While most large-scale tech transformations underperform or stall, TransUnion is demonstrating what it takes to beat the odds: bold vision, deep integration of technology into business strategy, and a commitment to proving value from day one.
According to recent research from McKinsey, 90% of large companies are undergoing technology transformations, but only one-third are realizing their intended value. The MIT Technology Review paints an even grimmer picture — only 25% of organizations fully achieve their transformation goals.
But TransUnion, under the leadership of Chief Technology, Data and Analytics Officer [Full Name], is rewriting that narrative.
"We recognized early that transformation isn't just a tech initiative — it's a business strategy," said [Last Name]. "Our goal has been to simplify our infrastructure and align our expanding services around a shared foundation: consumer identity."
As the company has grown through acquisitions and diversified into fraud prevention and marketing services, it faced the challenge of siloed systems and fragmented tech stacks. To address this, TransUnion launched a unified solution enablement platform — designed to be scalable, efficient, and centered on shared data principles.
One critical differentiator: TransUnion became its own first customer.
"Before anything reaches a client, we test it ourselves," said [Last Name]. "Taking a 'customer zero' approach gives us real-world feedback and allows us to fine-tune our AI and data capabilities for adaptive, autonomous performance."
That internal testing is already informing the development of future use cases in predictive scoring, identity resolution, and audience segmentation, all powered by advanced analytics and AI.
To keep momentum high, the company also places heavy emphasis on transparent communication. Initiatives like internal newsletters, employee recognition, and leadership Q&A sessions are helping to sustain engagement through what is typically a multi-year journey.
The key, says [Last Name], is to be bold and intentional — but always focused on value.
"Most transformations fail because they underestimate the human element. We focused on getting the people, the process, and the platform right — and on proving progress every step of the way."
As many companies struggle to align strategy with execution, TransUnion's transformation journey offers a compelling case study in what it takes to get it right.
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