- Mohammed Saaida 1* & Shaban Jamal Ayyat 2
- Al-Istiqlal University, Jericho – Palestine.
- DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.17087293
The research
examines how digital transformation is implemented, its effects, and strategic
adaptation in the public sectors of developing countries. It highlights how
online technologies reshape public administration by increasing efficiency,
enhancing transparency, and delivering citizen-focused services, while also
supporting national development. The study also explores the role of digital
public services in economic growth, employment, innovation, improved
governance, and reducing digital exclusion. Persistent issues such as weak
infrastructure, limited digital skills, regulatory barriers, and fragmented IT
systems obstruct effective implementation. Drawing on international examples,
the paper identifies key success factors: strategic leadership, process standardization,
centralized IT control, capacity building, stakeholder engagement, and
public-private collaboration. Cultural, organizational, and behavioral changes
in governance are also integral to digital transformation, which extends beyond
operational improvements. By analyzing implementation strategies, performance
tools, and experiences of smaller municipalities, the study contributes to a
theory of digital transformation tailored to the specific contexts of
developing countries. This approach emphasizes institutional capacity, social
inclusion, agility, and long-term adaptability for sustainable and effective
transformation.