Field operations represent the execution backbone of many commercial organizations. Yet in traditional Business Development models, field activities are frequently managed through delayed reporting cycles, fragmented data streams, and manual supervision structures. Such limitations generate information asymmetry, productivity dispersion, and reactive decision-making—particularly in geographically dispersed and high-volume markets. This article reconceptualizes digital enablement not as a technology upgrade, but as governance infrastructure within General Business Development. By embedding real-time data capture, harmonized performance taxonomies, productivity analytics, and structured escalation mechanisms into field operations, organizations can significantly improve commercial efficiency while preserving structural discipline. The study proposes an Integrated Digital Business Development Model that aligns data-driven field execution with capital efficiency, risk control, and performance transparency. Through shortened feedback loops and calibrated supervision, digital systems enhance decision precision, reduce margin leakage, and stabilize multi-regional performance variability. This reframing positions digital enablement as a core architectural lever within General Business Development—transforming field operations from reactive execution engines into adaptive, intelligence-driven performance systems.
Mufit Ozcan (Wed,) studied this question.