ISBN-13: 9783030004422 / Angielski / Twarda / 2018 / 266 str.
ISBN-13: 9783030004422 / Angielski / Twarda / 2018 / 266 str.
How did Capital One and Uber implement nearly identical business models, focusing on customers that are most profitable to serve? Why are Google and Amazon so valuable to us?
How did Capital One and Uber implement nearly identical business models, focusing on customers that are most profitable to serve? Why are Google and Amazon so valuable to us? Why are Google, Apple, Microsoft, and Amazon so difficult for competitors to displace? And why can Google charge almost anything it wants for keywords, since no form of competition will force prices down? The information-based business models of these companies, and many more, are exploiting the patterns described in this book.This book instills pattern-based thinking that will prepare all readers for greater success in our rapidly changing world. It will help executives, regulators, investors, and concerned citizens better navigate their way through the digital transformation of everything .Professor Clemons presents six patterns for staying competitive and achieving profitable business models. The author's reframe-recognize-respond framework teaches readers how to transform unfamiliar problems into familiar patterns, how to determine which patterns to apply in different situations, and how to respond most effectively.Information changes everything. This book is a guide to power and profit from understanding changes in the age of digital transformation.
Table of Contents
Chapter 1 — Introduction: You get control when you recognize the patterns
Introduction to Chapter 1 Section 1.1 — The Structure of This Book Section 1.2 — Patterns, Pattern Recognition, and Thinking Strategically About Thinking StrategicallySection 1.3 — Developing the Theory of Newly Vulnerable Markets
Section 1.4 — The Complete Theory of Newly Vulnerable Markets
Summary of Chapter 1Chapter 2 — Information Changes Everything: It’s Not What You Know, It’s What You Know Before Everyone Else!
Introduction to Chapter 2Section 2.1 — Information Asymmetry and Market Collapse
Section 2.2 — Dealing with Information Asymmetry Through Signaling
Section 2.3 — Dealing with Information Asymmetry Through Screening: The Theory, and an Explanation for Capital One’s SuccessSection 2.4 — Dealing with Information Asymmetry Through Data Mining
Section 2.5 — Versioning as a Form of Screening
Section 2.6 — Working with Signaling, Screening, and Data Mining: Specific Examples Where We Need to Address Information Asymmetry
Summary of Chapter 2Chapter 3 — The Power of Framing: If You Can’t Answer the Question, Turn it into a Question You Can Answer
Introduction to Chapter 3Section 3.1 — Introduction to Reframing for Easier Solution
Section 3.2 — Learn the Useful Forms of Reframing
Section 3.3 — Transforming a Problem for an Easy Solution:
Section 3.4 — Transforming a Problem for Easy Solution
Section 3.5 — Reframing the Problem so it Looks Like Something You Have Already Analyzed
Section 3.6 — Pushing the Problem to its Limit
Section 3.7 — Using a New Sequence of QuestionsSummary of Chapter 3Chapter 4 — Resonance Marketing in the Age of the Truly Informed Consumer: Creating Profits through Differentiation and Delight
Introduction to Chapter 4Section 4.1 — Resonance Marketing: The Changing Marketplace for Craft Beer
Section 4.2 — Resonance Marketing: Information Changes Consumer Behavior and Corporate Strategy
Section 4.3 — Hyperdifferentiation: With Modern Technology Firms Can Make Anything
Section 4.4 — Hyperdifferentiation Plus Information Yields Retailer Profits and Customer DelightSection 4.5 — Characteristics of a Successful Reviewing Site
Section 4.6 — Hyperdifferentiation Plus Information Guides Manufacturers to Resonance Marketing and Customer Delight
Section 4.7 — Unrewarded Excellence and the Need to be Better than Good EnoughSection 4.8 — Not Just Better Enough to be Liked, But Also Different Enough to be Loved!
Section 4.9 — Information Changes Everything For Producers and Retailers
Section 4.10 — This is Global. Resonance Marketing is Everywhere.
Section 4.11 — The Rise of Astroturfing and the Threat of Fake Grass-Roots Support
Summary of Chapter 4Chapter 5 — Online Brand Ambassadors and Online Brand Assassins: Master The New Role of the Chief Perception Officer
Introduction to Chapter 5Section 5.1 — Tactical Implications for Companies: The New Role of the Chief Perception Officer
Section 5.2 — The First Role of the CPO
Section 5.3 — Tactical Implications for Companies
Summary of Chapter 5
Part II — Patterns for Power, Control, and Harvesting of Profits
Chapter 6 — Resources, Platforms, and Sustainable Competitive Advantage: How to Win and Keep on Winning
Introduction to Chapter 6Section 6.1 — Introduction to Sustainable Competitive Advantage
Section 6.2 — Sustainable Competitive Advantage Based on Acquiring a Unique Set of Resources
Section 6.3 — Introduction to Platforms and Platform Envelopment
Section 6.4 — An Early Example of Platform Envelopment at Rosenbluth TravelSection 6.5 — Platform Envelopment Strategies in Two-Sided Markets
Summary of Chapter 6Chapter 7 — Understanding the Power of Third Party Payer Businesses and Online Gateways
Introduction to Chapter 7Section 7.1 — Introduction to Third Party Payer Systems
Section 7.2 — Mandatory Participation Third Party Payer Systems:
Third Party Payer Systems in the Absence of Competition
Section 7.3 — Learning the Lessons of Power
Section 7.4 — When Mandatory Participation Third Party Payer
Systems Combine with Online Gateway SystemsSection 7.5 — Power is not Unlimited
Section 7.6 — The Origins of the Credit Card Industry, Before it Became an MP3PP
Section 7.7 — Mandatory Participation Third Party Payer Systems
Outside of Search: Credit Cards’ Transition to a Powerful MP3PP
Summary of Chapter 7Chapter 8 — The Continuing Power of Third Party Payer Businesses
Introduction to Chapter 8Section 8.1 — MP3PP Systems in the Internet Age: How Can They Still be Dangerous?
Section 8.2 — The Recurring Pattern in Third Party Payer Models:
When the System Really Start to Use Its Power
Section 8.3 — And now … Coming soon to a Search Engine near You … Platform Envelopment and Vertical Integration
Summary of Chapter 8Chapter 9 — Power and the Potential for the Abuse of Power in Online Gateway Systems: An Analysis of Google
Introduction to Chapter 9Section 9.1 — Quality Scores and the Power to Make and Defend Arbitrary Decisions
Section 9.2 — Vickrey Auctions, Pseudo-Vickrey Auctions, and the Power to Charge Whatever You Want
Section 9.3 — The Illusion of Choice
Section 9.4 — Can We Show that Monopoly Power Has Been Abused in Search and Extended Beyond Search? Is There Evidence?
Section 9.5 — Should You Care About Reverse Price Wars? Do Higher Prices Charged to Sellers Really Affect Consumers? Some of the Money Goes to You, Right?Section 9.6 — Why Should Anyone Do Anything About Monopoly Power in Search? Won’t Technological Progress Fix any Problems Better and Faster than Regulation?
Section 9.7 — Is it Fair to Complain? After All Google has Done for Us?
Section 9.8 — But What Should Regulation Look Like?
Section 9.9 — A Final Cautionary Note on Regulation
Summary of Chapter 9 Appendix 9.A. — Showing that there is Monopoly Power in Search — How Would You Know?Part III — I got it! Learning to work with these Patterns?
Chapter 10 — Scenario Analysis and Managing Strategic Ambiguity: How to Remember Future Events, before They Actually Occur!
Introduction to Chapter 10Section 10.1— Remembering The Future and Using Scenarios for Rapid Recognition and Rapid Response
Section 10.2 — Learn to Ask the Right Questions, Even If You Can’t Answer Them
Section 10.3. — When “Good Data Goes Bad”, or What to do When “Convincing Data Actually Lies to Us”!
Section 10.4. — Learn to Ask the Right Questions, Even If You Can’t Answer Them: Lessons from The Future of Chinese Consumer Behavior
Section 10.5 — Working with Questions if All You Have is Questions: Remember What They Say About Making Lemonade if Life Gives You Nothing But Lemons
Section 10.6 — The Future of Consumer Behavior in China
Section 10.7 — Working with the Scenarios for the Future of Consumer Behavior in China
Section 10.8 — What’s So Special about Four Scenarios?
Summary of Chapter 10
Chapter 11 — Examining the Wide Range of Business Models Currently in Use in Online Businesses: How to Understand A New Business Using Existing Frameworks
Introduction to Chapter 11Section 11.1 — Fully Digital Business Models and Partly Digital Business Models
Section 11.2 — The Full Range of Online Business Models
Section 11.3 — Selling Real Stuff
Section 11.4 — Using Ads to Sell Real Stuff
Section 11.5 — Selling Content Online
Section 11.6 — The Digital Transformation of Higher Education
Section 11.7 — Selling Online Services
Section 11.8 — Creating Exchanges for Business-to-Consumer and Direct Consumer-to-Consumer Interactions
Section 11.9. — If the Sharing Economy is Transformational, Maybe We Should Say a Bit More about Building Sharing Economy Websites
Section 11.10 — Control of Search and Charging for Customer Access
Section 11.11 — Selling Virtual Experiences and Virtual Stuff
Section 11.12 — Harnessing Social Networks the Right Way
Section 11.13 — Selling Referrals Based on Snooping or Context
Section 11.14 — Using Contextual Referrals to Direct Ads to Mobile Users
Summary of Chapter 11
Chapter 12 — Information Changes Everything: Implications for Society
Introduction to Chapter 12Section 12.1 — Let’s Just Do the Right Thing
Section 12.2 — Fake News: Is this really a big deal? Isn’t this just bigger, faster, more personal, and efficient?Section 12.3 — How Price Discrimination Affects Fairness for All of Us
Section 12.4 — How Much Should We Value Efficiency? How Much Should We Value Fairness?
Section 12.5 — Why is Fairness a Social Policy Issue?
Section 12.6 — Privacy in the Online World
Section 12.7 — Fairness Considerations in Platforms and the Sharing Economy
Section 12.8 — Why is it So Hard to Agree on Fairness?
Section 12.9 — So Where Should We Draw the Line?Section 12.10—And, Finally, What Should We Do Now?
Summary of Chapter 12
Chapter 13 — Epilog: What could go really, really, wrong?
Introduction to Chapter 13
Eric K. Clemons is Professor of Operations, Information and Decisions at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. For thirty years he served as the Founder and Project Director for the School’s Sponsored Research Project on Information: Strategy and Economics. He worked with C-suite officers from organizations like Merrill Lynch, Marriott Hotels, Lever Brothers, and Continental Airlines, to develop research that advanced their daily decision making. His experience includes analyzing bet-the-farm decisions with individuals as varied as the Chairmen of the New York Stock Exchange and the London Stock Exchange and the Chief of Naval Operations, to the president and chief operating officer of a rapidly growing craft brewer. He is a pioneer in the digital transformation of business strategy.
How did Capital One and Uber implement nearly identical business models, focusing on customers that are most profitable to serve? Why are Google and Amazon so valuable to us? Why are Google, Apple, Microsoft, and Amazon so difficult for competitors to displace? And why can Google charge almost anything it wants for keywords, since no form of competition will force prices down? The information-based business models of these companies, and many more, are exploiting the patterns described in this book.
This book instills pattern-based thinking that will prepare all readers for greater success in our rapidly changing world. It will help executives, regulators, investors, and concerned citizens better navigate their way through the digital transformation of everything.
Professor Clemons presents six patterns for staying competitive and achieving profitable business models. The author'sreframe-recognize-respond framework teaches readers how to transform unfamiliar problems into familiar patterns, how to determine which patterns to apply in different situations, and how to respond most effectively.
Information changes everything. This book is a guide to power and profit from understanding changes in the age of digital transformation.1997-2024 DolnySlask.com Agencja Internetowa