The disruptive technology is simply what I call the world’s internet. A few years back, the internet was basically viewed as just another tool for business, communication and entertainment. Most organizations probably just put up a website that displayed minimal corporate information. The internet was perceived to hold so much potential but most did not attach extraordinary importance to maximising its potential at that time.
Today, the internet has truly become the world’s internet. The 21st century is right here and the world has become a totally different place. Globalization (amongst other forces) has now distinguished the internet as the unrivalled platform for conducting any sort of business activity ranging from those of SMEs to multinationals.
The virtual world is fast adopting all the characteristics of the traditional real world and in a few decades, what is referred to as the virtual world at present may hold more significance than the traditional real world. The Matrix after all may prove to be more than just an imaginary concept and a figment of the wachowski brothers’ imagination.
Second Life is a rapidly expanding virtual community that provides an online society within a 3D world, where users can explore, build, socialize and participate in their own economy. A downloadable client program called the Second Life Viewer enables its users, called "Residents", to interact with each other through motional avatars, providing an advanced level of a social network service. Residents can explore, meet other Residents, socialize, participate in individual and group activities, create and trade items (virtual property) and services from one another. Second Life's virtual currency is the Linden Dollar (Linden, or L$) and is exchangeable for US Dollars in a marketplace consisting of residents, Linden Lab and real life companies.
For businesses of whatever size, technology has become an absolutely indispensable tool. In-fact, a comprehensive IT strategy that makes adequate provisions for enterprise-wide knowledge management, performance improvement, process abstractions amongst others is imperative for corporations today and is viewed as a pre-requisite for survival in today’s acutely competitive global business environment. Peter Cohan (one of the world’s top technology strategists) said ‘the few firms that persist and ultimately achieve integrated transactions are more likely to enjoy a sustainable advantage over those that give up’.
Facebook, Google, Yahoo, MySpace and Microsoft are living examples of multi-million, perhaps billion dollar companies whose focus has been on people and Technology. The Foreign Exchange Market is another example of an industry that has so expanded as a result of these twin concepts. Current global daily transactions are upwards of $4 trillion daily!…providing market liquidity and accessibility levels never before experienced. Companies like Currenex have made this possible by connecting over 70 global banks to their state-of-the-art currency exchange engine. This has made Currency speculation a business the average citizen can engage in (though Peter Bain, a foremost trading tutor warns that forex-trading isn’t for the faint at heart but involves serious study, commitment, perseverance and development of a personal trading strategy).
Technology by itself is incapable of repositioning most organizations for high profitability. We live in times of knowledge proliferation and corporations are increasingly recognising the indispensability of the human resource. Warren Bennis remarked in Business Minds that “intellectual capital has supplanted capital as the critical success factor”.
The wealth of today’s organization is resident in its people. The expectations from today’s leaders are therefore totally different from what they used to be.
For those that want to remain relevant, and perhaps maintain relevance, recognition of and exploitation of these core duo resources (i'm not talking about intel processors here) remain central. People and Technology constitute the initial steps to achieving sustainable success, and realizing market dominance in the case of businesses.
It's no more an option for businesses, institutions, governments or individuals. You've got to embrace People and Technology now!
Sunday, October 07, 2007
Sunday, May 20, 2007
The Disruptive Factor
hello guys! been quite a while and i apologize for not adding content since.
Human minds somewhere, somehow have always found a 'new' method, perharp a new discovery that changes the rules and eventually forces everyone else to change, or lose out, i mean completely!
What i mean is there's always that dispruptive technology that comes along, and redefines the way things are done.
We've had the agricultural revolution, industrial revolution and lately, information technology, but the big question on your lips might be what next?
Well, there are many possibilities and just before i go further, i'd like us to look at how IT has evolved.
We started with vacuum tubes, then mainframes, then the PC came along, then the Internet evolved, and now, with hot spots and fibre backbones, satellite communications and mobile networks, convergence couldn't be less visible. Some people call it the era of social networking but Cisco prefers to use the term "the human network".
IT has now become a 'commodity' and what matters now is not how fast that processor is, what advanced feautures that software has, or how compact that portable device is but how this piece of hardware and software can really meet my needs in a simple and efficient way (that includes saving costs too and ensuring that i'm not exposed to risks of any sort).
i'll talk about the disruptive factor in just a while. (have to attend to something urgent!)
Human minds somewhere, somehow have always found a 'new' method, perharp a new discovery that changes the rules and eventually forces everyone else to change, or lose out, i mean completely!
What i mean is there's always that dispruptive technology that comes along, and redefines the way things are done.
We've had the agricultural revolution, industrial revolution and lately, information technology, but the big question on your lips might be what next?
Well, there are many possibilities and just before i go further, i'd like us to look at how IT has evolved.
We started with vacuum tubes, then mainframes, then the PC came along, then the Internet evolved, and now, with hot spots and fibre backbones, satellite communications and mobile networks, convergence couldn't be less visible. Some people call it the era of social networking but Cisco prefers to use the term "the human network".
IT has now become a 'commodity' and what matters now is not how fast that processor is, what advanced feautures that software has, or how compact that portable device is but how this piece of hardware and software can really meet my needs in a simple and efficient way (that includes saving costs too and ensuring that i'm not exposed to risks of any sort).
i'll talk about the disruptive factor in just a while. (have to attend to something urgent!)
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