Strategy and Digital Transformation: Exploring the Relationship Between Strategy and Digital Transformation in Established Firms
Abstract
The purpose of this thesis is to investigate how strategy and digital transformation work together
to enhance firms' ability to compete in a digital landscape. Digital technology has
fundamentally altered market dynamics and product/service offerings, making a firm’s ability
to drive digital transformation a critical source of competitive advantage. However, not all
established firms have successfully capitalized on these opportunities. While some studies
emphasize the challenges of using strategy to drive digital transformation within established
firms, others point to the obstacles of effectively leveraging new digital resources resulting from
digital transformation to form strategies for growth and competitiveness. These questions are
still not settled, and more research is needed.
This thesis addresses these gaps with one conceptual and two empirical papers. The first
empirical paper examines the heterogeneity in firms’ digital strategy by introducing digital
orientation as a new antecedent and contrasting it with market orientation and entrepreneurial
orientation. Using textual analysis of annual reports from 73 Norwegian publicly traded
companies over ten years to operationalize the concepts, their relationships are analyzed
through a longitudinal structural equation model. In the short term, we find a circular
relationship whereby entrepreneurial orientation increases digital orientation, digital increases
market orientation, and market orientation increases entrepreneurial orientation. No long-term
relationship between the variables is observed. The second empirical paper hypothesizes that
incentives for digitalization vary by stage of digitalization. Using survey responses from 823
Norwegian firms during COVID-19, analyzed with ordered probit and multivariate probit
regression models, we find that digital leaders accelerated their digitalization efforts during the
pandemic, indicating a polarizing effect between leaders and laggards. The third, sole-authored,
conceptual paper addresses the paradox in optimal growth strategies for digital firms,
contrasting focus strategies through digital scaling with diversification through platform
envelopment and bundling. A new conceptual model suggests that optimal strategies are
contextual and determined by a firm’s relative level of digital transformation against
competitors.
In sum, this thesis contributes to strategic management literature, which is informed by
IS literature, providing new conceptual and empirical insights into how strategy and digital
transformation work together. It explains why some firms are more proactive in building
strategies for digital transformation, why some accelerate their digitalization faster than others,
and how they may optimize their digital growth strategies as a result.