Old ideas for managing new technology.
Welcome to the digital challenge.
It is hard to think of an industry where this isn’t happening. For many managers it’s overwhelming. Wherever they look, everyone is talking digital delivery on mobile devices. The sheer breadth and scale of new technology can be threatening. It’s constantly changing. How do you cope?
Stay Underwhelmed
Not changing are the basic principles of running a business. Want to climb the digital hill? Do it one step at a time.
The journey starts with the customer becoming aware of your product or service, then considering yours and comparing it to others. Next is the intention to buy, then the purchase, on to implementation, possibly followed by support services, then cementing the relationship and hopefully maintaining it with further transactions. Nine steps in all. Not all will apply.
Look at each of one and examine how you can use technology to facilitate, influence or execute any of them more effectively to build volume.
Make it a project.
Don’t overlook your strengths. That’s what newspapers did with classified ads for real estate, cars and jobs. Instead of using those strengths to develop online power in each, they stuck with print. Most lost all three to internet start-ups.
Use your own advantages, and that includes your own knowledge and business experience. Big data isn’t just something out in the digital ether. Dig into your own customer base. There’s plenty of data already there. Start targeting repeat business.
Don't stop at customers
Competitive advantage can comes from digital cost reduction. It boosts profit margin, some of which you may have to give away to capture and retain market share. Margin is just as important as volume. You will need more of it to compete in a digital world.
Examine your decision journey and your value chain step by step. That’s not a new idea. It’s still about volume and margin, digital or othwerwise.