You are an aggressive, successful business leader. You have extensive experience in your category. Customers are your highest priority. You have a disciplined strategic plan in place. Yesterday, this was enough to assure your continued success. Today, it is not.
Globalization and technology are driving change in every business sector at a velocity never before experienced. Moreover, most of these changes are completely beyond any business leader’s control.
This is today’s business reality and it mandates that you change and keep changing how your business thinks and works before these dual engines-of-change force you to change, before your business loses its momentum, and before competition leaps ahead of your company or brand.
Here’s why you have no control over today’s geopolitical events.
Cartels, cabals, speculators, and organized crime as well as conventional global market forces — more than ever before — manipulate commodity price and availability. Of the all-too-many examples of this unfortunate trend, the following illustration underscores the challenges associated with the global commodity market. China possesses over ninety percent of rare earth metals used in the manufacture of a host of technologies from smart phones to smart bombs and electric car batteries to wind turbines. In each of the last three years, China reduced the amount of export of rare earths causing a steep price increase and triggering a costly disruption of delivery of this precious commodity to businesses throughout the world.
Industrial, agricultural, and mineral disasters such as the nuclear devastation in Japan, the severe crop damage in coffee-growing countries, the monumental oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, the horrific Chilean mine explosion, and the global air traffic problems that resulted from the volcano eruptions in Iceland seriously impaired global supply chains and harmed the bottom lines of all-too-many businesses.
Political discord, governmental upheavals, rebellions, nationalization of resources and industries, terrorists, and wars are — more abruptly than ever before — threatening or destroying what once seemed like secure financial investments in nations such as Libya, Venezuela, Iran, Zimbabwe, Indonesia, Russia, Thailand, Mexico, and a host of other promising locations around the globe.
Global currency fluctuations, unforeseen credit crises, and economic stagnation have become increasingly severe and unpredictably enduring. Today, businesses must deal with sudden changes in the value of a broad range of currencies, rather than a handful of historically dominant currencies. The extreme fluidity in the valuation of imported and exported goods, services, and components is equally difficult. Moreover, urgent financial challenges from within and far beyond their home turf threaten businesses everywhere. Profligate economic policies, inflation, deflation, and credit crunches are no longer restricted to developing countries — these fundamental economic problems are inflicting damage on developed countries such as Spain, Ireland, Greece, and Portugal as well as the three global economic engines — China, Japan, and the U.S.
As we have all witnessed, people in enormous numbers, are crowding into the city centers of numerous nations around the world to demand a more promising personal future and an improved governmental experience. Their empowerment has been facilitated by newer, faster, more powerful, and more agile technology. Smart phones, email, and social media have enabled their connectivity with citizens of like minds and similar ambitions in distant lands.
In a similar context, customers in the marketplaces of every developed nation have been empowered and facilitated by rapid innovation in an ever-broader variety of technologies. These buying publics are demanding an improved purchasing experience from vendors and marketers of products and services in every segment of commerce.
The profound transformation of customer purchasing behavior is irreversible because it is driven by the high velocity of technologic development. Moreover, this universal behavioral change is accelerating because technologic innovation is intensifying, as illustrated by the contacting timeline of key technical introductions below:
To sustain your business success in today’s rapidly evolving, global, ultra-high-tech environment — a confluence of marketplace issues that you cannot influence or control, you must focus all your human and financial resources on the single most important component of your customer offering — one that you can completely control: your customers’ purchasing experience.
What follows are four fundamental changes that will enable your business to deliver a consistent, positive, memorable, and enduring customer purchasing experience:
Get out in front of the turbulent wakes of globalization and technology — embrace tomorrow’s strategies today!
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