The best technology is built right next to the problem
Written by: Grant Phillips Save to Instapaper
Organisations often fail to realise the full value of digital transformation because technology is implemented without fully understanding the operational problems it is meant to solve.
According to Grant Phillips, the most successful solutions are developed close to real-world workflows, enabling greater adoption, reduced complexity and better business outcomes.
Organisations continue to invest heavily in digital transformation, yet many still struggle to achieve the outcomes they expected.
According to McKinsey, around 70% of transformation programmes fail to meet their objectives, despite significant investment in technology.
For Grant Phillips, Group CEO of e4, the reason is both simpler and more complex than organisations realise.
"One of the biggest mistakes organisations make is assuming technology alone will solve a problem," he says.
"If a solution doesn't fit the way people actually work, it becomes difficult to unlock its full value."
Putting the Problem Before the Technology
Phillips believes many transformation projects begin with the technology rather than the problem.
As a result, organisations implement solutions that function exactly as designed but fail to gain meaningful traction among the people expected to use them.
This challenge is particularly visible in industries such as financial services and property, where processes are often shaped by regulation, multiple stakeholders and longstanding ways of working.
A platform may perform well in a demonstration environment, yet struggle to deliver the same results once it encounters the realities of day-to-day operations.
"The closer technology stays to the problem it is trying to solve, the more useful it becomes," says Phillips.
"When a digital solution is designed, it shouldn't be an abstract concept tested in a sterile environment. It should be informed by real operational experience."
Adoption Drives Value
Gartner predicts that 60% of supply chain digital adoption efforts will fail to deliver their promised value by 2028 due to insufficient investment in learning and development, reinforcing the point that technology only creates value when people are equipped to use it effectively.
Phillips says this disconnect is responsible for many disappointing transformation outcomes.
Over the past two decades, this thinking has shaped the way e4 develops technology.
The company has focused on solving practical challenges within the industries it serves and using those experiences to inform product development.
Many of the solutions e4 takes to market have first been deployed and refined within its own operating environment.
The purpose is not to prove that the technology works in theory.
It is to understand how it performs when faced with the same operational pressures, compliance requirements and competing priorities that clients experience every day.
DeceasedEstates in Practice
The most recent example of this in action is DeceasedEstates, e4's platform for estate administration.
In South Africa, more than 100,000 deceased estates are reported annually, creating a process that involves attorneys, banks, insurers, SARS and the Master's Office.
While progress has been made in modernising parts of the system, estate administration remains heavily dependent on documentation, manual intervention and communication between multiple parties.
According to Phillips, the opportunity was never simply to digitise an existing process.
"The real challenge was understanding where delays occur, where information gets stuck and where unnecessary administration creates frustration for the people involved," he explains.
"Once you understand the problem properly, you can design technology that reduces friction without disrupting the flexibility needed to manage complex estate matters."
Focusing on Outcomes
The lesson extends beyond estate administration.
Across industries, organisations are becoming less interested in technology for its own sake and more focused on outcomes.
They want solutions that fit naturally into existing workflows, reduce complexity and create measurable improvements for employees and customers.
That shift places greater responsibility on technology providers to remain close to the environments they serve.
"There will always be new technologies, new platforms and new trends," says Phillips.
"The organisations that create lasting value are usually the ones that stay focused on the problem. If you understand that properly, the technology becomes much easier to get right."
About e4
Ends.
About e4
e4 is a technology company specialising in digitalisation.
By understanding the complexity of a digital journey, e4 partners with its clients to provide innovative solutions that suits their unique needs.
Using an omni-channel platform approach, e4 offers a range of digitally-inspired services as well as solutions.
Working across financial services, data and the legal sector, e4 understands the intricate requirements in these sectors, and uses its expertise to assist clients in effectively managing their businesses through digitalisation.
Further Information
For further information:
Monica van der Spuy | GinjaNinja | M: +27 71 685 6476 | E: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Get new press articles by email
GinjaNinja is an owner run and managed PR, integrated marketing, and communications agency. The company has evolved over 21 years to offer public relations experience across several industry sectors together with key digital and marketing services. What we value in our clients is what we value in ourselves. GinjaNinja has integrity, is hard working, dedicated, passionate, ethical, creative,... Read More
Latest from
- Why simplicity is your best defence in the AI era
- NAPAfrica and ZANOG enhance community-driven interconnection in Cape Town's growing digital ecosystem
- Trellidor backs the next generation of football talent as title sponsor of the Trellidor Mzansi Super Cup
- AI-powered scams and identity attacks become top cyber threats in 2026
- ERP is shrinking - and that is exactly why third-party support matters
- Bad partnerships can break good businesses - The case for ongoing risk monitoring
- Passkeys are not the end of passwords - they're the next evolution of trust
- AI adoption is exposing a new generation of data security risks
- Why representation in STEM is no longer optional
- Leadership appointments position SoftwareOne for next phase in South Africa and across Africa
- Vedant Launches Accounting Service Firm Leveraging Technology to Give Businesses Access to Financial Clarity
- Dariel urges businesses to evolve security policies for the AI era
- Why certified security infrastructure is becoming essential in South Africa’s mining sector
- The shift from upgrades to control and why it matters to CFOs
- SoftwareOne reports strong momentum with growth across all regions
The Pulse Latest Articles
- The Real Ai: How African Ingenuity Drives Growth And Distinguishes The Continent’s Logistics Sector (June 25, 2026)
- Sotru Launches To Stop Supplier Fraud At The Moment Of Payment (June 23, 2026)
- The Death Of The Dinner Party? Why South Africans Are Choosing Convenience Over Traditional Entertaining (June 23, 2026)
- Wildbeest Media Launches 2026 Tourism Marketing Campaign Service For South African Travel Brands (June 22, 2026)
- Opinion Piece: The Chair Is Not The Person: A Ceo’s Hardest Leadership Lesson (June 22, 2026)
