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|  | Title: Second Curve: Managing the Velocity of Change by Ian Morrison ISBN: 0-7881-9178-0 Publisher: Diane Pub Co Pub. Date: 01 February, 1996 Format: Hardcover List Price(USD): $25.00 | 
Average Customer Rating: 3 (2 reviews)
Rating: 2
Summary: Pretty obvious, formula-driven, consultant-speak stuff.
Comment: Sort of like a combination of "In Search of Excellence" and in search of flatulence -- companies that win and companies that lay an egg. All this 1-2-3 wave business can make you seasick. Basically it would make a good set of business school cases. But the cases don't really fit into an overarching framework that has the explanatory power Morrison pretends
Rating: 4
Summary: A topical, provocative book replete with real-life anecdotes
Comment: The business book is as ubiquitous an item as a laptop computer in
airplanes. In every flight that I've ever been on in the US, there are
legions of rent-an-MBAs, wearing grey Hickey-Freeman suits and Cole-Haan
 wingtips, sipping a beer and grimacing as they try to ingest the latest
 idea from Tom Peters. They've learned about searching for excellence,
 the discipline of market leaders, constructing a virtual corporation and
 being part of a learning organization. They've been folded, spindled,
 mutilated and re-engineered. They have ridden the third wave and
 preached the fifth discipline. They have read the machinations of
 Machiavelli, the homilies of Dale Carnegie and the leadership secrets of
 Attila the Hun. They know that if they meet the Buddha on the road, they
 should kill him; that if it ain't broken, they should break it; that the
 future is always shocking and that you always swim with sharks.
 
 It was therefore with some cynicism that I picked up a new business book
 off the shelf at Keplers this weekend. Even the title put me off. "The
 Second Curve - Managing the Velocity of Change," by an Ian Morrison, who
 bore the grandiose title of President of the Institute of the Future.
 But I had some familiarity and liking for the writing of Paul Saffo, who
 works at the same institute. And my stack of books at home was getting
 quite short. So I took a twenty-five dollar bet.
 
 I am glad I did. "The Second Curve" kept me engrossed through the
 afternoon and the night, and I stayed up till two finishing it,
 something I do increasingly rarely nowadays. Mr. Morrison is that rarest
 of birds, an original thinker. More importantly, he is not an armchair
 theorist. Almost all his writing is bolstered by real-world anecdotes
 and experience from twenty years of being called upon as a consultant.
 In tone, it is reminiscent of "The Art of the Long View", another book
 that I highly recommend.
 
 The author's principal thesis is that technology is causing a sea change
 in almost every facet of our lives. The first curve is the one that
 people are used to and which still shows a reasonable pace of growth.
 Think, for instance, of the full-service brokerage services offered by a
 place like Merill-Lynch. The second curve is the one that understands
 that, in essence, such a company does nothing more than transactions and
 brokering information. Both of these can be automated and done much
 cheaper via the Internet. Enter Lombard OnLine. All transactions for
 twenty bucks! Unlimited company reports for free! After all, the only
 things you're consuming is a few extra cycles of cpu and a few extra
 kilobaud of bandwidth.
 
 Financial institutions still think of themselves as their physical
 presence - brick and mortar and oak veneer. But they are really nothing
 more than a conduit for electric impulses; credit A's account here,
 debit B's account there, feed the earnings report to a browser, download
 a mortgage calculation applet. As users get more aware of how they can
 access information themselves and manage their own financial affairs,
 paying huge percentages as fees is going to seem quaint. Dean-Witter and
 Smith-Barney have no idea how badly they are going to be hurt.
 
 To the authors credit, he strongly advises against expecting the change
 to happen tomorrow. A line that appears in many places in the book is
 that we always overestimate the change that will occur in one year and
 underestimate the change that will occur in ten. So a key chapter in the
 book is devoted to transition strategy from the first curve to the
 second. How do you gauge when a supposed second curve is in fact a
 mirage (the Newton, picture telephones, personal helicopters)? How do
 you surf a first curve to its entirety (the plain old telephone, video
 rentals, mainframes)? When does it pay to bet the farm on a new paradigm
 (there, I used that word)? When is it too risky to?
 
 There are some common-sense ideas here. One, that technology makes it
 possible to do most things faster, better and cheaper. Think of the fax
 machine and electronic mail replacing the US mail and memos. Two, that
 the new consumer expects exceptional service as a birthright. He or she
 wants to be able to order a pair of jeans from L.L Bean at midnight or
 to choose from six kinds of crackers at Safeway. Three, that the new
 consumer is not necessarily Caucasian or Japanese. In the next fifteen
 years, there will be 122 million middle-class households (incomes
 greater than $25K per year) springing up in South Asia, China, and Latin
 America.
 
 In addition, there are many provocative theses. One is that any industry
 that trafficks in information (insurance, publishing, recorded music) is
 going to get decimated if it does not adapt to the second curve. You can
 no longer live off your history as an authority figure. Gangsta rap
 artists will not automatically go to Time-Warner because of its history
 in the information business. Doctors can no longer expostulate that
 their long training makes them worth two hundred dollars an hour. The
 HMO down the street will just take that doctor off its database and cut
 his or her business by three-quarters. Medicine is not that lucrative a
 profession any more.
 
 The second is that the real power in a value chain is no longer with the
 manufacturer of a product but with the retailer. Wal-Mart can dictate
 the selling price of a toy much more than Mattel can. All it has to do
 is threaten to withhold shelf-space for the Mighty Morphin Power
 Rangers. In like vein, CompUSA decides which is a bestselling CD-ROM
 much more than Broderbund does, by the way it spends its advertising and
 display dollars. It is going to become increasingly important to own
 your channel or have very strong partnerships with it. And remember that
 with the Internet, the eighteen-year old in the garage can still bypass
 all established channels and go straight to the consumer. Id Software
 provides a sterling lesson in this in the way it sold "Doom".
 
 I judge a book by how many of its ideas resonate in my head when I drive
 to work the next morning. By this unscientific metric, "The Second
 Curve" is a very worthwhile read.
|  | Title: Health Care in the New Millennium: Vision, Values, and Leadership by Ian Morrison, Ian Morrison ISBN: 0787951153 Publisher: Jossey-Bass Pub. Date: 15 January, 2000 List Price(USD): $44.00 | 
|  | Title: Sources of Power: How People Make Decisions by Gary Klein ISBN: 0262611465 Publisher: The MIT Press Pub. Date: 26 February, 1999 List Price(USD): $22.95 | 
|  | Title: Social Transformation of American Medicine by Paul Starr ISBN: 0465079350 Publisher: Basic Books Pub. Date: 01 April, 1984 List Price(USD): $26.00 | 
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