Digital Context 2.0: Seven Lessons in Business Strategy, Consumer Behavior, and the Internet of Things
We are in the midst of yet another shift in business models because of digital. This time the force for change is not mobility; it’s data and the Internet of Things. The more devices that connect to each other, the more digital creates a personal ecosystem, called Digital Context. Digital Context is as distinct a shift in business strategy from omni-channel as omni-channel was from the first multi-channel business models. Companies need strategies grounded in consumer behavior to guide the development of business models, brand experiences, and customer journey work. Based on two years of in-depth research on consumers, Digital Context 2.0, provides seven lessons on how to prepare your business for the next wave of technologies—and make your customers happier. Lesson 1: A Watch is not a Watch A watch is not a watch. An IoT-enabled razor is not a razor. An IoT-enabled hearing aid is not a hearing aid. They can each do the basic functionality that the name implies but they do much more and will be hired by consumers to do more than what the name of the item suggests. The consumer hires the tool to do much more than what you originally intended the product to do. The more tools that connect to each other the more each tool becomes a part of an ecosystem that supports other activities. That ecosystem will change your business model. Lesson 2: Over Time All Channels Become Queues Critical to every business model are the marketing, transactional, and customer service channels that ensure that you can share your offerings with your customers. We have progressed from a world of single channels, to multi-channels, to omni-channels, and now to Digital Context. Along the way the channel has become smart and when channels become smart they queue things. Lesson 3: Consumers Get that Context Requires Data Despite the constant hacks and security breaches, most consumers share their data with companies freely if they understand and agree to the purpose for sharing the data. The Internet of Things and Digital Context depend upon the free flow of data between things. Lesson three explains why consumers share data, who the Context Comfortables are, and why they are important to every company’s business strategy. Lesson 4: Design Your Value Proposition to Target a Consumer Mode Increasingly, if companies are to be relevant and differentiated to their customers, they will need to understand modes. Modes are ways of thinking and behaving that consumers ‘get into’ that helps them get things done. By targeting a mode for your value proposition, you are effectively aligning your goods, services, or experiences with the way that consumers go about doing what they want to do. Lesson 5: Data + Content Creates the Package Companies that are focused on creating content for distribution should turn their attention to focusing on ways to create the Package. Smart Media companies need to find ways to increase the amount of data that travels with the content they produce. In Digital Context, consumers will want their content to be informed by different data types. Companies are used to very basic data being embedded in or attached to content. However, context-aware content requires that companies find ways to share data about much more. Lesson 6: Don’t Focus on Loyalty; Focus on Positive Engagement The promise of Digital Context cannot just be to speed things up. Context must improve the wellbeing of people. Research in positive psychology can help companies think about delivering happiness to consumers. Digital Context should tap into that body of research. This lesson explores why a loyalty mindset is wrong for Digital Context and why a positive engagement mindset is what companies need to go after. Lesson 7: Doing Digital Strategy: A Case Study Using a fictional example based on P&G's Swiffer product, David W. Norton, Ph.D. shows how to bring the other six lessons together into strategic activities that guide business decision-making.
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Digital Context 2.0: Seven Lessons in Business Strategy, Consumer Behavior, and the Internet of Things
We are in the midst of yet another shift in business models because of digital. This time the force for change is not mobility; it’s data and the Internet of Things. The more devices that connect to each other, the more digital creates a personal ecosystem, called Digital Context. Digital Context is as distinct a shift in business strategy from omni-channel as omni-channel was from the first multi-channel business models. Companies need strategies grounded in consumer behavior to guide the development of business models, brand experiences, and customer journey work. Based on two years of in-depth research on consumers, Digital Context 2.0, provides seven lessons on how to prepare your business for the next wave of technologies—and make your customers happier. Lesson 1: A Watch is not a Watch A watch is not a watch. An IoT-enabled razor is not a razor. An IoT-enabled hearing aid is not a hearing aid. They can each do the basic functionality that the name implies but they do much more and will be hired by consumers to do more than what the name of the item suggests. The consumer hires the tool to do much more than what you originally intended the product to do. The more tools that connect to each other the more each tool becomes a part of an ecosystem that supports other activities. That ecosystem will change your business model. Lesson 2: Over Time All Channels Become Queues Critical to every business model are the marketing, transactional, and customer service channels that ensure that you can share your offerings with your customers. We have progressed from a world of single channels, to multi-channels, to omni-channels, and now to Digital Context. Along the way the channel has become smart and when channels become smart they queue things. Lesson 3: Consumers Get that Context Requires Data Despite the constant hacks and security breaches, most consumers share their data with companies freely if they understand and agree to the purpose for sharing the data. The Internet of Things and Digital Context depend upon the free flow of data between things. Lesson three explains why consumers share data, who the Context Comfortables are, and why they are important to every company’s business strategy. Lesson 4: Design Your Value Proposition to Target a Consumer Mode Increasingly, if companies are to be relevant and differentiated to their customers, they will need to understand modes. Modes are ways of thinking and behaving that consumers ‘get into’ that helps them get things done. By targeting a mode for your value proposition, you are effectively aligning your goods, services, or experiences with the way that consumers go about doing what they want to do. Lesson 5: Data + Content Creates the Package Companies that are focused on creating content for distribution should turn their attention to focusing on ways to create the Package. Smart Media companies need to find ways to increase the amount of data that travels with the content they produce. In Digital Context, consumers will want their content to be informed by different data types. Companies are used to very basic data being embedded in or attached to content. However, context-aware content requires that companies find ways to share data about much more. Lesson 6: Don’t Focus on Loyalty; Focus on Positive Engagement The promise of Digital Context cannot just be to speed things up. Context must improve the wellbeing of people. Research in positive psychology can help companies think about delivering happiness to consumers. Digital Context should tap into that body of research. This lesson explores why a loyalty mindset is wrong for Digital Context and why a positive engagement mindset is what companies need to go after. Lesson 7: Doing Digital Strategy: A Case Study Using a fictional example based on P&G's Swiffer product, David W. Norton, Ph.D. shows how to bring the other six lessons together into strategic activities that guide business decision-making.
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Digital Context 2.0: Seven Lessons in Business Strategy, Consumer Behavior, and the Internet of Things

Digital Context 2.0: Seven Lessons in Business Strategy, Consumer Behavior, and the Internet of Things

by David Norton
Digital Context 2.0: Seven Lessons in Business Strategy, Consumer Behavior, and the Internet of Things
Digital Context 2.0: Seven Lessons in Business Strategy, Consumer Behavior, and the Internet of Things

Digital Context 2.0: Seven Lessons in Business Strategy, Consumer Behavior, and the Internet of Things

by David Norton

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Overview

We are in the midst of yet another shift in business models because of digital. This time the force for change is not mobility; it’s data and the Internet of Things. The more devices that connect to each other, the more digital creates a personal ecosystem, called Digital Context. Digital Context is as distinct a shift in business strategy from omni-channel as omni-channel was from the first multi-channel business models. Companies need strategies grounded in consumer behavior to guide the development of business models, brand experiences, and customer journey work. Based on two years of in-depth research on consumers, Digital Context 2.0, provides seven lessons on how to prepare your business for the next wave of technologies—and make your customers happier. Lesson 1: A Watch is not a Watch A watch is not a watch. An IoT-enabled razor is not a razor. An IoT-enabled hearing aid is not a hearing aid. They can each do the basic functionality that the name implies but they do much more and will be hired by consumers to do more than what the name of the item suggests. The consumer hires the tool to do much more than what you originally intended the product to do. The more tools that connect to each other the more each tool becomes a part of an ecosystem that supports other activities. That ecosystem will change your business model. Lesson 2: Over Time All Channels Become Queues Critical to every business model are the marketing, transactional, and customer service channels that ensure that you can share your offerings with your customers. We have progressed from a world of single channels, to multi-channels, to omni-channels, and now to Digital Context. Along the way the channel has become smart and when channels become smart they queue things. Lesson 3: Consumers Get that Context Requires Data Despite the constant hacks and security breaches, most consumers share their data with companies freely if they understand and agree to the purpose for sharing the data. The Internet of Things and Digital Context depend upon the free flow of data between things. Lesson three explains why consumers share data, who the Context Comfortables are, and why they are important to every company’s business strategy. Lesson 4: Design Your Value Proposition to Target a Consumer Mode Increasingly, if companies are to be relevant and differentiated to their customers, they will need to understand modes. Modes are ways of thinking and behaving that consumers ‘get into’ that helps them get things done. By targeting a mode for your value proposition, you are effectively aligning your goods, services, or experiences with the way that consumers go about doing what they want to do. Lesson 5: Data + Content Creates the Package Companies that are focused on creating content for distribution should turn their attention to focusing on ways to create the Package. Smart Media companies need to find ways to increase the amount of data that travels with the content they produce. In Digital Context, consumers will want their content to be informed by different data types. Companies are used to very basic data being embedded in or attached to content. However, context-aware content requires that companies find ways to share data about much more. Lesson 6: Don’t Focus on Loyalty; Focus on Positive Engagement The promise of Digital Context cannot just be to speed things up. Context must improve the wellbeing of people. Research in positive psychology can help companies think about delivering happiness to consumers. Digital Context should tap into that body of research. This lesson explores why a loyalty mindset is wrong for Digital Context and why a positive engagement mindset is what companies need to go after. Lesson 7: Doing Digital Strategy: A Case Study Using a fictional example based on P&G's Swiffer product, David W. Norton, Ph.D. shows how to bring the other six lessons together into strategic activities that guide business decision-making.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780996941419
Publisher: Gifted Press
Publication date: 01/06/2015
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 238
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

For over twenty years, Dave has led research and strategy work for clients around the world. Dave founded the Digital Collaboratives in 2013 to help companies collaborate in conducting research about consumers and the impact of digital in their lives. Because of his research and thought leadership, he is one of the youngest recipients of Brigham Young University’s highest award for honored alumni. Dave has lectured at Harvard, Columbia Business School and at Fortune magazine’s annual summits. He has taught at Brigham Young University, the University of Minnesota, and Minneapolis College of Art and Design. Since 2005, Stone Mantel has guided hundreds of brand experience leaders in creating meaningful brand experiences.

Table of Contents

Foreword to Digital Context 2.0 vi

Chapter 1 A Watch is Not a Watch: Business Models in the Age of the Contextual Home 1

It's Not a Watch

The Home is the Digital Hub

Consumers hire the job; not the business model

The Impact of Digital Context on Business Models

The Loss Leader/ Razor & Blades Model Changes

The Multi-Sided Platform Model

Seven Lessons for IoT Business Strategists

Chapter 2 Over Time All Channels Become Queues: Digital is Normal, Digital Context is Next, and Tools Disrupt Channels 32

All Companies Need Channels

Rapidly Changing Channels versus the Durable Business Mode!

Tools Disrupt Traditional Channels

Over Time all Smart Channels become Queues

So, Now a Definition of the Digital Consumer

Chapter 3 The Rise of the Context Comfortable Consumer: Context Comfortables, Creepiness, and a Life Worth Logging 63

The 39 Percent

The Context Comfortables

High Comfort Consumers

Comfort Consumers

Reluctant Consumers

Mo Comfort Consumers

Key Insights Into Brands

Google Gets Data

Apple is about Productivity

Netflix Rules Queues

Walmart has Brand Data Permission

Fidelity has Potential to Build Family Relationships

The Struggle between Privacy and Closing the Gap

The Logging And the Quantified Self: Evidence for Milestones

What Constitutes Creepiness, and How is it Evolving?

What is Super Creepy?

Chapter 4 What Mode Are You In?: How to Design Value Propositions for Digital Context 103

The Study

Anatomy of the Mode-Driven Consumer

Modes First, Then Demographics

Recurring Jobs and Modes

Eleven Important Modes

The Value of Modes

Chapter 5 Data + Content Creates the Package: Context-Aware Content Requires You to Increase the Amount of Data Tied to Content 143

A Thoughtful Package

The Need to Share Data

Data Types and Permission

Smart Media Channels Sell Things

Now, Back to the Package

Different Data Types and Different Content

Anticipation and Curation

Chapter 6 Don't Focus On Loyalty; Focus on Positive Engagement: Your Brand Promises Happiness; Your Experience Needs to Deliver it 173

Your Brand Promises Happiness

A Loyalty Program is the Wrong Mindset

Moving to Positive Engagement

The Business Requirements to Deliver Happiness

A Transformative Happiness Engagement Model

An Altruistic Happiness Engagement Model

A Perceptive Happiness Engagement Model

A Utilitarian Happiness Engagement Model

Each Model Creates Positive Engagement

Chapter 7 Doing Digital Strategy: A Concept Case Study: Applying Digital Context lessons to Procter & Gambles Swiffer Wet Jet Mop 201

Why This Fictional Case Study?

Data Experience Design

Swiffer Decides to Be a Smart Tool

Developing a Marketing Plan

Modes, Segments, Journeys, and Value Propositions for Swiffer

A Positive Engagement Strategy

Evolving to New Modes and Models of Engagement

Let's Pause to Think

It's A Wrap

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