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GLOBAL PHONING GROUP
Three Megatrends Could Make Or Break Your Business This Decade
by GPG
|
Jan 21,2020
How can CEOs both lead in the more recognizable world of the next two years and position their organizations to thrive past the next ten?
The 2020s will be a transformative decade for the business enterprise. The forces reshaping our world will challenge many business orthodoxies and interrupt long-term plans at the same time that society’s expectations of business are expanding. Signs of this ongoing evolution are all around us—with the emergence of an open talent economy, the unprecedented pace of tech-driven innovation across all industries, and an active political debate around the obligations of business to fulfill a broader social purpose than profit maximization.
Stepping back from individual shifts and putting them in context, three longstanding trends appear to be driving and accelerating the evolution of business and economic fundamentals. These secular trends are reshaping what the future enterprise will look like, the role it plays in the economy and society, and what it will take to thrive in the long term.
1. Transformative technologies augment human talents.
Human beings have always developed tools to augment work, but the technology we now have at our disposal is enabling the creation of capabilities that are orders of magnitude more powerful than anything we have seen previously. Having automated routine cognitive work, technology has now meaningfully entered the previously underdeveloped arena of non-routine cognitive work, where human analytical and problem-solving skills predominate. This augurs seismic change, as AI extends to augmenting human decision making in such diverse areas as business, law, healthcare, and government. Within the enterprise, non-routine AI will likely disrupt nearly every role and function, while elevating the relationship between human and machine.
2. Ecosystems stitch together the best capabilities of multiple enterprises.
The last round of globalization brought disaggregation in the form of sophisticated supply chains. More recently, efficiencies around information flow and business transactions have allowed companies to leverage assets and resources without owning them. New forms of collaboration already enable organizations to deliver custom-built solutions by pulling together best-in-class capabilities from different entities in a seamlessly integrated fashion. This is just an early glimpse of how organizations may capture value as significantly enhanced connectivity and digitization usher in the new era of ecosystems; and ecosystems will reorient the marketplace. To participate and thrive, organizations will have to reimagine borders and business models, clearly defining the opportunities to co-own, co-create and co-evolve over time.
3. Technology enables greater customer centricity.
Today’s digital tools enable companies to gain insights into customers’ buying preferences and their social spheres, while social media and other digital platforms allow customers unprecedented influence over the design, production, and improvement of goods and services. On a macro-level, the co-creative energies these technologies have unleashed are starting to reorganize the economy around some of our truly fundamental human wants and needs: mobility, health and wellness, learning and personal growth, money and value exchange, and accessible, sustainable energy. As these human-centric ecosystems emerge, the relationship of business, technology, and society will dramatically reset.