The Digital Transformation Playbook: Rethink Your Business for the Digital Age
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partners invested. When companies do launch a direct-to-consumer channel in competi- tion with their primary sales channel, they need to establish clear boundar- ies. These may be geographic boundaries: some insurance companies that rely on sales agents have initiated their first direct-to-consumer sales in geographic markets where they are not well established. Another kind of boundary can be provided by branding: when Allstate purchased Esurance, it opted to run the direct-to-consumer business as an independent unit under a different brand. Warfare Mentality Both co-opetition and the search for leverage in value trains require leaders to look at competition as more than a zero-sum contest. In organizations where the “competition is war” metaphor and mind- set run deep, cooperating with rivals and competing with partners can pose a cultural challenge. When Doreen Lorenzo, former president of Frog Design, first took the helm of that company, a peer gave her a book: Sun Tzu’s The Art of War. “I don’t want to sound like a baby boomer,” Doreen told me, “but sometimes, war is not the answer. Or not the only answer.” Sun Tzu is not alone. Among the many bellicose management guides published are books such as Wess Roberts’s Leadership Secrets of Attila the Hun. That scorched-earth conqueror is famed for quotes such as “There, where I have passed, the grass will never grow again.” There are certainly times for fierce competition with rivals. But to succeed in the dynamic ecosystem of business today, leaders need to 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 87 know when to fight and when to make peace. The creators of PayPal cer- tainly learned this. They actually started out as the leaders of two bitterly competing start-ups, Confinity and X.com, with mirror-image products. “By late 1999, we were in all-out war,” writes Peter Thiel, who goes on to describe 100-hour workweeks gripped by a mania of competition. “No doubt that was counterproductive, but the focus wasn’t on objective pro- ductivity; the focus was defeating X.com. One of our engineers actually designed a bomb for this purpose. . . . Calmer heads prevailed.” Finally, in 2000, faced with a rapidly deflating tech bubble, the founders of the two companies met on neutral ground and negotiated a 50–50 merger. “De- escalating the rivalry post-merger wasn’t easy, but . . . as a unified team, we were able to ride out the dot-com crash and then build a successful business.” 28 Openness One of the biggest challenges of a platform business model is letting go of some of the value creation process. By their nature, platforms grow by letting their distinct outside parties each bring their own value to the plat- form and interact with a substantial degree of independence. This requires a hands-off approach that may not be possible for some leaders or some company cultures. The most valuable platform business in the world struggled mightily with this. Apple and its founder, Steve Jobs, had always distinguished them- selves with an exacting focus on controlling every aspect of the customer experience for products like Macintosh computers, iPod music players, and the iTunes music store. Their seamless integration seemed to hinge on Apple’s maintaining absolute and total control. When the iPhone first launched, the company followed this same philosophy: everything was designed and built by Apple. In its first year, users immediately recognized the power of the computer sitting behind the iPhone’s glowing touchscreen, and hackers began “jailbreaking” their phones so they could experiment and add new programs of their own design. Apple was faced with a decision: fight back against the hackers (who were, in fact, Apple’s early adopters and avid customers) or shift course and provide tools for outside developers to program directly for the iPhone. Jobs’s uncharacteristic reversal led to the release of the software 88 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 development kit that launched the App Store. This move sparked incred- ible innovation, turned the iPhone into a platform business, and led Apple’s growth into the most valuable public company in the world. For leaders navigating today’s shifting landscape of competition, know- ing how open or closed to keep their business model is critical. 8 To operate successfully in the digital age, businesses must have a dynamic understanding of how firms compete and cooperate. Rather than a sim- plistic view of bitter enemies and unalloyed partnerships, businesses need to see all their interfirm relationships as a shifting mix of competition and cooperation. They must understand the value of cooperating with direct rivals, the threat of asymmetric competitors who look nothing like them, the importance of leverage within their relationships with partner busi- nesses, and the power of digitally enabled platform business models to bring together different parties and drive new value creation. Relationships with other firms, in short, have become just as networked and interconnected as relationships with customers. In both relationships, the increasing digitization of interactions is yielding another product as well: data. Every interaction with customers or with businesses is produc- ing streams of information that can now be recorded, captured, and ana- lyzed in ways that were impossible only a short while ago. Understanding how to utilize this data strategically, as a source of new value for businesses, is the next important domain of digital transformation. 4 Turn Data Into Assets The role of data for businesses is changing dramatically today. Many com- panies that have used data as a specific part of their operations for years are now discovering a data revolution: data is coming from new sources, being applied to new problems, and becoming a key driver of innovation. One innovator is The Weather Company (TWC). This media company started in 1980 with a television channel, The Weather Channel. Since then, it has branched out into third-party publishing platforms, websites, and mobile apps, including the one I use every morning to decide whether to pack an umbrella. Like most media companies, TWC is in the business of making content that draws an audience and selling ads that are placed in that content. Data has always been part of that business model: every day vast quantities of weather data need to be captured, analyzed, and turned into the colorful charts, animated graphics, and reliable forecasts that keep audiences tuning in. But TWC has discovered that its data can be much more than just the raw material it uses to create programming for its viewers. The same DATA 90 T U R N D A T A I N T O A S S E T S data that the firm collects, manages, and analyzes constitutes a key strategic asset and, increasingly, a source of new innovation and value creation. I learned about this in detail from Vikram Somaya, who was the gen- eral manager of WeatherFX (later renamed WSI), a new TWC division focused on thinking differently about weather data. Somaya was an art his- tory major in college and is fond of quoting Shakespeare, but at TWC, he led the teams of data scientists who analyze the company’s data to generate additional value for both business customers and end consumers. Weather has a powerful impact on a wide range of businesses. By one estimate, up to one-third of the U.S. economy is shaped by variations in weather. 1 Walmart has said that local weather is one of the biggest factors in its predictive models for store sales. TWC’s data scientists work with major retailers to identify when they should predict a spike or slump in their sales so they can adjust their advertising spend (to commit more resources or to hold them back) as well as their merchandising. The company also works directly with brand advertisers—in categories like allergy medication, fleece jackets, and snow tires—to predict the best time for them to spend on ad placements. Even our snack food purchases on a given day (nacho chips or pretzels?) have been found to be shaped by whether the weather feels bright, sticky, or gloomy. With digital adver- tisements (inserted on websites or in apps like TWC’s own), brands now have the opportunity to adjust and target their message on the fly, choos- ing which image to show specific viewers based on the weather where they are standing. 2 TWC is even using its data to create new products and services for industries like the insurance sector. For instance, it has built an app called Hailzone for insurers like State Farm and Travelers to offer their auto insur- ance customers. Whenever a hailstorm is about to hit, Hailzone sends out a text message alert to those customers, warning them to move their cars inside. That saves a tremendous headache for the drivers and costly hail damage bills for the insurer. The company is even collaborating with some of its most avid cus- tomers to grow and improve its data asset. Every day TWC crowdsources data from a community of 25,000 self-described “weather junkies” who pay to subscribe to a service called The Weather Underground. These avid hobbyists spend hundreds of dollars to buy their own weather-monitoring equipment, which they set up on their own property. Findings are shared and discussed among the network of fellow enthusiasts. With typical members uploading weather measurements at their own locations every T U R N D A T A I N T O A S S E T S 91 2.5 seconds, their input helps the company greatly improve the quality of its own data sets. TWC has evolved from a media company that simply produces data as Download 1.53 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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