|
Smith
Hosts Sixth
Annual Netcentricity Conference
The Future of the 21st Century Digital
Enterprise
According to
Eric Clemons, you can learn a lot
about marketing in the digital economy
by drinking beer. Well, technically, you
can learn a lot by examining the way
people decide which beer to drink.
Clemons, professor of operations and
information management at the Wharton
School, University of Pennsylvania, was
a keynote speaker at the Smith School’s
6th Annual Netcentricity Conference on
April 28, 2006. Business leaders and
business school faculty from around the
United States attended the event, which
featured talks and panel discussions
focused on “The Future of the 21st
Century Digital Enterprise.”
Clemons used the "digitalization of
beer" to describe how worldwide
information networks support a level of
product differentiation unknown in the
past, and how that extreme
differentiation requires a different
mindset for marketing.
Key to this mindset is understanding
the power possessed by the average
consumer. In the digital economy,
everything is an information good—even
beer. The Internet has made it possible
for consumers to know everything about a
product—where to get it, how much it
costs, and exactly what its attributes
are. Clemons described several Web sites
reviewing beers; in perusing those sites
he discovered a stout so highly regarded
by its creator that Clemons couldn’t
just purchase the beer—he had to
interview for it. “What a great, great
world,” Clemons laughed.
Because consumers have the choice of
so many kinds of beer (or ice cream, or
Power Bars, or golf balls) companies
must change the way they think about
market share. In the past, says Clemons,
companies pursued the “fat spot,” a
large segment of satisfied—if not
devoted—consumers of the company’s
product. Now companies can be profitable
in the “sweet spot”—a smaller segment of
customers who are wildly enthusiastic
about a company’s product. Companies
should not be concerned about getting
many people to like their product, but
about getting some people to love their
product, Clemons advised.
“It’s not about one product being
better,” said Clemons. “It’s about being
better for each customer. There is no
best.”
Clemons used the proliferation of
microbrews as an example to describe how
“sweet spot” marketing can maximize
profits. “Informed consumers are
unwilling to pay any more than they have
to for commodities, and are willing to
pay a big premium for what they truly
want,” says Clemons. “If you get the
product right, you won’t have to worry
about advertising. The customer will
find you.”
The
Netcentricity Conference offered
participants a vision of the future of
digital business from multiple
perspectives, with many sessions and
panel discussions. The introduction of a
new Internet channel to sell products
provides many opportunities, but many
challenges as well. The
University of North Carolina's
Jay Swaminathan
described to attendees how to
effectively use both the traditional and
digital channels to buy and sell
products and services. By the year 2010
about 40 percent of households will be
buying online, said Swaminathan.
Different pricing strategies are needed
to maximize profits when you have
multiple channels and it is detrimental
to a firm to let the Internet channel
act independently, or to blindly match
prices in all channels, said
Swaminathan.
Other speakers included:
Ritu
Agarwal, the Smith School's Robert
H. Smith Dean's Chair in Information
System, who spoke on the opportunities and
challenges associated with digitizing
the health care system and focuses
specifically on technologies that can
used in care delivery facilities.
Peter Cramton, University of
Maryland, spoke on the many types of
online auctions and bidder behavior.
Panel discussions on
online communities and markets, the
evolution of the modern supply chain,
and auction design for the digital
enterprise were conducted by
members of the Smith School's
distinguished operations management and
information technology faculty.
2006 Conference
Agenda ► |