Companies are increasingly investing in digital transformation, expecting those efforts to deliver measurable business results. McKinsey estimates 90% of all organizations are in the process.
But many aren’t seeing the results they’d hoped for. PwC research shows 92% of respondents say tech investments haven’t delivered the expected benefits. One possible reason: leaders count on digital technology tools to create business change on their own, instead of spending time on business redesign.
This article explains what digital business innovation means and how to move from simply investing in more tools to implementing a strategy that drives results.
What is digital business transformation?
Digital business innovation involves redesigning how a business operates by introducing modern technologies that improve how teams manage data, workflows, and decision-making. These technologies may support customer service and predictive analytics when connected to clear business goals.
Digital transformation is not:
- The “digitization” of old tools: Instead, it requires redesigning core business processes.
- Strictly related to customer-facing ecommerce: Those processes are important, but digital transformation extends to every part of the business.
- Focused solely on automation: Automation tools are helpful, but digital business innovation requires a broader evaluation of business strategy.
Digital business transformation is different from mere digitization. Digitization alone is focused on converting analog business processes into digital ones. Digital transformation alone can refer to improving basic processes with technology.
Digital business transformation goes further. It includes technology solutions, business strategy, customer-facing operations, and back-end operations. Deloitte’s 2025 benchmarking survey of 400 US-based organizations found that companies are evaluating digital transformation through operating models, investment priorities, organization design, ownership, and growth strategy.
Deloitte also notes that when decisions are integrated into daily work across the organization, transformation becomes a mechanism for ongoing reinvention rather than a one-time effort.
In ecommerce, transformation involves combining every aspect of the company into a connected operating system:
- Customer data
- Orders
- Products
- Checkout
- Retail / point of sale (POS)
- B2B
Business transformation connects systems, teams, and data across the company.
For example, Shopify can unify customer, order, and product data. By supporting multiple buying channels, it can accelerate digital transformation by connecting commerce data across channels.
But technology alone does not create transformation. Grant Thornton’s 2025 "Digital Transformation Survey", based on insights from more than 550 senior executives, found that 93% of business leaders are increasing technology investments, yet only 27% say their technology is fully aligned with business goals.
The report also found that 32% of respondents say their data needs improvement to support technology initiatives, and only 16% rate their data quality as excellent. That gap shows why digital transformation depends on more than buying or upgrading tools.
Business outcomes depend on how teams implement and govern these tools. Digital businessinnovation means reshaping business models, operating models, or customer experiences.
Why digital business transformation matters in 2026
Ecommerce businesses have reasons to reevaluate legacy operating models. Innovation may involve adopting technology that supports specific business goals, then strategically implementing it to support revenue protection and competitive positioning.
Ecommerce businesses face pressure from customer expectations, operational volatility, and AI adoption. Customers increasingly encounter faster, more personalized digital experiences, which can raise expectations for brand interactions. Over half (52%) of consumers say they stopped using a brand after one bad experience.
Poor digital experiences can lead to lost revenue, prompting companies to reassess their business models and operating processes.
Ecommerce is also benefiting from tailwinds as numbers increase. Per the U.S. Census, ecommerce accounted for 16.4% of all total retail sales in 2025, or $1.23 trillion. It’s a large and competitive market, with customer expectations continuing to change.
AI adoption is widespread, but adoption alone does not equal transformation: McKinsey found that while 88% of organizations use AI in at least one business function, only about one-third have begun scaling AI programs.
But while AI-powered solutions can support specific workflows, they do not replace strategy, governance, or change management.
The core pillars of digital business transformation
Digital business transformation depends on cross-functional adoption. To digitally transform with a company-wide view of the entire organization, consider these four components:
1. Strategy and leadership
Strategy defines the goals and the business outcomes that can arise from all these new investments in the right technology. A company can define ownership for the initiative, then assign team leaders who will handle innovation in the daily operations.
Teams should set clear, measurable goals for new business outcomes. TEKsystems’ 2025 “State of Digital Transformation” report found that digital transformation leaders are more likely to define desired business outcomes before starting a digital initiative: 76% of leaders do so, compared with 53% of digital laggards.
Increased revenue, increased customer retention, and fewer stock-outs are the key performance indicators (KPIs) that data systems can track and refine over time. Digital transformation involves more than adding a new tool. It’s building a strategy around how that tool gets implemented.
2. Technology and architecture
After defining the goal, ask what systems (platforms, integrations, infrastructure) can support that goal. Skullcandy, for example, needed a platform capable of taking new products live within 90 days. They also already had to integrate NetSuite, their enterprise resource planning tool (ERP), with their ecommerce platform.
Shopify was able to meet these challenges. Skullcandy was up and running on Shopify within 90 days, and soon, they achieved 45% year-over-year revenue growth.
3. Data and measurement
Machine learning (ML) and AI tools can help teams measure and analyze data. But these tools still rely on clean data. A 2025 data integrity report from Drexel LeBow and Precisely found that 67% of respondents don’t fully trust the data their organization uses for decision-making, while only 12% say their data is of sufficient quality and accessibility for AI.
Data should be both unified (no duplicates, no different versions across systems) and usable. This way, companies can tie metrics to specific business outcomes and refine the innovations over time.
4. People and change management
People and change management affect technology adoption. Teams need ownership: clearly defined roles for who oversees the transformation. They also need training and new workflows.
KPMG’s 2026 "Global Tech Report" found that talent shortages remain a major barrier to scaling technology, noting that organizations still face gaps in the skills needed to execute transformation plans.
If there’s a new tech stack running inventory, for example, it should be usable by the teams responsible for the workflow. It’s not just the technology that drives innovation. All four components affect implementation, because a weakness in any component can slow adoption.
How to build a digital business transformation strategy
Digital business transformation happens over time, but companies can start with a defined process:
1. Define the desired business outcomes
This step clarifies the business reason for the transformation. It’s one thing to have a broad goal like “improve efficiency,” but another to have a clear use case for how new business models can improve business performance.
Technology selection can follow the definition of business goals. Work backward from the overarching goal, looking at milestones like:
- Revenue growth
- Customer conversions
- Customer retention
- Customer lifetime value (CLV)
A digital strategy begins with defining the desired end-state, then identifying the new business models that can help a company achieve it.
2. Audit friction in customer journeys
Digital innovation focuses on reducing friction. Conviva’s 2025 “State of Digital Experience” report found that poor digital experiences led 55% of consumers to abandon a purchase, and 50% to switch companies. Begin the process of digital innovation by auditing the current customer journeys to identify key chokepoints.
This isn’t to say every piece of friction is customer-facing. The customer experience might be bad because of a stockout, which means back-end operations need updating. In that case, digital innovation may help teams implement more accurate inventory forecasts that prevent these in the first place.
3. Identify high-impact areas of business innovation
After identifying customer journey friction, teams can identify high-impact opportunities: look for the areas tied to measurable business value, such as conversion rate, retention, or fulfillment speed. For instance, improving checkout performance may address high traffic and low conversion numbers.
Everlane, for example, identified a customer behavior pattern in which they favored faster checkout options. Customers were using mobile devices for 70% of online purchases. By setting up Shop Pay, the brand simplified checkout and reduced checkout time, leading to an immediate lift in customer conversions.
4. Simplify the architecture
Digital transformation does not always require adding more systems. Pegasystems’ 2025 legacy transformation research found that the average global enterprise wastes more than $370 million a year because of inefficient modernization of outdated systems and applications. Simplification is one way to reduce technical debt.
Digital transformation can reduce the need for unnecessary tools and integration. Ideally, this means fewer custom workflows that get in the way of speedy checkouts and efficient day-to-day operations. At this point, look for platforms with multiple functions, especially if they render existing tools unnecessary.
This approach can also apply to companies with B2B operations. For industrial food equipment brand Russell Hendrix, an inflexible legacy B2B platform meant poor search and user experience (UX). Shopify B2B helped simplify multiple use cases in the company, such as faster internal ordering and native company accounts. The result was 43% growth in B2B online order volume and five times the order-processing speed.
5. Roll out in phases
Innovation works best when rolled out in phases. Prosci’s 12th Edition “Best Practices in Change Management” research emphasizes that structured change management improves change outcomes.
Phased rollouts can help teams manage training, adoption, and workflow changes before expanding transformation across the business. Begin with a simple test case, like the Shop Pay example above, and then roll out to new pieces of the business after achieving a clear business lift.
6. Track value and adoption
Tracking results can support adoption. WalkMe’s 2025 “State of Digital Adoption” reportfound that enterprises lost $104 million to underused technology in 2024. Leaders need to track platform performance and whether teams actually adopt the tools after launch.
If a new digital platform leads to more conversions, leaders have clearer evidence to support a broader rollout. Conduct quarterly reviews of digital efforts to track value, measure adoption, and identify new areas for rollout.
Digital business innovation FAQ
What is digital business transformation?
Digital business transformation is the full, top-down redesign of how a company operates, especially when implementing more modern systems, data, and automated workflows. This goes beyond adopting new tools by focusing on improving how decisions are made. This comes from key pillars like strategy, leadership, and change management.
What’s the difference between digital transformation and digital business transformation?
Digital transformation focuses on a process-by-process basis, improving with technology. Digital business transformation takes it a step further to include strategy, leadership, operations, and the customer experience.
Why do digital transformation efforts fail?
Digital transformation efforts can fail when companies treat transformation like a digital tool rollout instead of a full business redesign. Rather than embracing four pillars (strategy, architecture, data, and change management), companies focus on replacing tools instead of redesigning processes.
How long does digital business transformation take?
It partially depends on the scope of the project. Many transformation programs use phased rollouts, especially if focusing on high-impact areas and proven results.
What are the most important metrics to track in digital transformation?
Metrics should connect to business outcomes. Revenue growth, conversion rates, customer retention, and operational efficiency can all be key variables to track.
How can ecommerce or retail brands start digital business transformation?
Start with clear goals. From there, it’s a process of identifying friction and high-impact areas in customer and operational journeys. With the use cases clearly defined, it’s then possible to simplify systems, roll out changes in phases, and measure results during and after rollout.


