Across the continent, governments and corporations are
rushing to digitize from e-governance platforms to online banking, from smart
agriculture to digital classrooms. Yet behind the optimism lies a sobering
truth: up to 70% of digital
transformation (DT) projects fail (Tabrizi et al., 2019; Gartner,
2018).The reason? Not a lack of technology but a failure of leadership, culture, and engagement. Africa’s digital revolution is not failing
because of bandwidth or budgets, but because of people. Digital
transformation is not a one-time software installation. It is a complete rethinking of how organizations
create value in a digital world (Matt et al., 2015). Unfortunately, many
African institutions still treat it as a procurement exercise, rather than a cultural
and strategic evolution, similar to the preference of Metaverse sport the world
over (Atta-Woode & Gangai, 2025).
According to Buvat et al. (2018), 65% of global firms lack digital leadership capacity, a challenge
even more acute in Africa. In many organizations, decision-making is top-heavy,
change-averse, and disconnected from the workforce. The result is a wave of
failed projects and wasted investment. From Accra to Nairobi, digital platforms
have been launched with fanfare only to fall silent months later. Employees
resist because they see digitalization as replacement rather than empowerment
(Sherin, 2023).When people are left
out of digital change, technology becomes a threat instead of a tool. A
rigid corporate culture, combined with poor communication, has made digital
transformation in Africa more of a slogan than a success story.
My recent study, “Innovative Digital Transformation
Strategy: A Conceptual Framework of Leadership, Culture, and Engagement,” suggested
a model grounded in Dynamic
Capabilities Theory (DCT). Introduced
by Teece,
Pisano, and Shuen (1997),
this model argues that an organization’s survival in rapidly changing
environments depends on its ability to sense, seize, and reconfigure resources to maintain
competitiveness. In African context, our organizational leadership must cultivate these three critical
abilities:
- Sensing – Detecting emerging digital
opportunities and threats.
- Seizing – Acting decisively through
visionary leadership and resource alignment.
- Reconfiguring – Adapting internal processes
and culture to sustain competitiveness.
This makes DCT
not only relevant but also essential for African organizations facing volatile
economic, social, and technological conditions. Africa’s digital transformation
journey differs fundamentally from that of Western economies. The continent’s
challenges includes limited infrastructure, institutional fragility,
fluctuating policies, and workforce skill gaps. Africa needs flexible
strategies for digital transformation and not static solutions. Dynamic
Capabilities Theory provides exactly that: a model for continuous adaptation and
renewal rather than one-off reform for Africa’s organizations in
turbulent markets where yesterday’s solutions rarely solve tomorrow’s problems.
In Ghana, for
example, the government’s digital ID initiative, e-levy systems, and paperless port reforms show how policy and technology evolve
amid uncertainty. Only institutions that can reconfigure quickly survive such disruption. DCT provides a framework to guide
this adaptation by focusing on learning, leadership agility, and resource
alignment all critical for sustainability (Teece, 2018; Eisenhardt &
Martin, 2000).
Furthermore,
African firms are not just adopting technology; they are leapfrogging
entire stages of development moving from analog to mobile or AI-driven systems
in one leap (Ndemo & Weiss, 2017). Such rapid, non-linear growth requires
what DCT calls dynamic reconfiguration, the ability to redesign structures, retrain workers, and
reallocate resources in real time (Ambrosini & Bowman, 2009).
The theory also
resonates with African cultural contexts, where informal networks, social
trust, and adaptive leadership play crucial roles in business success. Unlike
rigid Western frameworks, DCT accommodates contextual learning and improvisation
traits deeply embedded in African entrepreneurship and governance systems
(Loonam et al., 2018; Okpo, Ikediashi & Afolabi, 2023).
Why
African Organizations Need This Model
1.
Builds Leadership Agility – Leaders gain the foresight to anticipate digital trends
and align them with strategic goals (Kotter, 2000).
2.
Promotes Cultural Adaptability – Organizational culture shifts from rigid hierarchies to
collaborative, learning-driven environments (Mergel et al., 2019).
3.
Drives Employee Engagement – Workers become contributors to innovation rather than
victims of automation (Kane et al., 2018; Gallup, 2021).
4.
Sustains Competitiveness – Continuous learning and flexibility become built-in,
ensuring survival in volatile digital markets (Teece, 2018).
Deloitte
(2020) found that companies emphasizing engagement during transformation
recorded faster adoption rates and
higher morale, while adaptive cultures (Kocak & Pawlowski, 2022)
increased success rates across industries.
The
Leadership Imperative
Africa’s
digital future depends not on coding, but on leadership courage and competence. Digital transformation must be
led by leaders who can communicate, connect, and collaborate.
They must:
- Understand
technology
as a business strategy, not a gadget.
- Build
inclusive cultures where every employee understands their role in change.
- Invest
in re-skilling and knowledge sharing.
- Encourage
open dialogue and cross-functional innovation.
Leadership agility means the ability to pivot quickly and
learn continuously-the hallmark of successful digital leaders.
Governments should create national digital leadership programs to build capacity within
ministries, state enterprises, and academia. Universities must integrate digital leadership and transformation
frameworks into their business and public administration curricula. The
time is now more especially, where Artificial Intelligence (AI) is
revolutionizing our way of work and the technological space across the world.
Africa is already behind the adaptation of AI and automations.
African success stories such as Rwanda’s e-governance, Kenya’s
fintech ecosystem, and Ghana’s
digital ID system show it is possible when leadership, culture, and engagement align, as technology alone does not transform
institutions, people do.
The
Way Forward
Africa is at a digital crossroads. With its youthful
population and growing internet access, the continent holds immense potential. Nevertheless,
potential without transformation is inertia. The proposed framework offers a
roadmap to convert digital ambition
into sustainable success through leadership that senses change, cultures
that adapt, and employees who engage. Africa does not need another app, it
needs adaptive leaders and digital cultures that can reconfigure
and rise. The truth is uncomfortable: Africa’s digital revolution is not
failing because of bandwidth or budgets, but because of people and our
inability to acknowledge and appreciate our circumstances and adopt a digital
transformation tailored towards our leadership style, inherent cultural traits,
and the resources needed for such technological advancement. Not every process
need to be digitalized, and not every organization or entity needs digital
transformation.
By Joseph
Atta-Woode (AI & Digital Innovations Expert)
Joseph Atta-Woode is also a PhD
Scholar in Management, Sharda University India and Facilitator of AI
Certificate Program at Ghana Christian University College, Accra. Ghana. His
specialties include Leadership, Digital Transformation-AI, Strategic Innovation
and Organizational Behaviors.