Specialty businesses that require consultative selling and technical service need to have a collaborative rather than a transactional Internet model. Determining what this Internet business model looks like and then implementing the model are big challenges for 2001 and beyond.
Another major business activity in Y2K was trying to “capture value.” The industry’s customer base is focused on price. As an industry, we have been unsuccessful in obtaining value for most of our adhesive offerings. Customers want lower prices and supply-chain efficiencies. The customer no longer perceives servicing as differentiation or value adding.
The continued flurry of merger and acquisition activity does nothing to “capture value.” When two companies are merged, the hopeful net effect is a lower-cost, more-efficient operation. This is achieved, in part, by eliminating duplicate activities and personnel.
I believe that acquisitions and mergers actually stifle innovation and product-leadership differentiation. An acquired company will be adverse to risk until the dust settles. “I’m not sticking my neck out to promote something different with my new management. What if it fails?” The acquiring company often spends too much time dealing with merger activities – like getting two accounting systems to talk to each other – rather than focusing on innovation.
The reason we have difficulty “capturing value” in our industry is because, for the most part, we do not bring value to our customers in a way they recognize as something they are willing to pay a premium for. It is our responsibility to challenge our perceptions and paradigms, and fight our way out of the morass we are in by creating truly innovative, differentiated products and business models that will serve us well into the new millennium. Some suggestions on how to accomplish this are: