Technology is not disruptive: it is customers that are doing the disruption, technology is just the tool.
Just like matches disrupted the flint and steel manufacturing industry, Josiah Wedgewood disrupted the pottery industry, and the motor car disrupted the horse transport industry. These three, and many others you can think of, were driven by customers preferring the new offering, as it better met their needs. It is customers who are driving the disruption of shopping, communicating, travelling, and all the rest.
Once you accept technology is just the tool, you can start thinking about customers.
The best place to start is with the customer journey.
What are your customers trying to achieve when they buy a product? Do they want a drill bit, or do they want a hole? Do they want a luxury central city hotel, or do they want somewhere comfortable to sleep with a café nearby for their breakfast?
Understand the customer journey, what it is they are looking for, and the means by which they currently get there is key.
Once you have that figured out, you might be able to see places where the current value chain that serves customers can be re-engineered.
Technology is one way, but there are others.
A business I worked for years ago replaced a network of distributors with direct salespeople backed up by a very friendly telephone process. This was pre internet, so no tech beyond the phone and a hand recorded version of a CRM on customer cards was used. The results were spectacular.
Considering any sort of reengineering of the existing value chain means that there will be an element of risk, However, the risk can these days be mitigated by using the Lean Startup methodology, simply, placing a version of the chain in front of customers and seeing if, and how they use it. If the product is entirely new, it is not much use asking them, as they have little frame of reference. Henry Fords dictum of the faster horse still holds true, but seeing how customers use a new product in its minimum viable form is the best way to gather insight. We used to call it test marketing, so this idea is not really new, but the technology that enables it more easily than ever before is.
Alongside technology enabling customers to make different choices, there comes the second baseball bat to the head of incumbents: the business model.
Again, business models are simply the manner in which you deliver value to your customers. The manner in which this value delivery happens can change, enabled by technology, which changes the business model.
They go hand in hand.
Let’s take retail. I was in a large format general retail store a few weeks ago, and there were customers all over the place playing with their phones. Some were just amusing themselves, but many were price checking, seeking product specifications, availability, and looking at product comparison websites. I am sure some bought products, but equally sure that many walked out, either delaying the purchase or making it elsewhere.
Opportunity lost.
The huge untapped competitive advantage bricks and mortar retailers have, is that they have the potential for human interaction. We are a social species, so seek to commune with others. Yet, this retail store, typically, had cut down on staff on the floor, saving costs presumably in the face of online competition. A few added sales staff who were product experts, there not to sell product but to assist potential customers make the right choice, even if that choice was not available immediately, would have made a huge difference,
Back to the customer journey.
In the old days, customers travelled almost the whole journey in the one place, a retail store. Once they determined they needed a product, they went to a store they trusted, and were given information by the salespeople, made a choice and paid, had it delivered. All in the one place.
That has changed,
Now the power of the retailer that came from controlling the information has been lost, the information is available everywhere, so the customer can make their choices while nowhere near a retail outlet. However, often they will go and have a look at the physical product, in a store, just to make sure, or just to get a better sense of the physicality of the product. They then can check price and availability and make a decision on the supplier. Showrooming is the term often used, and it is a powerful new force, underutilised by retailers. The customer journey doesn’t finish with the product delivery. Now there are tech tools that will follow up, ensure service is delivered, ask for referrals and ratings, all designed to offer information to the next customer who may be showrooming.
Technology is the enabler of changed customer behaviour, not the driver. The driver is customers looking for increased value by seeking and accepting the removal of commercial friction.
Header cartoon courtesy of Hugh McLeod at gapingvoid.com