish. And it’s important to bring your whole self to
work, including the vulnerable side, especially during the
pandemic. Saying “I'm human, I'm having a hard time right now,”
allows other people to be vulnerable too. Giving people the
permission to be human doesn’t make you less effective, in fact I
see it as an important step to building trust.
How do AR and VR feature in your plans for IKEA's future?
‘They are important new technologies that we need to test and try.
‘We've been testing VR in the store, to visualize how a piece of
furniture fits in a room. We recently acquired a California
company by the name of Geomagical Labs. With their new AI
technology, we will bring home visualization to a different level.
By letting you scan your home, one room at a time, and
turn it into a 3D model in which you can try out the IKEA home
product range from any location. It’s a tool for democratizinghome design, and that means it must be accessible to everyone.
‘You will be able to access it via any smartphone — iPhone or
Android; it needs to be simple enough for people to use it.
Asa leader, how do you think about using new technologies
to support rather than replace workers?
To automate or digitize IKEA, it may sound at times like we're
moving away from the humanity of it all, but in fact it’s the other
way around. We are enabling people to do more of what they love,
to learn and try new and different jobs that weren't possible
before. We want to relieve people of repetitive tasks, so a lot of our
work right now consists of reskilling and helping people carry out
avariety of roles.
The pandemic, of course, changed and accelerated everyone’s
plans regarding projects like these. But what has your
experience been, and what have you learned from it?
‘There's been a lot of learning throughout this process. And many
challenges remain. But the key is resilience, it’s never quitting.
Giving the organization the strength to solve any problem. The
resilience we have built so far is why we are where we are now, in
a position of strength, always looking to grow and improve.
Editor's note: This interview has been edited and condensed for
clarity.
Thomas Stackpole is a senior editor at
Harvard Business Review.