Archive for the ‘general’ Category

The “Socialism” of Social Media

Thursday, September 24th, 2009

This relatively short article is packed with interesting ideas .. some explicitly mentioned, some not so much.

My View On ‘The New Socialism’
http://www.mediapost.com/publications/?fa=Articles.showArticle&art_aid=114260

These three points particularly jumped out at me.

A – Online social media is growing at an extraordinary rate, already representing an extraordinary share of the total time that many consumers spend on media.

B – There are no better examples of the changing business and pricing models than newspaper classifieds and Craigslist.

1. The former has made all participants — sellers, advertisers, subscribers — pay dearly, while pocketing outsized profit margins.
2. The latter only requires a tiny fraction of the participants to pay relatively little, and still pockets outsize profit margins.

Of course, the $100 million that Craigslist might generate this year is only a fraction of the billions of dollars that it displaced.

Isn’t this combination of #1 and #2 a huge (socialist?) redistribution of wealth?!

C – Online media exposures are growing at an extraordinary rate, maybe even exponentially. The future is not about delivering “cheaper, faster” impressions. It is about delivering results — helping people find things, helping people buy things, helping people sell things.

I am note sure that is quite right, but it definitely is an interesting perspective!

Revisiting Schumpeter on Steroids

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

It is great to see that The Economist is using “Schumpeter” as the name for a new column on business and management that it is launching.

I am looking forward to becoming a loyal reader.

In response to the launch of this new column, I am posting this slightly revised version of an item that I wrote a little over two years ago.

Back then, I made the argument that it is vital to begin to re-think Schumpeter’s important contributions and his signature notion of how “the perennial gale of creative destruction” plays a central role in capitalism.

Despite all the deserved attention that Schumpeter is getting, there is an important issue that also merits discussion, namely:

The way that quantitative changes in the amount and the rate of Schumpeterian transformation are triggering important qualitative changes in the nature of Schumpeter’s creative destruction.

In fact, a tsunami of “Industrial-Strength Creative Destruction” is flooding across virtually every part of the world…and our encounter with “Schumpeter on Steroids” is cramming unprecedented change and transformation into every nook and cranny of the planet.

If you look back to the first half of the 20th century, you can see that the industrialization and mass-production of manufactured goods began to radically change not only the quantity of those goods, but also the nature of the goods that were produced and the roles that those products played in our lives.

In an analogous sense, the new “mass-production of creative destruction” has important implications for the role and nature of Schumpeterian change…and for the role and nature of innovation in today’s world.

I’ve touched upon these issues in several “Articles from the Archives” that already have made it onto this site (for example, In Praise of Bad Ideas and Nobel Laureate on R&D Changes), and I expect to be exploring other implications – specific and general – in future postings.

So, stay tuned for more…much more.

In the meantime, here are few links to a selection of notable recent items about Schumpeter and to the book that spurred my initial posting back in 2007, the biography of Schumpeter by Pulitzer-winning historian Thomas K. McCraw.

Welcome to Re-Inventing Innovation

Thursday, April 26th, 2007

Thanks for visiting Re-Inventing-Innovation.com, which focuses on the far-reaching transformations that are re-shaping the nature and role of innovation and creativity in today’s world

The two-pronged mission of the site is

  1. To contribute to the discussion and the understanding of the “re-invention of innovation” that is taking place, and
  2. To help to develop effective responses to the new challenges and opportunities that are emerging in connection with these radical changes.

We hope that you find the site helpful…and we look forward to your feedback and responses, which can be sent to contact@re-inventing-innovation.com.