“Today everything computes. Intelligence has been infused into things no one would recognize as computers: appliances, cars, roadways, clothes, even rivers and cornfields.” So begins an IBM Smarter Planet ad in the Wall Street Journal arguing that computing must get smarter to manage today’s wealth of data. This data is not your father’s data of computer bits and bites. It now includes tweets, visual images, videos, machine output, etc. In this new world, IBM argues, computing must be: Designed for new data streams Optimized and fine-tuned to specific user tasks Managed in cloud-based solutions that offer security and flexibility Major computer models don’t change often, IBM states. But when they do change they “unleash enormous productivity, innovation and economic growth,” capturing the conclusion of economists who study Kondratiev long economic cycles. Does your business model capitalize on a rising sea of data from…
Will Netflix’ business model crash as entertainment streams converge?
Netflix’s stock price is falling, fast. My take is that the decline has much more to do with the long-term viability of its business model than the stated cause – recent defections in subscribers owing to a change in its pricing formula and a (since averted) break-up of the company into two parts. Here’s a business model lens on Netflix’s issues. Boundaries are melting in the entertainment world as content that used to be available in only one way becomes accessible in multiple ways. We can see TV shows on the Internet, read physical books on-line, use videogame boxes to watch movies-on-demand and buy hardware solutions that transfer data streams acquired on our computers to our TV screens. Hollywood’s new UltraViolet System will give consumers free Internet or cable access to any purchased DVD. What’s the implication for Netflix of convergence to one…
A sad “Kodak moment” business model failure
Louis Pasteur — “Chance favors the prepared mind.” This quote motivated Bill Welter to co-author The Prepared Mind of a Leader: Eight Skills Leaders Use to Innovate, Make Decisions, and Solve Problems (Jossey-Bass, 2006), a thoughtful leadership book. Bill’s also principal of Adaptive Strategies, a small business that specializes in the application of critical and strategic thinking for business through workshops, strategic thinking behavior programs and one-on-one coaching. And, as I write on the day after Steve Jobs’ sad passing, I am sure Bill would agree that Jobs modeled the attributes Bill wrote about. (See below.) From The Prepared Mind of the Leader Observing. Seeing beyond the obvious Reasoning. Moving from the known to the undetermined Imagining. Envisioning the future before it arrives Challenging. Pushing for higher and deeper thinking Deciding. Choosing with consequences in mind Learning. Keeping a developmental mindset Enabling. Exercising…