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Dormant Internet Will Still Shake The Business World
What happened to the Internet earthquake that was supposed to reshape the business landscape? Summit Strategies President and CEO Tom Kucharvy explains what's in store in the months and years to come.
We are now languishing in the depths of the post-Internet bust. Times are quite different from a year and a half ago, when virtually everything about the Internet applications hosting, B2B exchanges, wireless Internet access, even Internet portals seemed destined to reshape the world as we knew it.
Whatever the Internet's future course, it is extremely unlikely that we will return to the unbridled (and unjustified) euphoria or the naive dreams of years past. Ultimately, the Internet will indeed transfigure the way business is conducted. How? Let me offer just a few examples of the ways in which the Internet will (not may, but will) reshape business as we know it especially the computer and communications industries.
Before getting into how the Internet will alter the world, I must first explain my view of how it won't alter the world. We will not, at least not during the next several years, see the re-emergence of the "Myth of the Consumer Internet" the vision of hundreds of millions of users, with Internet-enabled devices sewn into their lapels, conducting billions of online transactions and creating trillions of dollars in new revenue per day. While consumers will certainly increase their use of the Internet, this adoption will be more steady than seismic. As we have been insisting since the beginning of the Internet Age, the real shake-up will occur in business. That means that adoption will be driven not by fad or addictive obsession; but by cold, hard business benefits and return-on-investment (ROI) calculations.
Just how will the Internet transform business and our own industries? Primarily by driving all types of IT and communications industry trends to the Internet. For example, as we have discussed in previous reports, it will:
These shifts are certainly important to the IT and communications industries. They will, after all, radically alter the composition of these industries and the ways in which all vendors and providers deliver their offerings. They will meet our basic criteria for being "inflection points" that create huge new markets, change the rules of industry competition, and produce new winners and losers. But, while these changes are of great import to our own industries, they will hardly transform the nature of business in the 21st century. These are the type of under-the-cover changes that will only excite, or more likely traumatize, corporate IT and communications executives.
Let's instead focus on three Internet-based changes that are likely to rattle all industries and attract the attention of virtually all line-of-business executives, from manufacturing and sales, to CEOs:
Tom Kucharvy is President and CEO of Summit Strategies, Inc. (www.summitstrat.com), an independent market strategy, research, and consulting services firm based in Boston MA, and which he founded in 1984. Summit Strategies helps technology companies understand the implications of formulative trends and how these trends will affect their company, customers, partners and competitors. It has tracked the rise of Internet applications hosting since mid-1998 and is a recognized authority on the emerging ASP industry.
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