3 Ramifications of the Emerging Broadband 2.0 World

January 26, 2010

The two dia­grams below pro­vide a great exam­ple of how one can use the Flag­ship Model dis­cussed in my last post to dis­cover and build advan­ta­geous strate­gic collaborations.

Fig­ure 1: Cor­re­la­tion between Broad­band Growth & Productivity

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pastedGraphic_1.pdf (68 KB)

Fig­ure 2: Push­ing Beyond Broadband’s Cur­rent Capability

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pastedGraphic.pdf (55 KB)

source: Orga­ni­za­tion for Eco­nomic Co-operation and  Devel­op­ment, Booz & Com­pany analysis

Point 1: Six Mil­lion Dol­lar Man Conundrum
We can build it bet­ter, faster, and stronger. Given that pro­duc­tiv­ity increases can be directly con­tributed to the qual­ity of broad­band deployed, gov­ern­ments’ and busi­nesses’ eco­nomic inter­ests are aligned around achiev­ing a supe­rior infra­struc­ture. Thus the like­li­hood that gov­ern­ment and uni­ver­sity research assets will be used, with guid­ance from the busi­ness com­mu­nity, to build/upgrade the exist­ing infra­struc­ture is high. It is this type of intan­gi­ble input to a busi­ness that the non-business infra­struc­ture aspect of the model captures.

Point 2: Play Nicely
The best oppor­tu­ni­ties often involve too much risk if under­taken alone. Build alliances that allow you to place the risk-reward ratio within the organization’s tol­er­ance range.

Point 3: Atten­tive Com­mu­nity Cit­i­zens Pros­per the Most
Orga­ni­za­tions can gain a com­pet­i­tive edge if they rec­og­nize sce­nar­ios where at least three of their four net­work rela­tion­ship can real­ize direct ben­e­fits from the sit­u­a­tion. Pas­sive oppor­tu­ni­ties will allow sev­eral through the door. It is those who are proac­tively scan­ning the envi­ron­ment that will be able to race ahead of their peers. 

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