Saul J. Berman, Steven Abraham, Bill Battino, Louisa Shipnuck and Andreas Neus
The authors perform market trend analysis and to examine the clash between new and traditional media and explore future industry competitive scenarios.
Abstract
Purpose
The authors perform market trend analysis and to examine the clash between new and traditional media and explore future industry competitive scenarios.
Design/methodology/approach
IBM conducted a comprehensive study that included interviews with leaders of media companies and an in‐depth analysis of the factors that are shaping the industry outlook. IBM conducted in‐person interviews with more than 75 senior media executives, industry analysts, economists and technology visionaries and also worked with the Economist Intelligence Unit to survey another 125 industry executives.
Findings
IBM sees four primary business models emerging – traditional media, walled communities, content hyper‐syndication and new platform aggregation. The research also found evidence of another developing conflict that it calls the media divide. It could pit partner against partner in a struggle for growth.
Practical implications
IBM proposes seven industry‐specific recommendations for incumbent media companies as they face the immediate threat from new entrants and eventual collisions with traditional partners: Deliver experiences, not just content. Leverage virtual worlds. Innovate business models. Invest in interactive, measurable advertising services and platforms. Redefine partnerships, while mitigating fallout. Shift investment from traditional business to new models. Create a flexible business design.
Originality/value
The article offers a combination of market evolution analysis, future market scenarios and recommendations for gaining first mover advantage.
Details
Keywords
Matt Porta, Brian House, Lisa Buckley and Amy Blitz
Business “rules” (for the way value is created) are rapidly evolving, necessitating transformational change. The confluence of several factors – the Internet, innovative new…
Abstract
Purpose
Business “rules” (for the way value is created) are rapidly evolving, necessitating transformational change. The confluence of several factors – the Internet, innovative new technologies, changing consumer preferences, intensified global competition, and the proliferation of fast‐evolving social technologies that connect people and ideas – is driving the need to change. This paper aims to investigate these issues/
Design/methodology/approach
The paper looks at eight new rules which have been identified through research on 100 technology start‐ups and 40 early adopter large enterprises that were then refined based on insights from technology analysts, IBM business leaders and the venture capital community.
Findings
The paper finds that these rules, referred to as Value 2.0, illustrate unique ways in which emerging technologies are enabling new value creation in an enterprise.
Practical implications
Corporations can use the eight rules to capitalize on new markets and business models, get closer to markets and customers and create new capabilities
Originality/value
The Value 2.0 proficiencies described in the article seem likely to be critical in coming years for corporations in many industries.