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Business Models for the Social Mobile Cloud E-Book

Ted Shelton

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Beschreibung

Fully exploit new conditions and opportunities created by current technological changes The combined impact of social technologies, the mobile Internet, and cloud computing are creating incredible new business opportunities. They are also destroying unprepared companies, transforming industries, and leaving behind workers who are unwilling or unable to adapt. Business Models for the Social Mobile Cloud reveals a compelling view from PwC of how the social mobile cloud and a combination of new technology changes are key players in a digital transformation in business and society that is moving more quickly and cutting more deeply than any technology transformation ever seen. * Explores a road map to success through adapting to technological changes * Written for businesses and leaders who want to understand how the coming technology changes will eventually impact their businesses For companies to succeed, leaders must understand how to stay ahead of their competitors in adapting to the new conditions and opportunities. In Business Models for the Social Mobile Cloud, PwC's Ted Shelton describes the tectonic changes currently underway--and to come--plus why they are happening, what to expect, and what you must do about.

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Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2013

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Contents

Cover

Title Page

Copyright

Dedication

Preface: There's an App for That!

Introduction: Turning Inside Out

Part I: The Technology of the Social Mobile Cloud

Chapter 1: A Remote Control for the World

The Three Technologies

Lessons from the History of the Internet

The History Lesson: Big Picture Thinkers Survive the Game

Build for the Social Mobile Cloud

The Time Is Now

Social Networking Is the Fastest Growing Technology Ever

The Cloud: The Connective Tissue

Buy a Smartphone Now

Chapter 2: Social Means Connected: Compete with Yourself, Collaborate with Others

The Social Network

Co-Creation

Compete with Yourself

Sign Up for a Social Network Today—on Your New Smartphone

Your Employees and Business Partners in Social Networks

Chapter 3: Mobile: The Great Untethering

The New Technical Capabilities

Connectivity

Reality Redefined: The Physical World with Data Overlay

Life Streaming: Access to a Photographic Memory

Cyborg

BYOD and the Consumerization of IT

Chapter 4: Plug Yourself into the Cloud

Four Key Technologies

Benefits of the Cloud are Heavenly for Business

Drawbacks of the Cloud—Just Like Any Grid

Leveling the Playing Field

Plug Yourself into the Cloud

Part II: How Business Will Be Changed by the Social Mobile Cloud

Chapter 5: ADAPT: Adapting to Change

Technological Changes

At the Core of Today's Change: Transaction Cost Economics

Chapter 6: Persistent Digital Engagement: The New Digital Consumer

Customer Service Is the New Marketing

Connecting Digitally at the Physical Point of Sale

Embrace Transparency

Chapter 7: Digitization: The Rising Value of Information in Products and Services

Innovation Drivers

Wireless Sensors in Everything and Everywhere

Application Programming Interfaces for Everything

Software Is Everywhere

Chapter 8: Crowd Storming, Crowd Sourcing, Collaboration, Co-Creation

More People = Faster and Better Decisions

Group Collaboration = Faster and Better Outcomes

Extend Engagement and You Increase Value for Everyone

Chapter 9: Hierarchy will Yield to Networks, Remaking Organizations

Seniority and Control of Information

Finding New Business Model Solutions

Chapter 10: How We Buy: Redefining Shopping and Payment

Business Model Shift 1: For Retailers, the Customer Is in Control

Business Model Shift 2: Pay from the Comfort of Your Own Phone

Business Model Shift 3: Corporate Currencies

Business Model Shift 4: Insuring Corporate Currencies

Business Model Shift 5: Accepting (Multicurrency) Mobile Payments

Business Model Shift 6: Transforming the Purchase Experience with Mobile Payments

Chapter 11: The Game of Work, the Work of Game

Business Model Shift 7: Turning Work into a Game

Business Model Shift 8: Data-Driven Decision Making and a Culture of Experimentation

Business Model Shift 9: Experience Is the Dominant Value

Chapter 12: Work and the Workplace Reimagined

Forces of Change

Business Model Shift 10: Dynamic Networked Social Sales and Support Staff

Business Model Shift 11: Workforce Collaboration to Improve Safety and Quality

Business Model Shift 12: Transparency and Openness

Part III: Understanding Change: How to Adapt to the Social Mobile Cloud

Chapter 13: Understanding Change

Punctuated Equilibrium

Reinvention

Chapter 14: Undoing Our Resistance to Learning

HIDE

Trains, Phones, Record Players: The Cause of What?

The Crucial Skills for Twenty-First-Century Success

Continuous Learning: You're Either Growing or Shrinking

Chapter 15: Systems Thinking

Looking at the Whole

Shifts in Focus

Tools to Assist with Optimizing Details

Interactive Data Visualization

Steps to Systems Thinking

Chapter 16: Decision Making

SAFE

Committing to Adapting

The Continuously Iterative Business Plan

Chapter 17: Seven Steps to Adaptability

Step 1: Why We Resist Change

Step 2: Embrace Data and Analytics

Step 3: Understand the Power of Social Collaboration

Step 4: Why We Resist Learning

Step 5: Use New Learning Tools

Step 6: Learn to Use Systems Thinking

Step 7: Decision Making

Afterword: Digital Transformation: What Will You and Your Business Look Like 10, 20, 50 Years from Now?

Appendix: PwC Thought Leadership on Social, Mobile, Analytics, Cloud (SMAC)

About the Author

Index

Cover image: © Volodymyr Grinko/iStockphoto

Cover design: John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

Copyright © 2013 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved.

Published by John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Hoboken, New Jersey.

Published simultaneously in Canada.

No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, scanning, or otherwise, except as permitted under Section 107 or 108 of the 1976 United States Copyright Act, without either the prior written permission of the Publisher, or authorization through payment of the appropriate per-copy fee to the Copyright Clearance Center, Inc., 222 Rosewood Drive, Danvers, MA 01923, (978) 750-8400, fax (978) 646-8600, or on the Web at www.copyright.com. Requests to the Publisher for permission should be addressed to the Permissions Department, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 111 River Street, Hoboken, NJ 07030, (201) 748-6011, fax (201) 748-6008, or online at http://www.wiley.com/go/permissions.

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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data:

Shelton, Ted, 1966–

Business models for the social mobile cloud: transform your business using social media, mobile Internet, and cloud computing / Ted Shelton.

p. cm.

Includes index.

ISBN 978-1-118-36994-4 (cloth); ISBN 978-1-118-49419-6 (ebk.); ISBN 978-1-118-49420-2 (ebk.); ISBN 978-1-118-49421-9 (ebk.); ISBN 978-1-118-55591-0 (ebk.)

1. Information technology—Management. 2. Internet marketing. 3. Social media. 4. Cloud computing. I. Title.

HD30.2.S5373 2013

658.8′72—dc23

2012037682

To the small village of outstanding individuals who have made the creation and publication of this book possible. Without the encouragement and support of my family, the regular comments and suggestions from friends, and the belief in this project expressed by my colleagues at PwC, this book would still be another unfinished project. Thank you to all of you!

Preface

There's an App for That!

Why is it that people like apps so much? There is the surface answer, which is to say that apps each solve a specific problem that people have. But there is more to it than that and a good reason that “There's an app for that!” has become an exclamation of satisfaction for a growing number of smartphone adopters. Each app becomes a small demystifying revelation that arms people with whatever tool they need to become instant experts at the game, whatever the game is. There is nothing quite like that aha! moment. It gives people power, confidence, and a sense of being rewarded. And it is enjoyable because an app can add an element of fun to even the most mundane task.

Say the task is shopping for the new lawn mower you need. You download a shopping app to your smartphone, scan or key in the lawn mower's model number, and in seconds there is a list of every retailer in the vicinity selling that mower, and what it costs. Say the task is getting some signed documents copied and delivered before a meeting in 30 minutes, but you are in the car driving. Pull over for a moment, download one of a number of applications that can scan a document by using the smartphone's camera, and in seconds you have produced PDFs and e-mailed them. Running late for the airport and want to check-in, collect your boarding pass, and even pay to go through the premium service line at security? There's an app for that!

What have these tasks ultimately become? Games. Why is shopping a game? Why is sending a document a game? Why would making a flight you might otherwise miss be a game? What is a game after all? I am using the word game not in the narrow sense of an activity that we engage in for entertainment but in a broader sense—a set of rules that we follow to achieve objectives and to earn rewards. Our lives are full of games when you think about it that way. Big games and little ones: go to school, get a job, find a mate, get promoted. Navigate across town on public transportation, make a soufflé that doesn't fall, or buy a present for a friend that really makes him smile.

Game is just a word for a system that motivates. In thinking of our tasks as games, we may strive to achieve them in less time or to achieve better results. And thinking of tasks as games can make them into ongoing cycles of improvement. You grasp one idea, particularly one that has long been elusive to you, and pretty soon, you have another idea. Ideas build on one another; they encourage cooperation, collaboration, a desire to learn new things, and even the desire to engage with one another. Making shopping into a game has been a core tool of marketing and advertising for a century: search for the special offer, time limited discounts, or offers only available to the first X number of people—these are all ways of creating a system that motivates you to purchase, in other words, a game. Companies increasingly see that work can also be given game qualities, with many side benefits—increased employee morale, improved productivity, and increasing quality.

And it is not just marketers and employers trying to manipulate us, we even do this to ourselves, making our tasks and activities into games, now with the help of apps and our ubiquitous smartphones. We have become a nation, a globe, enamored with apps. Tens of billions of applications have been installed by smartphone users over the past few years. Apps have everything: easy-to-understand rules, incredibly important functionality, flexible interaction, and instant reward. Who wouldn't want to play this game?

I keep using the word game, and will continue to do so, because as we rethink our lives, our society, and our business—specifically our shifting mobile workforce and workplace—we must keep in mind how technology amplifies our understanding and ability to affect human motivations. Gamification is a process in which the implicit game that exists in our social or business circumstance has been made explicit—something we are rapidly doing with all of our apps. We are using technology to make the world into a series of games, and the apps let us track progress and compare our achievements. The apps help make it easier to change, easier to adapt to new things, easier to win because we are rewarded for doing these things. We are reminded that change is constant and playful people always adapt best. And those who adapt survive.

Let me go one step beyond survival to say adaptation to an app nation means more than surviving. It means thriving. In business, which is the lens through which this book looks at our twenty-first-century lives, we are coming into a world where any business leader armed with a smartphone can change the way business is done, the way employees and business partners interact, and the way value is created. A key to success in this new environment is in designing our businesses to use social, mobile, cloud, and the data these generate to motivate and reward employees and delight customers: to leverage the world as a game to reach our personal and business objectives.

Understanding what is happening in the new world of apps, and how gamification is changing our work and our lives, requires more than just reading about what is happening. You will need to learn through experiencing the change as well. Although the driving forces for change are technological, the change happens when behaviors shift. This is 20 percent technology and 80 percent people and process. Technologies will encourage us to change how we connect with friends or colleagues, how we shop, and how and when we work. Increasingly your success will depend on how you change your behaviors, not just whether you buy the technology.

As a business consultant, I wrote this book to serve as a prescriptive guide to help business leaders rethink their lives and build or adapt their businesses in this era of what I call the social mobile cloud. The information content in everything we do is increasing at an exponential rate and we need new tools to manage in this new world. Social technologies are expanding who we work with—beyond our immediate teams to include the whole company and beyond the company to our trading partners, customers, and even noncustomers. Mobile is the new way we get to work—or how the work gets to us, anywhere and anytime. And the cloud is where the work is done, accessible from every device and by everyone in real time.

The heart of all of this is data—generated from products and from processes—manipulated by increasingly sophisticated analytical models and provided to us in graphic visualizations to ease our comprehension and support decision making. Your business is all about the information and your job is all about what you do with that information. You may think you make a shoe, but your customers are buying an online service that allows them to track their runs and compare them with friends. You may feed people fast food, but your customers are coming into your restaurant because they can play an augmented reality game and win a mobile device from your partner. Are you selling goods or providing an experience?

Increasingly for every business it is about experience and the medium for that experience is digital. And the information about the experience is how you improve, market, and support that experience. To succeed you will have to knit together your entire ecosystem of employees, partners, and even your customers into a rich data resource and collaborative network. But don't worry. There's an app for that.

Introduction

Turning Inside Out

Each successive technology in human history has changed how we produce and consume—what today we might call the business environment—creating winners and losers. Fifteen years ago the Internet began to sweep through the marketplace, enabling a set of innovations and creating a new set of companies across many established industries. The existing businesses that owned bookstores, travel agencies, video rental businesses, and media companies were challenged by these new companies, but in many cases continued on their pre-Internet paths rather than adapting to the direction these new companies were. As a result, many companies that had been established name brands no longer exist or are shells still struggling to respond to what happened.

Today, every company I walk into as a consultant is complaining about the same challenges and asking the same set of questions about the next wave of the Internet, the next transformation, which will be driven by the social mobile cloud.

The head of customer service for a consumer software company and the chief operating officer (COO) of a large quick service restaurant chain both said a version of “I don't know who my customers are, and I don't know how to connect with them to learn what they want or how we can serve them better.”

The chief executive officer (CEO) of a national recruiting and staffing organization and the chief marketing officer at a sports equipment company said, “We only engage with people in a momentary episodic way—but I know there would be so much more value created if we could connect with them [a job seeker, a purchaser of sporting goods, etc.] in an ongoing way around all of the things they do related to our service/product.”

The chief information officer (CIO) of a large chemicals company and the COO of a business process outsourcing company both asked, “How can I let my employees use the mobile and social technology that they have in their personal lives for work activities without compromising security or quality?”

The senior vice president of sales at a financial services company and head of operations for a large retailer both asked, “How can I get my employees to work with one another to solve problems for our customers on the spot or collaborate to come up with better long-term solutions that we all can use?”

The general manager of a health-care products division in a large company and the head of research for an automotive manufacturer both asked, “How can I collaborate with my trading partners to extend the value of my core products and services and create more innovative and satisfying customer experiences?”

Each of these questions (and many more like them) is about how the processes of innovation, production, transaction, and consumption—processes that are all dependent on human interactions—can be improved or even radically changed through the application of a new set of digital technologies.

This book ultimately is the story of how the social mobile cloud, a combination of three new technology changes, are the core ingredients of a digital transformation in business and society, moving more quickly and cutting more deeply than any technology transformation we have ever seen. The combined impact of social technologies, the mobile Internet, and cloud computing will create incredible new business opportunities. They will also destroy unprepared companies, transform industries, and leave behind workers who are unwilling or unable to adapt. These three technologies will turn you and your company inside out.

Back in the 1990s, industry pioneers were imagining a world in which the Internet would be an everyday part of people's lives. Today, that vision has become a reality. The adoption of the Internet and the transformation of every industry and sector of our society is moving at an unprecedented speed. Now that the Internet has become a place for people, not just information, it travels with us everywhere through our mobile devices, and it is evolving into a utility as ubiquitous, reliable, and easy to use as electricity or water. Today, we experience a new consumer reality—persistent digital engagement—we are connected digitally to one another and to a world of information from the moment we wake up to the moment we go to sleep. Even while we sleep, a new class of products can monitor what we are doing—how well we are sleeping—transmitting data about our sleep cycles to the cloud, awaiting our analysis.

This new ubiquitous connectivity is changing our expectations as members of our communities, as citizens, and as consumers—we expect greater transparency, greater access to information, more (and faster) response and engagement, more control or at least input into decisions that affect us. In short, we expect to play a role and be an integral part in our communities, our governments, and in the companies with which we do business.

As employees, we are carrying our consumer expectations into the workplace, expecting that businesses will let us use our mobile devices, our laptops, and our social networks and will be increasingly transparent, engaging, and collaborative. The pace of change in the first wave of the Internet will be dwarfed by the changes coming in this second wave of the social mobile cloud.

There is a core factor at work in the transformation of business (and of our broader society), one that we will return to in the chapters ahead. This factor, an input into how everything in the industrial world has by necessity been organized, is the cost of communication and by extension the cost of coordination. Very simply put: As the number of people in an interaction increases, the complexity (and thus cost) of their communication increases. And the cost of communication is the largest input into the cost of coordination. When one person talks to one other person, there is a single relationship, call it A <-> B. But add just one more person and you go from one relationship to four relationships. A <-> B; B <-> C; A <-> C; and A <-> B <-> C (the dynamic when three people are together). Add a fourth person and you expand from 4 to 10 relationships—6 relationships between 2 distinct people, 3 relationships between 3 distinct people, and 1 relationship between all 4. Each collection of personalities creates a different dynamic and increases the complexity of meetings, information sharing, and decision making.

In order to scale organizations in the Industrial Age, we have had to organize innovation, production, and transactions into structured hierarchical processes—managing the interactions of each person in each process carefully so that the cost of communication and coordination did not overwhelm the system. As a result, the relationships of people inside the company to one another, and to people outside the company (trading partners, customers, regulators, and so on) have been carefully managed with walls like customer service and procurement erected to control the flow of information from the outside to the inside.

But in parallel, for hundreds of years, we have been evolving the social environment in which we interact—reducing the cost of communication and coordination through proximity and technology. Cities bring people closer together, reducing the cost of communication. The telephone reduced the impact of distance on the cost of communication. And for the past 60 years, the evolution of computing and networks has been steadily changing the cost equation.

We are now at a tipping point. For the past 100 years, hierarchical structure and prescribed process were dominant in supporting the growing scale of activity in our businesses and societies, with innovations in communication and coordination playing a lesser role. But we are now at a point where the social mobile cloud has become a more powerful force—turning our businesses inside out and exposing all of the people and processes to each other and to the outside world instead of hiding them behind walls.

What will it mean to master this new world? How will you be a leader (or at least a fast follower) in your industry? To succeed, you must understand how the coming technology changes are going to affect your company and your industry and stay ahead of your competitors in adapting to the new conditions and opportunities created by them. This book will start you on a path to making wise decisions, efficiently discriminate among possible investments, and position your business to reinvent itself and your industry. It may even help you evolve your existing business models into new ones more appropriate for this digital age.

In Chapter 5, I describe a process that I see people and organizations going through as they cope with change. I call this process ADAPT after its five steps: awareness, denial, acceptance, progress, and transformation. I hope that in reading this book, you will develop your own ability to ADAPT and also learn something about the next set of changes that will be impacting the way we live in the twenty-first century.

Part I

The Technology of the Social Mobile Cloud

Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!

Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!

Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!

Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!

Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!

Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!

Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!

Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!

Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!

Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!

Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!

Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!

Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!

Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!

Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!

Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!

Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!

Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!

Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!

Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!

Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!

Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!

Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!