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The internet has made fools of timid retailers

21/8/2019

2 Comments

 
Just 20 short years ago, the company I founded, Freeserve, launched to an unsuspecting world. At the time, very few people in the UK had used the internet, so few that Microsoft didn’t bundle a browser with Windows. What was the point? Hardly anyone was on the internet.

Fast-forward to today: now we don’t have to plug a wire into the phone socket, your computer doesn’t make that funny noise to log on and you can even use your mobile phone. The internet is everywhere and is part of our daily lives.

“New companies have stolen the food from right under the noses of old companies without them even knowing”

But, boy, has it made fools of people.

New companies have come and stolen the food from right under the noses of old companies without them even knowing it. In a short space of time, start-ups have made gigantic fortunes, while others have lost unbelievable amounts of money.
But the sad thing is, for 20 years, some companies have continually talked about the internet and still done nothing.

The only thing they’ve done is hired consultants who are good at acting and telling people what they want to hear.

Afraid of change
What consultants don’t tell you is that people are afraid of change. Because if they tell you that, they won’t get paid. I’ve no idea what was being discussed in the boardrooms of Asda, Morrisons and M&S Food as the directors watched Tesco and Sainsbury’s vans shooting up and down the roads in front of them.

Many companies haven’t been successful because they don’t pivot and progress; they carry on majoring in minor things until it’s too late.

At the beginning, the internet was a low-stakes place and then it suddenly changed, which meant people had to respond quickly to trends, they had to launch new services, they had to listen to customers’ problems and, most importantly, they had to find where their old customers were now spending their money.

I think many people are afraid of what they’ll find when they start looking at their businesses. So, stop asking customers what they want and create something that customers don’t even know they need yet.

We can learn a lot from a company like Apple. I was at the launch of the iPod and later the iPhone. I didn’t know I needed those products until Steve Jobs revealed them to the world then suddenly, I wanted to buy one. Stop considering new products, services or ideas as a threat and try to take advantage of them. 

From low stakes to ultimate risk
What’s changed and made the internet turn from a low-stakes arena into something that if you don’t get right, you’ll fall off the cliff?

The first thing is that successful companies now know about good design, navigation and technology. The best sites are so easy to navigate that you can find anything within a few clicks, and customers can’t understand why they keep going back to them over and over again.

“Stop just using the internet every day and ask: why do I visit some sites more than others?”

The other thing is the mobile phone.
The mobile phone sucks us in and feeds our addictive desires. On the train, on the bus and even in my house, people are addicted to these devices. If you don’t understand this, you are missing a large part of the equation.

To stop making mistakes, dare to ask the most straightforward questions. You won’t sound like a fool because if you don’t get it, your customers won’t get it.

Look at other successful companies and try and figure out how they’ve done it and learn from them. Stop just using the internet every day and ask: why do I visit some sites more than others? Look at them like a customer would.

What are the next 20 years going to be like? I haven’t got a clue – because if I did, I wouldn’t be sharing it with you.

This article appeared in Retail Week 16th August 2019 
https://www.retail-week.com/technology/opinion-the-internet-has-made-fools-of-timid-retailers/7032683.article
2 Comments
Jon Harris
27/8/2019 10:29:11 am

Boy, the world is changing fast ...
The High Street will not last for much longer ...
AI will change the way we run our lives - more than anyone can imagine ...
30 years from now - that generation will not recognise the way we live today
The way I see it is:
1. (the increasing speed of) Technology and
2. The numbers of people who will be productive in Society will have changed beyond all recognition, within the next 30 years ...
Will this be good (?) or will this be bad (?)
In 30 years time (the greatest scientists in the world predict that "the world will change more in the next 30 years than in the whole history of the human race") the proportion of those "productive" in Society will be a fraction of those today ... and what will they think of the "burden" of supporting the vast majority of the "unproductive" part of the human race??
We need to start planning now - the Government(s of the world) need to start focussing on the most productive ways of developing technology for the benefit of all ... will this happen??
Imagine what could be achieved if all the countries in the world decided to get on with each other ... and spent the money that is being spent today on armaments on looking after the welfare and future of the human race ... we could all look forward to a better future for ourselves and our future generations
However (there is always a catch!) ... unless the governments of this planet (or at least the sensible ones) start to consider the way we are treating "our home" ... maybe we won't need to worry about how to "survive" ... in 30 years from now, if we don't start making rapid changes now the Earth will suffer the same fate as Venus - which once supported some form of life ... but that all disappeared billions of years ago, when the then inhabitants decided that their atmosphere was an "optional extra"!
The future of the human race is in the hands of the policy makers of today - God helps us, I hear you say, and maybe with God's help we may just avoid armageddon
But don't let me put too bright a picture on the (near) future ... it is all in our own hands ... we need to embrace change, but we need to do it responsibly - if the human race is to survive
PS: the "red dwarf" we affectionately call "our Sun" is in the latter stages of burning its hydrogen - following that, it will start to burn the other elements and begin to expand and within the next 2 to 3 billion years it will have enveloped Mercury and Venus and scorched away all life forms on planet Earth
So we need (another) plan, if the human race is to survive ... we need to hop off to another planet ... a bit tricky as Mars is the only other planet further away from the Sun than the Earth that is not a "Gas Giant" - so our next stop, after Mars, will be Light Years away!
So wouldn't it make sense if we all started to get together and start planning a path for the betterment of mankind??
Let's use the wonders that science brings and start planning for a future where our descendants will survive (they are bound to be very grateful that we didn't leave them here to fry ... something that we can be proud of and take with us to our next adventure)

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Ovdje link
11/9/2023 07:10:28 pm

Thank you for writing this

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