Poging GOUD - Vrij

Boards in the digital age: Are directors digitally fit?

The Star

|

June 03, 2025

IN TODAY'S boardrooms, digital transformation is no longer a distant theme reserved for CIOs and consultants. It is a central governance concern; one that demands fluency, not just familiarity. As companies confront the disruptive tides of artificial intelligence, cybersecurity risks and evolving data ecosystems, a sobering question emerges: are boards equipped to govern in the digital age?

- NQOBANI MZIZI

Boards in the digital age: Are directors digitally fit?

While legislation in most jurisdictions does not yet mandate digital literacy as a formal prerequisite for directorship, it is increasingly becoming an unspoken expectation among investors, regulators and stakeholders who demand boards capable of navigating complex digital landscapes. A board that lacks digital fluency cannot effectively interrogate strategy, oversee risk, or drive innovation. Digital illiteracy has moved from the margins of boardroom discourse to the heart of strategic risk.

The Cell C case is instructive. Once a rising player in South Africa's telecoms landscape, the company held immense promise in a sector where data was fast becoming the new currency. But as market demands shifted and digital infrastructure became a critical differentiator in competitiveness, Cell C struggled to keep pace. Insiders reported that executives repeatedly raised concerns about the scale, urgency and direction of investment in data infrastructure and innovation.

While internal deliberations remain confidential, available evidence and industry observations suggest the board was slow to fully grasp the scale and urgency of the technological shift, possibly due to competing priorities, an operational focus, or gaps in strategic foresight about how rapidly and fundamentally technology was reshaping the industry. This disconnect between executive urgency and board-level understanding led to delays in decision-making, missed partnerships and underinvestment in critical platforms. Over time, the company lost ground to competitors with more agile, digitally attuned leadership. What followed was a drawn-out financial restructuring that shook investor confidence and highlighted the consequences of strategic inertia. Cell C's challenges were not simply financial. They were also governance failures, rooted in an inability to engage with technology-led change at the level it demanded.

MEER VERHALEN VAN The Star

The Star

Reigniting the spirit of 2010: How Bafana Bafana’s qualification can unite a nation again

TWO weeks ago, Bafana Bafana made history.

time to read

4 mins

October 31, 2025

The Star

Mercedes-Benz: A million-km journey

WHO says a car can't run for more than a million kilometers on the clock?

time to read

1 mins

October 31, 2025

The Star

The Star

Alleged gunmen in AKA murder case drop extradition appeal from Eswatini

THE two alleged gunmen in the daring murder of award-winning South African rapper Kiernan ‘AKA’ Forbes and his friend Tebello “Tibz’ Motsoane are expected to return to SA after they abandoned the appeal against extradition.

time to read

1 min

October 31, 2025

The Star

Boks target breakdown and aerial battle to ground Brave Blossoms

THE Springboks have identified the aerial battle and breakdown as the two key areas they must dominate against Japan tomorrow to get their November Tests off to a strong start.

time to read

2 mins

October 31, 2025

The Star

The role of commercial banks and DFls in Southern Africa’s ral expansion

ACROSS southern Africa, thousands of kilometres of Cape gauge railway lines run through bustling cities, between green valleys, and alongside grassy savannahs.

time to read

4 mins

October 31, 2025

The Star

'Ladies heading to Durban for holiday': Details emerge around N3 crash

TRAFFIC authorities in the Free State have revealed that the minibus taxi involved in yesterday's deadly crash on the N3 between Van Reenens Pass and Montrose veered off its lane before colliding head-on with an oncoming truck.

time to read

1 mins

October 31, 2025

The Star

5 offshore investment myths South African investors need to stop believing

THE process of offshore investing seems intimidating to many people, but the reality is far less complex than it seems.

time to read

5 mins

October 31, 2025

The Star

South Africans who worked in UK may qualify for substantial pension payouts

THOUSANDS of South Africans who previously worked in the United Kingdom may be eligible for UK State Pension benefits worth millions of rands, but remain unaware of their entitlement.

time to read

2 mins

October 31, 2025

The Star

Restoring trust and safety in the Western Cape

WHEN Acting Police Minister Firoz Cachalia outlined his new plan to tackle gangsterism and extortion in the Western Cape in Parliament, he spoke to a truth every resident of the province already knows: the problem is not just crime; it is fear.

time to read

3 mins

October 31, 2025

The Star

The Star

Joburg traders say city's clean-up is destroying their livelihoods

FOREIGN national traders selling goods in the Johannesburg CBD have spoken out about alleged harassment and mistreatment by metro police, as well as by members of anti-migrant groups such as March and March and political parties including Operation Dudula and the Patriotic Alliance (PA).

time to read

3 mins

October 31, 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size