The Digital Transformation Playbook: Rethink Your Business for the Digital Age
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Disintermediation and Intermediation
One of the biggest impacts of digital technologies has been on the relation- ships of businesses to the partners in their supply chain—the companies that supply critical inputs for the primary businesses’ own products or that 78 B U I L D P L A T F O R M S , N O T J U S T P R O D U C T S create additional value and distribute or sell those products to their even- tual consumers. This disruption and reconfiguration of business relationships is mostly talked about in terms of disintermediation—the removal of an intermediary or middleman from a series of business transactions. The Internet is widely known to have been a powerful force for disintermediation, as it has made it much easier for goods and services of all kinds to reach any audience that wants them. Newspapers were disintermediated by classified websites like Craig- slist or Monster.com. Individual advertisers were able to skip the middle- man (an expensive print ad in the local newspaper) and reach the desired audience directly by posting a cheap or free ad on one of these popular websites. Retail bookstore chains like Barnes & Noble and Borders Books were disintermediated by the arrival of Amazon.com, which for the first time offered publishers another path by which to sell books to consumers (Borders eventually filed for bankruptcy). In these cases, a new, digital-first challenger arrived to act as intermediary, letting the supplier sidestep its traditional channel for reaching customers. In other cases, companies trying to reach their ultimate consumers may build their own digital channel to sidestep, or disintermediate, their traditional partners. The insurance industry in many countries was built on an agency model, in which insurers sold their policies to individuals through independent agents. This reduced the employee overhead for the insurance companies but put a barrier between them and the users of their products, which inevitably reduces how much they know about those consumers and how effectively they can market to them. Insurance com- panies are extremely beholden to the intermediary, their agents, and this dependency hampers them in many markets when responding to consum- ers’ increasing desire for self-service and online shopping and purchasing options. Newer insurance companies, such as Geico (owned by Berkshire Hathaway), have entered the market that are selling directly to consum- ers online. Allstate Insurance has maintained its insurance agents while at the same time acquiring Esurance, which sells directly to consumers like Geico does. Allstate is, in essence, maintaining and disintermediating its sales partners at the same time. Digital platforms are also fueling a reverse phenomenon, which is best described as intermediation. In these cases, a new business manages to insert itself as an intermediary between the customers and a company that used to sell directly to them. Intermediation happens when a platform B U I L D P L A T F O R M S , N O T J U S T P R O D U C T S 79 builds such a large customer base and becomes such a valuable interface to customers that other businesses cannot afford to skip the opportunity to reach customers through that platform. The benefit to the new intermedi- ary is that it inevitably extracts a toll or platform benefit, often capturing a great deal of value. Facebook, for example, has managed to insert itself as an intermedi- ary between news readers and news publications that previously reached them directly, whether through printed editions or their own websites and apps. With social media driving over 30 percent of all traffic to pub- lisher websites and Facebook delivering 75 percent of that social traf- fic, no publisher, from BuzzFeed to The New York Times Company, can afford to skip using Facebook as a means to promote its content. 23 That gives increasing leverage to Facebook, which is able to greatly influence the prominence and visibility of publishers’ articles in the News Feed of its users. (In fact, Facebook became such a huge driver of publisher traf- fic only after reconfiguring its algorithm in December 2013 to give more priority to news stories.) As Facebook’s leverage over publishers grows, it is expected to extract a share of the advertising revenue from the readers it delivers to news publishers. 24 The same phenomenon of intermediation can be seen with other increasingly powerful platforms. Apple Pay, the mobile payment system for iPhones, iPads, and Apple Watches, was able to enlist Visa and Master- Card as partners for its launch, despite the fact that Apple Pay is inserting itself as an intermediary between these credit card companies and their own cardholder customers. Apple’s huge and affluent customer base and its track record in designing digital interfaces that customers use make it too powerful to ignore in the growing mobile payments sector. When a consor- tium of 200 German publishers complained that Google was stealing value from them by including their articles in its search results, Google decided to simply exclude them from its searches. When they experienced a loss of traffic that they said could cause member publishers to go bankrupt, the consortium reversed course and asked Google to put their articles back in its search results. 25 Tool: The Competitive Value Train As the locus of competition expands from rivalries among similar firms to include asymmetric competitors and a firm’s own suppliers and 80 B U I L D P L A T F O R M S , N O T J U S T P R O D U C T S intermediaries, managers need new ways of visualizing their competitive landscape. The Competitive Value Train is a tool I designed to analyze com- petition and leverage between a firm and its business partners, direct rivals, and asymmetric competitors. Let’s avoid any confusion with two related terms. Porter’s value chain is a popular tool for examining the various processes that add value to a product or service within a company’s own operations (e.g., how the R&D, manufacturing, marketing, and sales departments each add value). The Download 1.53 Mb. 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