Disruption impels us to either renew, adapt or die out
Gordon E. Moore stated already 50 years ago that change will never be this slow again. The way Moore鈥檚 law still holds true in the modern, disrupted, global market was a topical subject in Capital Markets Top Seminar, aimed at companies鈥 financial management and organised by PwC and Aalto University School of Business.
Disruption transforms the existing. It shakes the conventional and may turn the value chains and logic of entire sectors upside down.
鈥業f you think the change is stressing now, you should enjoy it, because in the future the rate of change will only accelerate鈥, stated futurist Stefan Hyttfors in his key note speech.
Petri Kokko from Google encouraged companies to disrupt their own businesses.
鈥業f you will not do it, someone will do it for you.鈥 Laura Raitio from Diacor agreed. 鈥榊ou have to positively cannibalise your own field. There is a need for free innovation and for courage to err, also.
The market is being redefined
Before long, disruption improves productivity and brings added value. Prior to this, a lot of restructuring that shakes the traditional thought has to happen.
鈥楢 change in technology induces a change in people鈥檚 behaviour. And vice versa, the consumers鈥 expectations change technologies. We are only in the beginning鈥, noted Petri Kokko. 鈥楢ll devices will be smart and at the same time will collect data on their users. This enables e.g. real dialogue between humans and devices.鈥
According to Stefan Hyttfors, there is an ongoing transfer of power from institutions to individuals. 鈥楾he large print media companies鈥 traditional competitive advantages regarding contents and distribution are no longer valid. With the Internet, advertising money is soon available to everyone.鈥 As a good example, Hyttfors mentioned the young YouTubers of the net that already have millions of subscribers globally. 鈥楢 perfectly turnround model where the entire value chain is broken.鈥
The wind-down of institutions was discussed also by Laura Raitio, who has been the CEO of Diacor terveyspalvelut Oy for a year now. 鈥楾he conventional traditions change when people reach the sources of information themselves.鈥 As stated by Raitio, in the health care sector this is manifested especially as a change in customer management. 鈥楾he consumers really transform this business. The customers pay for value. We as a service provider must understand where this value comes from and also transform our ways of management to match the today鈥檚 needs.
It is hard to be humble if you are so good
Are we really as good as we think? Do we recognise the weak signals that will shake the market in the future in time? This classic utterance by Muhammad Ali can be well paralleled by a situation where disruption is unwanted or where its reception is missed.
鈥楾oo many company managers try to convince themselves that they truly are on top of things. But can they afford to be careless?鈥 Stefan Hyttfors posed the question. In Petri Kokko鈥檚 opinion, disruption can be survived by taking risks. 鈥楾his brings about fears, but is an important lesson. Be always present, make better decisions, and make sure your company attracts new, rising talents with entirely novel profiles!鈥
鈥業 would leave behind annual clocks and rather write scenarios鈥, was Laura Raitio鈥檚 formula. The health care sector education does not necessarily anymore reflect what is needed in the future, either. 鈥榃e must for example be ready to receive all that data the patients bring to us with them. New talents are truly needed!鈥
Also professor Sixten Korkman, in his closing words of the seminar, pinned his hopes on our young students. 鈥楩inland鈥檚 biggest problem is our inability to react to resistance to change and to understand that we must adapt. In addition, as was already mentioned, we have too much faith in the institutions鈥 power. Luckily our new students know no fear of traditional ways of thinking. That will be our strength in the future!鈥
In conclusion, Korkman once again stated that we should not let a good crisis to go to waste, but to learn a lesson from it. 鈥榃hatever cannot last forever, must end.鈥
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