
The first step is to clarify what the company aims to achieve. A digital adoption plan shouldn't be limited to merely 'getting people to use a tool'. It must address specific business objectives.
For example: reducing data entry errors in an ERP, accelerating onboarding for a CRM, decreasing support tickets, improving data quality, or enhancing user autonomy.
These objectives must be measurable. It's best to define a few simple indicators: login rate, key feature usage rate, average time to complete a task, number of support requests, user satisfaction, or training completion level.
This step helps align IT, business, HR, and transformation teams around a shared vision.
Not all users have the same level of digital maturity. A sales director, an HR manager, a field technician, or a new hire will not have the same uses or face the same difficulties.
Therefore, user profiles need to be segmented. This segmentation can be done by job function, role, experience level, usage frequency, or location. The goal is to understand the expectations of each group.
This analysis helps identify friction points: complex screens, misunderstood processes, unclear features, lack of training, information overload, or fear of making a mistake.
A good digital adoption plan always starts from the ground up. It's not built solely on the tool's features, but on the real needs of the users.
Once profiles are identified, the main business journeys need to be mapped. This involves identifying the most important actions within the application.
For example: creating an opportunity in a CRM, validating a purchase request in an ERP, entering an absence in an HRIS, processing a customer ticket, or updating a product sheet.
For each journey, three questions must be answered: What is the task to be performed? Where does the user encounter difficulties? What support can help them at the right time?
This mapping serves as a basis for creating interactive guides, contextual help, targeted messages, or training modules.
Digital adoption is also a change management process. Users need to understand why the tool is changing, what benefits it will bring them, and how they will be supported.
Communication must be clear, regular, and tailored to different audiences. This can include pre-launch messages, getting-started guides, in-app notifications, or discussion sessions with managers.
The message must remain concrete. It's not enough to just talk about digital transformation. You need to explain the direct benefits: saving time, avoiding errors, easier access to information, better collaboration, or reducing repetitive tasks.
Onboarding is a key step in the digital adoption plan. When a user discovers a new tool, their initial interactions strongly influence their level of engagement.
Effective onboarding should be progressive. It's not about explaining everything at once, but about guiding the user through their first actions. Interactive journeys are particularly effective because they support the user directly within the application.
With a platform like K-NOW, it's possible to offer contextual guidance, targeted help, and resources tailored to each profile. Users learn within their work environment, precisely when they need to.
This approach reduces reliance on lengthy training sessions and improves autonomy.
Training remains essential, especially for complex business applications. However, it must be practical, immersive, and closely resemble real-world situations.
Users retain information better when they practice with concrete scenarios. This is particularly useful before a deployment, during a version upgrade, or for training new employees.
A simulator like K-STUDIO allows for the creation of interactive training sessions in an environment that replicates business applications. Employees can practice without risk, learn from their mistakes, and gain confidence before using the actual tool.
This approach enhances training effectiveness and minimizes initial roadblocks.
Digital adoption doesn't stop after launch. Users require ongoing support, especially as processes evolve or new features are introduced.
Contextual help delivers the right information at the right time. It can take the form of tooltips, step-by-step guides, alert messages, links to resources, or targeted notifications.
This approach improves user experience and reduces support load. Instead of searching for an answer in lengthy documentation, the user receives help directly within their workflow.
This is a core principle of "learning in the flow of work": learning by doing, without leaving your tool.
A digital adoption plan must be data-driven. Without measurement, it's difficult to know if the implemented actions are truly effective.
It's essential to track usage indicators, but also signs of friction. For example: underutilized features, abandoned journeys, frequent errors, excessive time spent on certain tasks, or an increase in support requests.
With a solution like K-VALUE, organizations can measure digital adoption, track gains, identify discrepancies by population, and analyze digital ROI.
This measurement enables better decision-making. It also helps demonstrate the value of training, change management, and user support initiatives.
Digital adoption is a continuous process. An effective plan must evolve with usage, tools, and business needs.
Collected data should be used to improve user journeys, adjust messages, enrich contextual help, or strengthen certain training programs. User feedback is also invaluable for detecting irritants that aren't visible in dashboards.
This continuous improvement approach transforms digital adoption into a true performance driver. It allows for a shift from a one-off approach to a sustainable Digital Employee Experience strategy.
Managers play a crucial role in the plan's success. They provide meaning, encourage best practices, and report on challenges from the field.
It's useful to identify business ambassadors or referents. These liaisons can test journeys, support their colleagues, and share feedback.
Digital adoption should not be solely driven by IT. It must become a shared project among IT, business units, training, transformation, and HR.
A successful digital adoption plan relies on a clear method: define objectives, understand users, map journeys, train, guide, measure, and continuously improve.
The challenge is not just technical. It is human, business-related, and organizational. By placing the user at the center, companies reduce digital friction, improve productivity, and enhance digital well-being.
With its K-NOW, K-STUDIO, and K-VALUE solutions, Knowmore supports organizations through all stages of digital adoption: tool guidance, immersive training, and ROI measurement. This comprehensive approach turns every business application into a true value driver.