Business Environment
The extraordinary
technological developments
of the last decade
are spawning new
rules of economic
engagement. Fueled
by worldwide information
networks, the fundamentals
of business are
being transformed
in every market,
in every industry,
in every nation.
Those who understand
how to create, manage,
and leverage assets
across boundary
less organizations,
using the tools
of information technology
and telecommunications,
are the new barons
of industry.
Unprecedented market
forces and organizational
forms have emerged.
There are new structures
of competition and
alliances, sources
of value and methods
of asset valuation,
strategies for touching
and retaining customers
in global markets,
and new electronic
channels and brokerage
relationships.
The rapidity and
volatility of technical,
knowledge, and market
changes require
leaders of global
businesses to be
highly adaptive
and receptive to
new and complex
information. These
accelerating changes
also necessitate
the development
of new theoretical
models for understanding,
evaluating, and
affecting the efficient
and fair practice
of business in the
“third industrial
revolution.” In
the digital economy,
no position is secure
or defensible for
long, as the fast
companies create
new advantages by
actually destroying
the old.
The innovation of
organizational processes
and products has
become a major business
challenge. One key
area of innovation
has been the recognition
that sophisticated
organizational supply
chains, as practiced
by companies such
as Wal-Mart, Dell,
and Nokia, can be
a strategic source
of competitive advantage.
With implementation
of advanced supply
chain management,
the adversarial
relationships between
logistics providers,
suppliers, and customers
become more like
partnerships, and
the collective focus
of firms begins
to shift from optimizing
each firm’s own
internal value chain
to optimizing the
larger inter-firm
extended value chain.
In this new business
environment, corporations
face many new challenges.
Business has now
become what is called
the “24/7” affair.
How does one manage
customers, suppliers,
and employees around
the clock? Given
the technological
advancements, how
does one move appropriate
parts of the business
online? Given the
global reach created
by technology, which
business processes
should be outsourced?
How does the instant
availability of
information transform
traditional organizational
structures? How
does one ensure
that technological
penetration into
the workplace improves
the productivity
of employees? Wireless
communications technology
has also become
so pervasive that
most people can
be on the road and
yet be connected
to everyone and
have access to all
the business intelligence
they need. Success
stories—and failures—of
wireless business
applications abound.
The challenge is
to know what mobile
applications make
sense from the point
of view of business
and organizational
design.
Most companies now
use the Internet
as a new channel
to their customers
and a way to speed
up the negotiations
with their suppliers.
A number of new
issues are emerging
in electronic marketplaces.
How does one create
electronic marketplaces
that are profitable?
What kind of online
auctions are most
useful for procurement?
How does one ensure
product quality
from the suppliers
while at the same
time ensuring competitive
prices? How does
one create e-markets
for time-sensitive
goods? In dealing
with customers,
companies must use
information intelligently
to compete. The
challenge is how
to ensure that the
best data are collected
and that the most
important data are
presented to customers
and companies for
effective decision-making.
New techniques in
data mining and
data delivery are
needed to address
these issues.
The digital economy
also allows companies
to use new ways
of doing business.
More and more companies
like Dell are getting
the customers to
use the Internet
to tell them exactly
what features they
need in a product.
The issue is how
to design these
direct-to-customer
systems. When one
orders anything
from Amazon, they
like to tell you
exactly when that
order will be filled.
Given that a supply
chain has to work
together to make
this happen, it
is important to
know how confident
one can be about
the order fulfillment
date. The issue
is how to design
available-to-promise
systems that are
more than 95% accurate.
The new digital
economy also allows
much more collaborative
decision-making
when there are multiple
agents (e.g., airlines
working with FAA,
or logistics and
delivery systems).
Again, the design
of these systems
requires very good
domain knowledge
as well as an understanding
of the algorithms
that can resolve
the problems very
quickly.
These are the challenges
for today’s business
schools, and only
a few are making
the transition to
the new digital
economy. At the
Smith School, we
are charting a course
to advance business
thinking and education
for the digital
economy. The world
as we know it is
changing rapidly,
from the way we
live our personal
lives, our social
and political activities
and choices, to
our approaches for
conducting business
and creating value.
The impact of technology
on the business
environment has
been felt in all
aspects of business.
Like businesses,
business schools
in the new millennium
must transform their
knowledge and research
base, curricula,
and modes of delivery.
At the Smith School,
we are in the midst
of this transformation,
with a vision of
becoming a model
for business education
and knowledge advancement
for the 21st century.
►Business
Challenges
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