News & Insights

Cultivating a Digital-Ready Workforce in the Age of AI

Written by Ian Finch | Jun 11, 2025 2:08:33 PM

Digital transformation isn’t a platform problem.

It's a people problem.

And AI risks accelerating and exacerbating it: new tools, smarter platforms, faster delivery cycles - all reshaping what ‘digital’ means across every function of the enterprise.

But the biggest challenge still isn’t tech. It’s people.

After nearly three decades helping organisations through digital change, we’ve seen this play out time and again:

Transformation fails when teams feel left behind. Not because they’re unwilling - but because they’re unprepared.

And as AI advances, the gap between capability and confidence is only growing.

The fix? Stop treating transformation as a feature rollout. Start building a workforce that’s ready, resilient and able to adapt at pace.

Here’s how we do that. 

1. Prioritise Adoption over Addition  


We’ve worked on dozens of large-scale digital programmes. And we’ve learned one thing the hard way: 

Success doesn’t come from the features you ship.  It comes from what people actually use. 

That’s why we bias our energy towards rollout and adoption - not just development. Tools don’t deliver value until they’re understood, embraced and embedded. 

So instead of asking:

“What can we launch?” it's better to ask: 

 “What are we enabling?” 

2. Focus on Transferable Capabilities, not just Tools    


Digital maturity isn’t about mastering platforms. It’s about developing people who can: 

  • Ask better questions of data 
  • Navigate complexity with confidence 
  • Collaborate across systems and functions 
  • Learn, unlearn, and adapt on the fly 

These are the skills that stick, even as tools change or AI automates tasks. 

Upskilling your workforce doesn’t mean turning everyone into a technologist. 
It means making 'digital confidence' universal.

3. Build ‘Change Muscle’ not just Knowledge   


Tech moves fast. AI moves faster. Traditional training can’t keep up. And shouldn’t really try. 

What we need now are teams who can flex with change. That means creating environments where:

  • Curiosity is rewarded 
  • Questions are encouraged 
  • Safe experimentation is normalised 

Learning shouldn't just inform. It should transform the way people think. 

4. Make Digital Thinking Everyone’s Job  


Digital isn’t a department anymore. It’s the fabric of how businesses operate. 

HR? Automated workflows. 
Finance? AI-assisted forecasting. 
Ops? Service journeys built on real-time insight. 

But most organisations still treat digital like a niche skill. That needs to shift. 

Digital literacy should be a baseline competency like communication or collaboration. 
Something we all expect
Something we all support

5. Bridge the Business-Technology Divide 


The biggest transformation delays rarely come from tech. 
They come from misalignment. 

Strategy sits in one room. Delivery in another. Adoption in a third. 

We need more translators; people who connect technical capability to real business need. 

And we need to stop calling them unicorns. We should be developing them intentionally. 

“You don’t need everyone to code. 
You need everyone to speak digital.”  

6. Culture First. Then Capability. 


You can buy all the training software in the world.  But if the culture isn’t ready, nothing sticks. 

Here’s what readiness looks like:

  • Leaders who show they’re learning
  • Time protected for growth and not just promised
  • Recognition for effort, not just outcomes

Culture isn’t the backdrop. It’s the engine.   


Connect with me on LinkedIn to receive similar insights derived from three decades of leading Mando Group across thousands of client digital challenges.