Classroom Companion: Business
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Introduction to Digital Economics
Digital Economy
Ecosystem Contents 4.1 Ecosystem Metaphor – 46 4.2 Ecosystem Components – 48 4.3 The Layered Internet as Ecosystem Component – 51 4.4 Computer Infrastructure and Platforms as Ecosystem Components – 54 4.5 Applications and Content as Ecosystem Component – 56 4.6 Consumers as Ecosystem Component – 56 4.7 Authorities as Ecosystem Components – 57 4.8 Conclusions – 58 References – 59 4 46 4 n Learning Objectives After completing this chapter, you should be able to: 5 Identify both direct and indirect the stakeholders in the ecosystem of a company in the digital market. 5 Analyze the impact each stakeholder has on the market performance. 5 Identify the interactions, critical relationships, and dependencies between the stakeholders. 4.1 Ecosystem Metaphor The concept of business ecosystems was first proposed by James F. Moore in 1993 in a Harvard Business Review article (Moore, 1993 ): “To extend a systematic approach to strategy, I suggest that a company be viewed not as a member of a single industry but as part of a business ecosystem that crosses a variety of industries. In a business ecosystem, companies coevolve capabilities around a new innovation: they work cooperatively and competitively to support new products, satisfy customer needs, and eventually incorporate the next round of innovations.” Since then, the concept has been used regularly as a tool to analyze business strategies; in particular, the complex businesses arising in the digital economy. The concept is a biological metaphor since many of the new digital businesses are imbedded in a complex community of other cooperating and competing busi- nesses and customers much like the coevolving ecosystems in biology. Removing one stakeholder from this community may have severe repercussion on the busi- nesses of the remaining stakeholders in the same way as the removal of one species in a biological ecosystem may sometimes alter the whole ecosystem system in a negative way or even destroy it. 7 Box 4.1 illustrates the vulnerability of a biologi- cal ecosystem where the removal of a single species destroys the whole ecosystem. Industry may be equally vulnerable to apparently small alterations in the business environment, for example, change in regulations, customer habits, discovery of new raw materials, and better production methods. Download 5.51 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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