| Review of
Don Tapscott's and Anthony Williams' Wikinomics
David Dalka, Contributing Writer
March 2007
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Wikinomics explores an emerging business strategy
in a world where consumers promote and, to a degree, own your brand.
In his latest book, Dan Tapscott argues that you can ignore it to
your peril or embrace it and be adored through the work of an unpaid
evangelist workforce. Tapscott suggests to adapt, and quickly –these
changes are here to stay and will continue to unfold as time progresses.
In the second chapter, Tapscott describes "The
Perfect Storm" where technology, demographics and global economics
are converging for the first Category 6 Business Revolution. Citing
the 1937 paper by Ronald Coase, "The Nature of the Firm,"
Tapscott examines how business transaction costs have fallen steeply
– once an advantage for large corporations but now exposing
a weakness of being a large entity. Be sure to read pages 55-57
and ask yourself, "How does Coase's Law affect my business
and what should I do about it?"
The archetypal corporate culture is just starting
to appreciate the magnitude of the changes necessary to create this
new type of hyper-responsive and customer-focused corporate culture.
Tapscott describes the cultural changes as a revolution –
moving from organizations built to push their own ideas and products
to using the wisdom of crowds to form new and better products and
offerings. It takes strong leadership from people who "get
it" to lead this type of change in larger corporations. Small
businesses or open-minded corporate structures have an advantage
here, in that they can adapt quickly. Wikinomics begins to explore
many examples of how to approach this new and changing era with
relevant examples and it would be foolish to ignore this unique
value proposition.
Some people will claim this book offers no new material.
To someone who reads the blogosphere daily, the stories or examples
may not be brand new. However, those same people likely didn't read
it with an open mind to the new businesses practices of Web 2.0
– the underlying business principles of revenue generation
from your primary business activities. Others might be critical
of the unique words that are invented in the book (prosumers, ideagoras,
etc.) and those people might have a stronger case.
Tapscott's previous book, The Naked Corporation: How
the Age of Transparency Will Revolutionize Business, is also a useful
read. It is primarily about transparency and trust in the post-Enron
era. It created a conversation around the issues of enterprise data
strategy while encouraging openness and transparency to build public
trust. This advice is not dissimilar to that given to a new blogger.
The correlations of building a strong corporate culture of trust
and that of open blogging that is not micro-managed is almost perfect.
_______
Author
David Dalka is a mobile search marketing
and social media consultant. His blog and contact information are
located at www.daviddalka.com/createvalue/
Have an upcoming book release that you'd like us to
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