Industrial
Non-Equilibrium Dynamics
by Tim Smith, PhD, May 30, 2000
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Economic transactions and industrial reorganizations
are akin to the evolution of a complex system punctuated with periods
of equilibrium and non-equilibrium dynamics. The reactions of firms
to the type of dynamics underway determine their competitive position
for the next period. In this article, I will clarify an analogy
of our economy to systems undergoing equilibrium and non-equilibrium
dynamics and explain some demands the internet makes upon the firm.
Most of the time, much of our economy is in a state
of dynamic equilibrium or a state of relative constancy. While components
of it are being changed, the composition of the entire system remains
the same. Our economy is a system with many interacting players
and parts. We conduct transactions and change employers without
altering the fundamental structure of the economy. At the micro
level our existence may be affected by the transaction, but at a
macro level the economic system remains constant.
Non-equilibrium dynamics can be recognized by its ability to change
of the composition entire system. The process may be slow or fast,
but the result is to alter and morph the entire system towards a
new state. The expected outcome of an interaction between the players
is no longer fulfilled. The components of the system, the players
and parts, are revalued and redirected in a non-equilibrium dynamic
process. When a complex system moves through a non-equilibrium state,
the outcome is unpredictable.
Currently, our economy is undergoing non-equilibrium
dynamics. Up-start concept companies are over taking established
asset based companies as witnessed in the AOL and the Time Warner
merger. Corporate anarchists like Jim Clark, the founder of Healtheon,
are threatening the 14 % of the U.S. economy through inserting themselves
into the delivery of health care. All of this due to society gaining
the ability to control the actions of unseen electrons in within
a piece of material made ostensibly from sand coupled with the controlled
pulses of light in strands of buried glass. Neither Bohr, Schrodinger,
nor Hiesenberg, the fathers of quantum mechanics, would have predicted
this outcome yet their ideas are the core enabler of our current
economic revolution.
In economies constrained to equilibrium or near-equilibrium
dynamics, we are able to predict the growth of wealth through the
simple understanding of the amount of capital and labor deployed.
Growth within an economy could increase either by deploying greater
populations or making capital improvements. More recently though,
we have seen that the wealth of a nation, its productive capacity,
is affected by other factors. Economist like to speak of “total
factor productivity” to capture all those messy variables
they don’t fully understand, but for business people the economist’s
messy variable are the core of our strategic decisions: how do you
increase a firms productivity more than its competitors?
During periods of equilibrium dynamics, firms attempt
to make better investment decisions or hire better people. During
non-equilibrium dynamics, the effects of the classic competitive
questions are dwarfed by the ability to combine capital and labor
in fundamentally new ways. The inventions of new business processes
and new business constructs are the hallmark of our non-equilibrium
economy. Growth no longer is confined by the inputs, but by the
ingenuity in their combination.
The internet is a small change in our ability to communicate, but
it affects entire industries. Compared to the corporate downsizing
of the 80’s, the industrial reorganization that our economy
is currently undertaking is gargantuan. For professional business
people like ourselves, the internet offers a defining moment where
we decide if we are a Pawn in the Chess game, or a Champion of the
New Landscape. We can’t sit back and watch the future unfold;
we have to define it. Speed and agility are core competitive advantages.
Change is the prerogative of the winners.
LeChattlier, an early physical chemist, stated that
if you apply a pressure to an equilibrium system, it will react
in a manner that will relieve that pressure. For him, driving forces
of change could arise from temperature changes, the ratio of the
components, or the introduction of entirely new components. For
firms, the driving force of change is innovation. The internet is
our new ingredient to our economy. Entire industries are reacting
to it. A firm’s reaction to it is akin to opening a closed
system so new things can come in. What will come of it is pure imagination.
What I will commit to is that the metric of 10% returns is old-economic
thinking. Embracing fundamental change enables the unprintable to
occur.
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Tim Smith, PhD is a principal at Wiglaf, a Market Research and Sales
and Marketing Strategy consultancy serving tech-driven businesses
operating in business markets. Small and medium sized businesses
select Wiglaf for our quantitative and fact driven approach. www.wiglaf.biz.
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"Industrial Non-Equilibrium Dynamics", Timothy
Smith, Chicago Business, May 30, 2000, p17.
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