Every year, companies spend millions on digital tools they don’t need and can’t use effectively. AI platforms that sit idle. ERP systems that create more work than they solve. Dashboards that nobody looks at.
The root cause isn’t bad technology. It’s buying before measuring.
Most companies invest in digital transformation based on gut feel, peer pressure, or what a vendor sold them. They skip the critical first step: understanding where they actually stand.
Measuring your digital maturity changes that. It gives you a baseline, a direction, and a way to know if you’re making progress. Without it, you’re flying blind.
This guide walks through how to measure digital maturity: what to look at, what to avoid, and how to turn measurement into action.
What Does It Mean to Measure Digital Maturity?
Let’s be precise about what we’re measuring. Digital maturity is your organization’s ability to use technology and data effectively to achieve business goals. It’s not about how many tools you own. It’s about how well they work together, how your people use them, and whether they actually move the business forward.
Think of it like a health checkup. You don’t go to the doctor to prove you’re healthy. You go to find out what’s actually going on, so you can fix problems before they become crises. Measuring digital maturity works the same way.
Measuring is not the same as assessing. Measurement is the process of collecting data against specific criteria. Assessment is the evaluation that follows: interpreting what the measurements mean and deciding what to do. You need both, but they’re different steps. Skip the measurement and your assessment is just an opinion.
Why Most Companies Get It Wrong
Data from organizations that have taken our digital maturity assessment shows a consistent pattern: companies overestimate their digital maturity by at least one stage.
The executive team sees the software licenses they’ve purchased and assumes a high level of maturity. Meanwhile, frontline employees are copying data between systems and maintaining shadow spreadsheets just to get their jobs done. The gap between perception and reality is where transformation projects go to die.
Common mistakes when measuring digital maturity:
A structured measurement approach eliminates these blind spots. But what should you actually measure?
The 6 Dimensions of Digital Maturity
To get a complete picture, you need to measure across multiple dimensions that capture both technical capability and organizational readiness. Our Digital Maturity Assessment evaluates six dimensions, adapted from European Commission recommendations for growing businesses.
A Practical Framework for Measuring Digital Maturity
With these six dimensions in mind, here’s a step-by-step process for measuring where your organization actually stands.
Score Each Dimension
Rate your organization from 1 to 4 on each of the six dimensions, using the four stages of digital maturity as your reference. Score each dimension separately – a company might be Level 4 on Automation & AI but Level 1 on Human-Centric Digitalization, and that imbalance tells you where to focus.
Level 2: Fragmented
Level 3: Integrated
Level 4: Optimized
Collect Evidence, Not Opinions
The biggest risk in self-assessment is bias. Reduce it by collecting actual evidence:
• Interview frontline employees, not just managers
• Document specific examples of manual workarounds
• Track the time spent on data reconciliation between systems
• Count the number of disconnected tools used for a single workflow
Identify the Gaps
Your overall score is less important than the gaps between dimensions. A company with high Automation scores but low Human-Centric Digitalization scores will struggle to get adoption. A company with strong Data Governance but weak Digital Business Strategy will build dashboards that nobody acts on. The gaps reveal your real priorities – fixing the weakest dimension typically produces the fastest improvement overall.
Measure Progress Over Time
Digital maturity is not a one-time score. Re-measure every 6 to 12 months to track whether investments are actually moving the needle. If your scores don’t change after spending money, you’re investing in the wrong things.
Common Pitfalls in Measuring Digital Maturity
Even with a solid framework, measurement can go wrong. Watch for these:
Vanity metrics
Number of software licenses, total IT spend, pages of documentation: these don’t measure maturity. Measure outcomes and integration, not inputs.
Confirmation bias
People naturally rate their own department higher. If every team gives itself a 3 or 4, your measurement isn’t honest. Look for the variation.
Consultant-driven scores
External assessors can be useful, but they see your organization from the outside and miss daily friction. Combine internal and external perspectives.
Framework shopping
There are dozens of digital maturity models. The best one is the one you actually use. Don’t get stuck comparing frameworks instead of measuring reality.
What Your Measurement Should Tell You
A good digital maturity measurement answers three questions. If your measurement doesn’t produce clear answers to all three, you haven’t measured deeply enough.
1
Where are we now? An honest baseline across all six dimensions.
2
Where is the biggest leverage point? The weakest dimension that, if improved, would generate the most impact.
3
What should we do first? A prioritized, actionable next step – not a 50-point transformation plan.
Why a Structured Assessment Beats a DIY Approach
The self-assessment framework above will take you far, further than most companies ever get. But it has limits. Internal bias is hard to eliminate. Cross-industry benchmarks add context that internal scoring lacks. And translating measurement into a practical roadmap requires experience that most organizations don’t have in-house.
A structured digital maturity assessment addresses these gaps by combining self-evaluation with external perspective, industry benchmarks, and a clear action plan. It evaluates across all six dimensions and produces a scored result tied to specific next steps.
We’ve developed our own free Digital Maturity Assessment based on European Commission recommendations, adapted to the real needs of growing businesses. It measures across these six dimensions, takes about five minutes, and delivers your score, your stage, and a personalized action plan.
Whether you use our assessment or build your own measurement process, the important thing is to start. The worst measurement is the one you never take.
From Measurement to Action
Once you know where you stand, the real work begins. The goal isn’t a higher maturity score. It’s better business outcomes that come from using technology more effectively.
For organizations that score high across all dimensions, the next frontier is intelligent transformation: integrating AI and advanced analytics to create systems that learn, predict, and adapt autonomously. But this builds on a foundation of solid digital maturity. Without the foundation, the advanced layers won’t hold.
The path forward is straightforward: measure honestly, identify your biggest gap, address it systematically, and re-measure to confirm progress. Each cycle moves you one stage closer to true digital maturity.
The alternative is to keep guessing. And guessing costs more than measuring ever will.