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« Mobile advertising evolving: user-distributed ads, user-created ads, user-priced ads | Main | Thought for the day: We are moving from being materialists, to being digitalists »

April 03, 2008

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Tomi Ahonen

Very good point Alan

Yes, its a structural change. Like the industrial revolution. We had experts who made shoes before the industrial revolution. Experts who made barrels. Experts who made horse carriages, etc. But these were all hand-made, took forever to make, and cost a fortune. Then came the industrial revolution, and suddenly we had abundant power - first steam power, eventually electricity driven power - to do part of the manual labour. Then the jobs changed, the quantity of production could be increased - and often even the quality of products could be increased with mass production and increased automation.

But that was a structural change - to just about everything. Factories, now needed big warehouses of supplies because the production numbers grew. They needed mass transport to move mass quantities of shoes or radios or cans of fruit, etc. Then we needed a different way of marketing them (mass advertising) and of selling them (the supermarket). We had people massing near the factories for work - creating the industrial cities like Pittsburgh and Manchester etc. Then came mass transport to move the people to work and to their homes. A need for more efficient mass housing, the apartment buildings, etc.

Total structural change.

Now we are facing another total structural change. As the world goes digital, and everyone is permanently connected, the jobs will change. Production changes (digital content is typically more expensive to produce initially, and then has a near-zero duplication cost, and on digital distribution channels, near-zero distribution cost). The role of the consumer changes, ever more do-it-yourself kind of opportunities, etc.

And this structural change does require a total re-think of the business entity. A Google or a Microsoft as an example rather than a GE or Motorola. Look at Nokia, it has been pushing the theme for years now, that they are a software company, an internet company. That they must become nimble and quick and adaptable. And obviously Apple, seeing the gradual diminishing opportunity in desktop PCs, and a less-rosy opportunity in stand-alone PDAs, and even a less promising growth path in laptops, started to move into the media space (iPod) and the mobile space (iPhone) as well as the home entertainment arena.

Yes, its a fundamental structural change, I totally agree.

Tomi :-)

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