International Journal of Management Technology (IJMT)

Digital Transformation

Digital Transformation of Administrative Operations in Medium-Sized Organizations (Published)

Despite the proliferation of digital tools, medium-sized organizations (MSOs) continue to rely heavily on manual administrative processes, resulting in inefficiencies, compliance risks, and lost productivity. While digital transformation frameworks abound for small businesses and large enterprises, there remains a critical gap in structured, tailored models designed specifically for MSOs—a segment that faces unique constraints in terms of resources, expertise, and scalability. This study addresses this gap through a mixed-methods investigation, combining qualitative case studies, quantitative surveys, and expert validation to develop and refine the Digital Transition Model (DTM), a phased, integrated framework for modernizing administrative operations. The DTM systematically merges digital record management, workflow automation, and collaborative communication platforms into a four-phase roadmap (Assessment, Digitization, Automation, Integration), ensuring a scalable, human-centric approach that aligns with the operational realities of MSOs. The research employed a multi-pronged methodology, including semi-structured interviews with 40 administrative managers and staff, process mapping workshops, and a survey of 200 MSOs across diverse industries, followed by pilot implementations and expert reviews to validate the model’s feasibility and impact. Key findings reveal that 68% of MSOs identify approval workflows and document retrieval as top bottlenecks, with manual processes costing organizations up to $48,000 annually in lost productivity per function. The study further uncovered that resistance to change, skill gaps, and fragmented tool adoption are the primary barriers to digital transformation, with 55% of MSOs citing budget constraints and 42% highlighting employee pushback as major challenges. The DTM was empirically validated through pilot implementations in healthcare, legal, and retail MSOs, demonstrating 50% reductions in approval cycle times, 70% fewer errors in automated workflows, and 30% improvements in compliance tracking. Practitioner feedback confirmed the model’s clarity, feasibility, and usefulness, particularly its modular design, which allows organizations to progress at their own pace while addressing cultural and technical hurdles.This paper introduces the first empirically grounded, MSO-specific digital transition model, offering leaders a practical, actionable roadmap to replace inefficiency with agility, reduce operational costs, and enhance competitiveness. By providing a structured yet adaptable framework, the DTM enables MSOs to transition from manual inefficiencies to digitally integrated administrative operations, positioning them for sustained growth in an increasingly digital economy.

Keywords: Change Management, Digital Transformation, Phased transition model, administrative modernization, business process management (BPM), collaborative communication platforms, digital record management, enterprise content management (ECM), medium-sized organizations (MSOs), workflow automation

Beyond Digital Infrastructure: The Societal Dimensions of Enterprise Cloud Adoption (Published)

This article examines the multifaceted societal implications of enterprise cloud adoption beyond its technical dimensions. Through a comprehensive analysis of case studies spanning commercial and governmental sectors, the research investigates how cloud-based digital transformation is reshaping workforce dynamics, environmental sustainability practices, economic structures, and public service delivery models. The findings suggest that enterprise cloud adoption serves as a catalyst for broader societal change, simultaneously creating new opportunities and challenges across various domains. The research identifies patterns of workforce restructuring, environmental resource optimization, business model innovation, and evolving civic engagement frameworks emerging from widespread cloud implementation. By contextualizing these changes within broader socioeconomic systems, this study contributes to an interdisciplinary understanding of how technological infrastructure choices at the enterprise level cascade into fundamental societal transformations. The article concludes with a proposed framework for holistically evaluating cloud adoption impacts and offers policy considerations aimed at maximizing societal benefits while mitigating potential risks associated with this technological paradigm shift.

Keywords: Digital Transformation, Environmental sustainability, enterprise cloud, socioeconomic impact, workforce development

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