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  September 22, 2005


Like people, organizations tend to change slowly, and in response to external forces. In people, changes are more evident from generation to generation (the cause of generation 'gaps' and a great deal of family stress). New organizations, likewise, are more likely to manifest behaviours responsive to the needs of their customers, employees, and other stakeholders than those that have been around awhile. We call these behaviours, collectively, culture.

What changes in the needs and wants of stakeholders will precipitate changes in organizational culture in the coming generation? Here are some likely bets:

Today's Behaviour:Tomorrow's Behaviour:
Selling aggressively, using researsed persuasive techniquesConversing with customers to discover, and then respond to, articulated customer needs
Advertising to 'create demand'Viral marketing
Analyzing the market, using surveys and demographic dataObserving customer buying behaviours, using 'cultural anthropology' techniques
Standardizing processes and productsImprovising processes and products
Collecting and searching for best practicesScanning and probing for emerging patterns
Executive decision-making by managers and experts based on experience and advice from consultantsCanvassing the crowd to make decisions based on collective wisdom
Marketing trials to test new products using prototypesCo-developing new products with customers and other partners using multiple parallel experiments
Make huge margins on software and content that has almost no variable costGive away software and content to attract customers to personalized events and containers
Tell customers how good your product is, using various mediaShow customers how good your product is, by giving demonstrations and samples
Offer sophisticated, multifunction productsOffer simple, elegant products that do a few things really well
Collect and archive large amounts of knowledge just in caseCanvass for knowledge just in time
Offer low-cost products that break or become obsolete or unfashionable in a few yearsOffer durable, upgradable products that never go out of fashion, and do more with less
Use size, acquisitions and vast intellectual property to dominate their marketUse innovation, agility and buzz to disrupt their market
Price products at what the market will bearPrice products at what customers can really afford

These changes will be driven by:
  • a shift in knowledge and power from suppliers to customers and end-consumers
  • the failure of the 'blockbuster' model of product offerings (where all the profit comes from one or two smash hit products, often followed by cheap, mediocre 'sequels') as consumers catch on
  • the availability through the Internet of almost infinite choice at modest cost
  • an Internet culture that believes that software and content should be free to all
  • the end of cheap oil, labour and other resources
  • new, innovative competitors in many industries that won't need to be big to have a huge market impact, and which will be astonishingly prolific and agile (imagine a thousand Googles!)
  • the wide-spread realization (thanks to interest rate spikes and a shrinking economy) that living beyond our needs is reckless and unsustainable
  • a growing lack of trust in corporations, thanks to an ongoing litany of scandals
It's going to be fascinating to watch this evolution. For the Fortune 500 (and for their shareholders) it's likely to be bloody, a replay of the transformation that has seen huge organizations crumble and small upstarts soar past them over and over since the start of the Industrial Revolution. What's likely to be different this time, however, is that the new upstarts will not grow into megaliths, but will instead spin off divisions into hundreds of small, autonomous, ever-agile entrepreneurial companies.

The big corporations just don't get it. They don't understand why so many are outraged that we're sitting on intellectual and financial capital that could end disease and poverty on this planet, but we can't do so because it would be unacceptable to the handful of staggeringly rich families that control this capital. They don't understand why Google is giving so many of its brilliant and valuable new tools and content away free. They don't understand why eBay paid billions to buy Skype. They don't understand why so many 'respectable' people don't equate file-sharing, the modern equivalent of going to the library, as theft. They are still stuck in the same mentality that predicted the telephone would never catch on, or that the world only needed a handful of computers.

The future of business is a world of ends. If our world lasts that long, of course.

7:46:59 PM  trackback []  comment []


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