Build a data-driven digital transformation roadmap for your organization. In four phases — maturity assessment, target state definition, initiative prioritization, and implementation planning — we create the strategic blueprint for your digital transformation. Over 520 projects successfully delivered.
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Without a clear digital vision and structured roadmap, organizations lack direction. Our experience from 520+ projects shows: companies with a data-driven roadmap achieve their transformation goals 3x faster than those without a strategic plan.
Years of Experience
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We follow a structured approach that takes your individual requirements into account.
Analysis of the current situation
Vision Development
Roadmap Development
Action planning
Implementation support
"Developing a clear digital vision and roadmap was the key to our successful digital transformation."

Head of Digital Transformation
Expertise & Experience:
11+ years of experience, Applied Computer Science degree, Strategic planning and management of AI projects, Cyber Security, Secure Software Development, AI
We offer you tailored solutions for your digital transformation
Development of an inspiring and realistic digital vision.
Creation of a detailed transformation roadmap.
Professional support during implementation.
Choose the area that fits your requirements
Business model innovation is the key to sustainable growth: We support you in transforming your existing business model or developing entirely new digital business models — from ideation to scalable MVP.
We guide you in building digital ecosystems that connect partners, customers and technologies. From platform strategy and governance design to scaling through network effects.
Digitalize your entire value chain end-to-end — from procurement through production to customer service. ADVISORI supports you with connected value creation, data-driven process automation, and measurable results.
Unlock new growth potential through effective platform business models. We support you in developing and implementing digital platform strategies -- from designing two-sided markets and activating network effects to sustainable monetization of your platform ecosystem.
The process typically takes 4–8 weeks, depending on the complexity of your organization and the number of stakeholders involved.
We combine a future-oriented perspective with practical feasibility. Drawing on our experience and proven methods, we develop visions that are both inspiring and realistic.
We define clear KPIs and milestones at the outset. These are reviewed regularly and adjusted as needed to make progress measurable.
A successful digital vision is far more than a technology-oriented picture of the future. It is a strategic instrument that orchestrates digital change, provides orientation, and aligns all stakeholders toward a common goal. The quality of a digital vision largely determines the success of the entire digital transformation. Inspiration and motivational power: Conveying a clear and compelling vision of the future that goes beyond purely technological aspects Creating an emotional connection through an authentic representation of corporate identity Formulating ambitious yet achievable goals that intrinsically motivate employees Using narrative elements and concrete future scenarios for tangibility and identification Incorporating purpose elements that clarify the higher meaning of digital transformation Strategic embedding and alignment: Smooth integration into the overall corporate strategy and value creation logic Clear derivation from corporate identity, mission, and core values Consideration of external market trends and disruption potential Alignment with long-term customer relationships rather than short-term technology trends Balance between focus and.
A successful digital roadmap bridges the gap between visionary ambition and pragmatic feasibility. It translates the long-term digital vision into concrete, sequential steps while balancing innovation with achievability. The art lies in finding equilibrium between impactful change and realistic implementation. Establishing a sound baseline: Conducting a comprehensive digital maturity assessment for an honest assessment of the current position Analyzing existing digital capabilities and resources within the organization Identifying legacy systems and technical debt that must be addressed Assessing readiness for change and digital competence within the organization Conducting benchmarking against competitors and industry leaders Structuring priorities and dependencies: Applying a multi-dimensional evaluation framework (value creation, urgency, complexity, risk) Identifying foundational initiatives that form the basis for further endeavors Building a logical sequence with clear dependencies between initiatives Considering critical paths and bottleneck resources in sequencing Balancing short-term quick wins with long-term strategic initiatives Integrating agility and adaptability: Designing the roadmap as an adaptive document with.
Developing a successful digital vision and roadmap requires thoughtful stakeholder engagement that goes well beyond top management and the IT department. An inclusive, multi-perspective approach ensures that all relevant viewpoints are considered while simultaneously creating the necessary acceptance for subsequent implementation. Internal leadership levels: Top management: Ensuring strategic alignment and resource provision Middle management: Expertise on operational challenges and feasibility Department heads: Contributing function-specific requirements and priorities Supervisory bodies: Consideration of governance aspects and long-term value creation Emerging leaders: Incorporating future-oriented perspectives and new ways of thinking Employees and specialists: Digital natives and tech-savvy employees: Contributing digital expertise and effective ideas Subject matter experts from core processes: Ensuring practical applicability and identifying pain points Change agents and multipliers: Promoting acceptance and supporting communication Works council and employee representatives: Addressing concerns and incorporating the employee perspective Interdisciplinary task forces: Combining diverse professional perspectives for comprehensive solution approaches External perspectives: Customers and users: Contributing needs, expectations, and.
Translating a digital vision into concrete, measurable goals and KPIs is essential for steering progress and demonstrating the success of digital transformation. This operationalization creates accountability, enables fact-based management, and motivates through visible progress. The art lies in making both hard and soft factors of digital transformation measurable. Developing a strategic goal hierarchy: Deriving strategic transformation goals directly from the digital vision Building a clear goal hierarchy with cascading to various organizational levels Defining long-term, medium-term, and short-term goals with logical interconnections Balancing direct business outcomes with transformation-related goals Ensuring SMART criteria for all goals (Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Realistic, Time-bound) Establishing a multi-dimensional KPI framework: Developing a balanced KPI set across various dimensions (finance, customers, processes, capabilities) Integrating leading indicators (forward-looking) and lagging indicators (results-oriented) Considering quantitative and qualitative metrics for comprehensive performance measurement Setting baseline values, target ranges, and milestones for each metric Aligning with industry benchmarks and best practice standards where appropriate Defining.
An effective digital vision workshop is a structured, creative process that helps an organization develop a shared understanding of its digital future. The quality of this workshop can be decisive for the success of the entire digital transformation, as it sets the course for all subsequent steps. Strategic preparation and participant selection: Careful definition of workshop objectives and expected outcomes Assembling a diverse group of participants representing various hierarchical levels and functional areas Conducting pre-interviews with key stakeholders to identify expectations and challenges Creating a concise briefing document with relevant market trends and competitive analyses Distributing inspiring materials and case studies to prepare participants Workshop structure and methodology: Opening with an inspiration session on digital trends, technologies, and disruption scenarios Conducting customer journey mapping to identify pain points and opportunities Applying the Future Backwards method to develop different future scenarios Using design thinking elements to promote creativity and user-centricity Integrating parallel working groups with regular.
Successfully connecting the digital vision with existing corporate strategies is essential for coherent overall alignment and the avoidance of isolated transformation initiatives. This integration ensures that digital innovations are understood not as separate technological endeavors, but as an integral part of corporate development. Identifying strategic connection points: Conducting a systematic analysis of existing strategy documents and corporate objectives Identifying areas of overlap and natural connections between the digital vision and core strategy Recognizing gaps and contradictions between digital ambitions and traditional strategic assumptions Deriving digital potential to accelerate existing strategic initiatives Assessing the contribution of the digital vision to overarching corporate goals and KPIs Ensuring governance integration: Establishing an integrated strategy governance model with digital representation Defining clear responsibilities for coordination between digital and overall strategy Setting up regular cross-check mechanisms to ensure consistency Harmonizing planning and management cycles between digital and conventional areas Creating shared resource and budget allocation for strategic initiatives Building narratives.
Various mistakes in developing a digital roadmap can jeopardize the success of the entire transformation initiative. Awareness of these typical pitfalls enables proactive planning and helps to navigate critical hurdles early. Avoiding these mistakes is essential for a realistic and effective implementation of the digital vision. Strategic misalignments: Developing an isolated digital roadmap without connection to the overall corporate strategy Overemphasis on technologies rather than business value and customer benefit Insufficient consideration of external market dynamics and competitive developments Spreading initiatives too broadly without clear focus and prioritization Lack of balance between effective innovations and incremental improvements Planning and implementation pitfalls: Creating an overly rigid, detailed long-term roadmap without flexibility for adjustments Unrealistic timelines without consideration of organizational absorption capacity Underestimating legacy systems and technical dependencies Insufficient consideration of resource and competency requirements Neglecting dependencies between different initiatives Stakeholder and cultural aspects: Insufficient involvement of relevant stakeholders in the roadmap development process Failure to consider.
Regularly reviewing and updating the digital vision is essential to remain relevant in a dynamic technological and economic environment. A successful digital vision is not a static document, but a living management instrument that must be continuously refined and adapted to new circumstances. Establishing systematic review processes: Implementing a formalized annual cycle for comprehensive vision reviews Setting up quarterly pulse checks to identify adjustment needs Developing a structured framework for assessing the currency of the vision Establishing an agile feedback system for continuous collection of impulses Integrating vision reviews into existing strategic planning cycles Creating evidence-based decision foundations: Continuous monitoring of relevant technology trends and market developments Systematic analysis of customer feedback and changing user expectations Evaluation of performance data from ongoing digital initiatives Conducting regular competitive analyses and benchmarking studies Establishing a trend radar with defined thresholds for adjustment needs Designing collaborative update processes: Involving a diverse group of stakeholders in revision workshops Using.
Effectively communicating a digital vision to all employees is a decisive success factor for digital transformation. A vision that is not understood, internalized, and lived remains an abstract concept without impactful effect. The art lies in conveying the digital vision in a way that resonates at all levels of the organization and inspires concrete action. Target group-appropriate preparation: Developing different communication formats for various hierarchical levels and functional areas Adapting complexity and level of detail according to the digital maturity and prior knowledge of the target group Translating abstract vision concepts into concrete implications for specific roles and work areas Creating function- and department-specific narratives that highlight personal relevance Considering different learning styles through multimedia communication formats Cascaded communication strategy: Empowering top management as primary ambassadors of the digital vision Training leaders at all levels to authentically convey the vision Establishing a network of digital champions as multipliers in various areas of the organization Developing.
The role of technology in the digital vision and roadmap is complex and multifaceted. It is simultaneously an enabler, a driver, and sometimes also a limitation for digital transformation. The key lies in neither overestimating nor underestimating technology, but viewing it as a strategic element in the context of business goals, customer needs, and organizational capabilities. Visionary impulses and spaces of possibility: Identifying new technological potential as a source of inspiration for the digital vision Recognizing effective technology trends with impactful potential for the business model Exploring effective technology applications as a catalyst for creative thinking Using technology foresight to anticipate future market developments Balancing what is technologically feasible with what is strategically meaningful in vision development Strategic prioritization in the technology portfolio: Distinguishing between foundational, differentiating, and experimental technologies Developing a balanced technology portfolio along the S-curve (emerging, growing, mature) Considering dependencies and synergies between different technology areas Evaluating technologies in terms of their strategic fit and value creation potential Integrating best-of-breed vs.
Integrating customer and market perspectives into the digital vision is essential to ensure that transformation creates genuine value and does not become an end in itself. A customer-oriented digital vision connects technological possibilities with actual needs and pain points, thereby generating relevance and competitive advantages. This outside-in perspective prevents digital transformation from missing market needs. Systematic needs and behavioral analysis: Conducting in-depth user research with qualitative interviews and contextual observations Analyzing digital customer journeys to identify friction points and optimization potential Using voice-of-customer programs for continuous capture of customer feedback Leveraging social listening and online sentiment analyses to capture unfiltered feedback Developing usage analytics for existing digital touchpoints and services Integrating customer insights into the vision process: Inviting customer advisory boards or lead users to vision workshops Creating data-based personas as reference points for vision development Involving customer experience teams and customer contact points within the organization Establishing customer safari formats for executives and decision-makers.
Balancing innovation with operational stability is one of the greatest challenges in designing a digital roadmap. While innovations are indispensable for future-proof business models, the reliability of existing systems and processes must not be compromised. A well-conceived digital roadmap creates space for impactful change without impairing operational excellence. Establishing strategic portfolio management: Developing a balanced innovation portfolio with defined allocations for different horizons Applying the three-horizons model (H1: core business, H2: emerging opportunities, H3: visionary initiatives) Implementing a scoring system that considers both innovation and stability criteria Using risk-return profiles to diversify the digital transformation portfolio Establishing continuous portfolio reviews with clear governance mechanisms Advancing architectural decoupling: Implementing microservices architectures to isolate effective components Developing API strategies for the secure integration of new solutions Using feature toggles and canary releases for controlled introduction of new features Establishing strangler pattern approaches for the gradual modernization of legacy systems Creating technical decoupling points between stable and experimental.
Successfully integrating different generations into the digital vision process is essential for a broadly supported and sustainable digital transformation. Different generations bring diverse perspectives, experiences, and digital affinities that can ideally complement one another. The art lies in developing an inclusive approach that utilizes the strengths of all age groups while simultaneously removing specific barriers. Designing cross-generational collaboration formats: Establishing reverse mentoring programs between digital natives and experienced employees Organizing cross-generational innovation labs with a balanced age structure Developing workshop formats that accommodate different learning and discussion styles Using pair-working approaches in digital projects and initiatives Creating physical and virtual collaboration spaces that support different ways of working Considering generation-specific motivational factors: Analyzing and considering different values and career expectations Adapting communication of the digital vision to various generation-specific motivational drivers Highlighting different benefit aspects (e.g., efficiency gains, innovation potential, work-life balance) Designing incentive systems that address different preferences and needs Creating space for generation-specific.
Connecting the digital vision with strategic talent and competency development is essential for the success of digital transformation. Without the right skills and talents, even the most brilliant digital vision remains unrealizable. At the same time, the vision can serve as a powerful motivator for learning and development when both dimensions are systematically linked. Conducting a strategic competency needs analysis: Deriving concrete competency requirements from the elements of the digital vision Conducting a digital skills gap analysis for various employee groups and functions Identifying critical digital roles and competencies for vision implementation Developing competency models that encompass technical, methodological, and cultural dimensions Prioritizing development areas based on the digital roadmap and transformation stages Designing individual learning and development paths: Designing personalized digital learning journeys linked to vision elements Implementing a skill mapping system for transparency on existing and required competencies Creating learning journeys with direct reference to strategic digital initiatives Developing microlearning formats for skills.
A well-conceived digital vision can act as a powerful catalyst for positive cultural transformation. It not only sets technological and strategic impulses, but also shapes the values, behaviors, and underlying assumptions that determine daily interactions. The digital vision offers the opportunity to develop a future-proof corporate culture that firmly anchors innovation, agility, and continuous learning in the organizational mindset. Explicitly anchoring the cultural dimension in the vision: Integrating explicit cultural guiding principles as core elements of the digital vision Formulating concrete behavioral expectations and mindset descriptions Developing culture stories that make the change tangible and emotionally accessible Creating positive visions of the future that connect cultural and technological aspects Defining a common language and metaphors for the desired cultural change Strengthening the cultural role model function of leadership: Raising awareness and empowering leaders as cultural role models and multipliers Developing leadership principles that exemplify the digital culture Establishing leadership routines that regularly address cultural aspects.
Agile methods provide a valuable methodological framework for developing and implementing a digital roadmap. They enable an adaptive, iterative approach that is particularly well-suited to the dynamics and uncertainty of digital transformation processes. Integrating agile principles into the roadmap process promotes flexibility, customer focus, and continuous improvement of transformation outcomes. Implementing iterative roadmap development: Designing the roadmap as a living document with regular review and adjustment cycles Applying the concept of rolling planning with detailed near-term and flexible long-term horizons Introducing timebox rhythms for roadmap reviews and adjustments (e.g., quarterly) Implementing a backlog concept for roadmap items with continuous prioritization Using sprint or increment structures for planning implementation phases Using agile planning and visualization techniques: Applying story mapping to visualize the customer journey and transformation story Using release planning to structure larger transformation steps Employing planning poker or similar techniques for effort and complexity estimation Implementing Kanban boards to visualize progress and manage workflow Developing.
Regulatory requirements are a decisive factor in designing a digital vision and roadmap, particularly in heavily regulated industries. The art lies in viewing compliance not as a pure obstacle, but as a strategic component of digital transformation to be proactively incorporated into planning. A forward-looking regulatory perspective can even create competitive advantages and unlock innovation potential. Implementing systematic regulatory scanning: Establishing a structured monitoring process for relevant regulatory developments Building a radar system for early detection of new or changing compliance requirements Conducting regular impact analyses of regulatory changes on the digital strategy Developing scenarios for different regulatory development paths Building direct communication channels with regulatory authorities and industry associations Integrating compliance by design into the digital architecture: Anchoring regulatory requirements as fundamental design principles Implementing privacy-by-design and security-by-design in all digital initiatives Developing reusable compliance components for digital architectures Creating flexible systems that can be easily adapted to changing regulatory requirements Implementing automated compliance.
Data governance plays a fundamental and increasingly central role in the digital vision and roadmap. As a strategic framework for the responsible, effective, and value-creating handling of data, it is not merely a compliance topic, but a decisive success factor for data-driven business models and digital innovations. A forward-looking digital vision must anchor data governance as a core component. Laying strategic data governance foundations: Positioning data as a strategic corporate asset in the digital vision Developing a comprehensive data governance framework with clear principles and guidelines Establishing dedicated roles and responsibilities (data owner, data stewards, chief data officer) Building a data governance board with cross-functional representation Integrating data governance into the overarching digital governance structure Anchoring data quality and data management processes: Implementing systematic data quality measures as a roadmap element Developing enterprise-wide metadata management for semantic consistency Establishing master data management for business-critical master data Creating data lifecycle management processes from capture to archiving.
Small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) face particular challenges when developing a digital vision, but also have specific advantages. With limited resources, they must proceed strategically, prioritize pragmatically, and utilize their agility as a strength. A tailored digital vision for SMEs focuses on impactful transformations and takes into account the specific structures and cultures of smaller organizations. Pragmatic analysis of the digital starting position: Conducting a focused digital maturity analysis with SME-specific criteria Identifying the most critical digital pain points and quick-win potential Analyzing the digital competitive environment with a particular focus on comparable SMEs Assessing existing technologies and systems in terms of future viability Honest assessment of available resources and competencies for digital transformation Focused vision design with strategic prioritization: Formulating a clear, concise digital vision with direct business relevance Concentrating on 3–5 strategic core elements rather than a broad transformation agenda Developing a digital target picture with direct reference to customer value and competitive.
Measuring and communicating the ROI of a digital transformation is a complex challenge, as digital initiatives often have far-reaching, indirect, and long-term effects. An effective ROI assessment must encompass both quantitative and qualitative dimensions and consider various time horizons in order to convey a realistic picture of the value contribution. Developing a multi-dimensional ROI framework: Building a balanced set of metrics across various value dimensions Integrating financial, operational, customer-oriented, and strategic metrics Considering direct value contributions and indirect effects of digital transformation Developing leading indicators (early signs of success) and lagging indicators (realized values) Building an impact chain that illustrates the connection between digital initiatives and business outcomes Systematically capturing financial value contributions: Identifying and measuring cost savings through process digitization and automation Capturing revenue increases through new digital products and services Calculating productivity gains based on time and resource savings Assessing improved capital efficiency through optimized inventories and resource utilization Quantifying risk reductions and.
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