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Digital Darwinism

Page 25

by Tom Goodwin

demographic shifts 178–83

  artificial intelligence 181

  death of the middle class 180–81

  division of a tech-driven future 179

  extremism 180

  empathy, not technology 168–69

  importance of looking further forward 166–67

  the predictive web: the Th’Internet 173–74

  privacy trading (and) 174–77

  transparency and control 175

  trust 175

  value 175–77

  second-order and adjacent technologies 169–70

  smartness in the cloud 177–78

  Primack, D 127

  Ptolemy 72

  Raymond, E 172

  Renoir, P-A 210

  reports (on)

  maintenance costs of highways/bridges through 2030 (US Dept of Transportation) 21

  Poorer than their Parents (McKinsey Global Institute, 2016) 181

  return on investment (ROI) 86, 128, 156

  robots 11, 46, 64, 108, 136, 169, 170, 182, 185

  Rodriguez, A 5

  Rometty, G (CEO of IBM) 182

  Sacks, D 124

  Sagan, C 170

  Sawers, P 85

  Sawhney, M 20

  Schurr, S H 34

  Schwartz, E 27

  Silicon Valley 12, 68, 208

  idiom – ‘building the plane while you’re flying it’ 4

  Six Sigma 50, 54

  Skype 70, 118

  Slack 61, 70, 92, 96, 108

  smartphones 13, 15, 18, 46, 61, 65, 81, 83, 113, 157, 158, 159, 168–69, 186, 187, 191, 198

  Smith, A 5

  Snapchat 12, 119, 171

  social networks 171–72

  Sonos 49, 69, 165

  Spotify 82, 137, 154, 156

  Stan, A 111

  starting your disruption (and) 106–24

  establishing a role 109–12

  establishing a time to change 112–13

  four ways to change 113–23

  1. self-disruption 113–16, 118, 117

  2. continual reinvention 118–20

  3. measured bets 121–22

  4. hedge fund 122–23

  how vital is this change? 108–09

  risk level 107

  Steel, E 116

  Stephens, R (The Geek Squad) 197

  Strohl, D 84

  The Structure of Scientific Revolutions 72 see also Kuhn, T

  studies (on)

  CEOs’ concerns on disruption/non-disruption of business models (KPMG, 2016) 12

  CEOs’ concerns on risk to business models (McKinsey, 2013) 12

  Sutherland, R 134, 195

  Taylor, D 93

  Taylor, E 121

  technology, three eras of (and/and the) 46, 48–67, 47

  how businesses can leverage power of post-digital age (by) 65–67

  build around possibilities, not the past 66–67

  build data literacy fast 67

  change 65

  making things simpler 66

  mid-computer age 54–56, 56

  mid-digital age 60–63

  mid-electricity age 50–51, 53, 52

  post-computer age 56–57, 58

  post-digital age 63–65

  post-electricity age 53–54

  pre-computer age 54

  pre-digital age 59–60

  pre-electricity age 49–50

  shortening cycles 57, 59

  three phases 48–49

  Tesco 169

  dotcom operations 102, 104

  Tesla 11, 30, 68, 70, 71, 115, 152

  three eras of technology see technology, three eras of

  today’s business dynamics see business dynamics today

  tooling ourselves for the future (and) 185–99

  audacity, decision-making and risk 198–99

  comfort of properness and expense (and) 196–98

  creativity – the need for constraints 197–98

  rethinking education (and) 188–96

  building empathy 194–95

  curiosity 191

  decisiveness 192–94

  fostering agility 192

  the power of creativity 195–96

  relationships 190

  unprecedented levels of unpredictability 186–88

  Tran, N 209

  Trump, D 20, 68, 187

  Twain, M 68

  Twitter 12, 119, 171, 183, 188

  Uber 68, 70, 86, 87, 104

  Unilever 108, 127

  United Kingdom (UK) (and) 8, 21, 28

  BBC 61

  Channel 5 TV 149

  the EU 187

  transport in 82

  use of canals 84

  United States (US) (and) 35, 177, 181 see also New York

  interstate highway system 21

  presidential election (2017) 14

  security 63

  use of banks/cheques 104

  unleashing the power of the paradigm shift (and) 68–88

  avoiding the local maximum 75–76, 76

  being different is scary 85–86

  design as evolutionary funnels 73–75, 74, 75

  don’t apply old models to new eras 86–87

  don’t apply old thinking to new eras 86

  don’t let experience or success kill you 85

  leaps in design paradigms (and) 82–84

  currency 83

  phones 83

  in shopping 83

  in transport 82–83

  lesson from the paradigm shift: breaking rules 84–85

  a new theory for disruption 69–71

  the paradigm leap in action 76–82 see also Apple; music and Sony Walkman

  the CD player era 78

  the streaming age 81–82

  the worst MP3 players 78

  power of the paradigm shift 71–73

  value propositions 105

  Van Buskirk, E 79

  Walcutt, L 113

  Walmart 120, 169

  and Jet.com 114

  Warhol, A 97

  Watson, J 140

  WeChat 83, 172

  Weinmann, K 130

  Welch, J 179

  Wikipedia 69, 191

  Willshire, J V 208

  Winsor, J 129

  and the ‘Hamptons Effect’ 129

  Woloson, W 84

  Wroblewski, L 10

  Yahoo 171

  Yglesias, M 85

  YouTube 11, 62

  Zipcar 70, 104, 148

  Zuckerberg, M 120

  “A fascinating dip into a disruptive future.”

  Dylan Jones, Editor, GQ

  “This finally answered many questions about innovation which have long haunted me. It’s one of those rare books that is worth reading twice.”

  Rory Sutherland, Vice Chairman, Ogilvy & Mather Group, and TED speaker

  “Goodwin cuts through the gobbledygook to offer down-to-earth, practical advice for transforming your business.”

  Adam Najberg, Head of Digital Media, Alibaba

  “A great map of the entire digital landscape, sprinkled with invaluable insights to act upon.”

  Stefan Olander, former Vice President, Global Digital Innovation, Nike

  Digital isn’t a thing, it’s everything. Digital Darwinism is your wake-up call to realize that incremental change in digital transformation isn’t enough. Faced with disruptive technologies, unprecedented speed of change and the advent of digital-first super-companies, your business will be left behind and become extinct unless it acts. This book takes an exhilarating look at disruptive thinking to inspire those who want to be the best at digital transformation and who want to survive these turbulent times.

  With a growing abundance of decisions to make, data to process and technology that threatens to disrupt even the most established business models, businesses are facing forces that could destroy them. But with the right strategy in place, these forces could help you transform your company into a market leader. Digital Darwinism provides a guiding hand through the chaos of t
his moment, offering practical strategies as well as a call to action that sets a fire underneath complacency and inspires creative change.

  Tom Goodwin shines a light into the future by exploring technology, society and the lessons of the past so that you can understand how to adapt, what to embrace and what to ignore. In order to revolutionize your mindset, Goodwin proves how every assumption the business world has previously made about digital is wrong: incremental change isn’t good enough and adding technology at the edges just won’t work. If you want your organization to succeed in the post-digital age, you need to be enlightened by Digital Darwinism.

  Tom Goodwin is the Executive Vice President and Head of Innovation at Zenith Media USA. He has been voted the top voice in marketing and social media by LinkedIn in 2017, a must-follow by Fast Company and, with over 500,000 followers, one of 30 people to follow on Twitter by Business Insider. An industry provocateur and commentator on the future of marketing and business, he is a columnist for TechCrunch and Forbes, writes frequently for the Guardian, GQ, Ad Age, Wired, Adweek, Inc., MediaPost and Digiday and is a contributor to the World Economic Forum.

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