A digital transformation strategy engagement with EMUG delivers five outputs: a current state digital maturity assessment scoring the organization across 40 capability dimensions benchmarked against sector peers; a digital transformation vision and strategic capability target framework aligned to business objectives; a target architecture blueprint covering technology, data, process, and organizational dimensions; a prioritized use-case register with ROI analysis; and a three to five year transformation roadmap with initiative-level scope, timeline, investment, and benefit definition — formatted for capital allocation committee presentation. The EMUG CHART Framework delivers these outputs within 8 to 14 weeks.
Standard IT strategy focuses on technology selection, infrastructure management, and IT service delivery optimization. EMUG’s digital transformation strategy covers a broader scope: it defines how business processes, organizational capabilities, and data assets need to change alongside technology to achieve competitive digital outcomes. For engineering and manufacturing enterprises, this means the strategy addresses product development process redesign enabled by PLM, manufacturing operations improvement enabled by MES and IoT, quality management transformation enabled by AI, and supply chain resilience enabled by predictive analytics — not just which technology platforms to adopt. Every recommendation specifies the process, organizational, and data change required alongside the technology investment.
EMUG uses a structured use-case scoring methodology in the CHART Roadmap phase that evaluates every identified digital opportunity across five dimensions: ROI potential (quantified benefit versus implementation cost), strategic alignment (contribution to defined strategic objectives), data readiness (availability and quality of data required), implementation complexity (technical and organizational change required), and organizational change capacity (readiness of affected functions to absorb the change). Each use case receives a composite score that determines its priority ranking and roadmap position. High-ROI, high-alignment, low-complexity use cases are prioritized for first-wave delivery to demonstrate value quickly; complex, high-value use cases are sequenced later once organizational capability has been built.
EMUG develops investment-grade business cases for each transformation initiative in the CHART Roadmap phase. The process starts with benefit quantification — using the client’s actual cost data (labor costs, scrap rates, downtime costs, inventory values) to calculate the financial value of each identified improvement. Implementation costs are estimated based on EMUG’s reference cost data from comparable completed programs, adjusted for the client’s organizational scale and technology landscape complexity. NPV, IRR, and payback period are then calculated per initiative and in aggregate for the full roadmap. The business case format is structured for capital allocation committee presentation at large manufacturing enterprises, with sensitivity analysis showing the range of outcomes under optimistic, base, and conservative scenarios.
A focused digital transformation strategy engagement covering current state assessment, target architecture design, use-case prioritization, roadmap development, and investment case runs 8 to 14 weeks using the EMUG CHART Framework. The timeline depends primarily on the breadth of scope (number of functions assessed), the complexity of the existing technology landscape, and the availability of senior stakeholders for interviews and workshops. EMUG designs the engagement to respect the time constraints of CIO, CDO, and VP-level executives — with structured workshop formats that extract the required insight in focused two to four hour sessions rather than extended working groups.
Yes. EMUG designs digital transformation strategies for global organizations with operations across Europe, the Middle East, Asia-Pacific, and the Americas. For multi-country strategy engagements, EMUG assesses digital maturity at both global and regional levels — identifying where global standardization is appropriate and where regional differentiation is required due to regulatory requirements, system landscape differences, or operational context variation. Strategy outputs include a global transformation roadmap with regional implementation variants for key markets, regulatory compliance mapping per region (GDPR for Europe, ITAR for US defense, China Cybersecurity Law for China operations, India DPDP Act for India), and a global versus local governance design for program execution.
EMUG frequently engages with organizations that have an internally defined digital strategy that has not achieved investment approval or execution traction. In these situations, EMUG conducts a strategy validation engagement rather than starting from scratch — reviewing the existing strategy against the CHART Framework dimensions, identifying the gaps that have prevented investment approval or execution progress (typically insufficient ROI evidence, inadequate technology specificity, or lack of implementation sequence logic), and strengthening the strategy in the specific dimensions where it is weak. This approach typically runs four to six weeks and respects the internal work already completed while addressing the decision-making blockers.
EMUG delivers digital transformation strategy to automotive OEMs and Tier 1 suppliers (IATF 16949 compliance alignment), aerospace and defense organizations (AS9100 and ITAR requirements), industrial machinery and equipment manufacturers, energy, oil, and gas companies (IEC 62443 OT security architecture), and engineering services and EPC firms. Delivery countries include Germany, France, UK, Netherlands, Sweden, Italy, Spain, Poland, Czech Republic, UAE, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait, Bahrain, India, China, Japan, South Korea, Malaysia, Thailand, USA, Canada, Mexico, Brazil, South Africa, Nigeria, and Kenya.