воскресенье, 14 августа 2022 г.

Target Markets: Why They Aren't Just for Marketers

 


Sales teams and entrepreneurs need to know their target market. You can get there by asking yourself, "Who is the ideal fit for my offering? What are their interests and priorities?"

Answering these questions can help you prioritize the deals you're most likely to win. But how can you really understand the ins-and-outs of your target market?

Let's take a closer look at what a target market is, go over how to conduct a target market analysis, see some helpful examples, review target market segmentation, and look into how sales teams can leverage target markets.

Let's say you've created a B2B software product that helps remote construction teams. In that case (and to state the obvious), you'd probably focus on companies within the construction industry. But defining your target market doesn't stop there.

You know your industry, but there's no one-size-fits-all mold for the businesses within it. If you were pinning down a target market for your product, you'd have to start with business characteristics — for instance, scale would be a good place to begin.

Your product will suit certain companies better than others, and selling to a Fortune 1000 company isn't the same as a small construction business with less than 100 employees.

In this case, you'd want to pin down the size of your ideal customer's business — and this number would be the start of a target market analysis. Let's take a closer look at what that process looks like.

As the name implies, target market analysis is the basis for identifying your target market. Here are the five steps you can take to do one of your own.

1. Analyze your product or service.

Take a look at what you're selling to understand which consumers would get value from your product. The questions below will help with the brainstorming process:

  • "What need does your product or service fill?"
  • "Are there any problems or pain points it solves for?"
  • "Who would benefit most from your product or service?"

Once you've answered these questions, you might want to consider getting feedback from current customers. Conduct a focus group or ask your service department about their common problems.

Analyzing your product or service in this way will help you better understand your target market. In fact, you might learn that your current customers aren't the people you're trying to target. If you notice a disconnect in this process, you'll want to better align your target market with your actual marketing goals so you can realign.

2. Check out the competition.

Perform an analysis of your competitors to see who they're targeting. Take a look at their customer base, and see if you can find an area of the market you could focus on that they might be missing.

The best way to do this is to conduct a competitive analysis. This entails researching who your competitors are, what they offer, and even review their sales tactics.

Looking at your competitors will even help you identify target market gaps that you can fill. Are there any target markets they do not focusing on?

This could lead you to expand into new markets geographically or develop new products to target a different market.

3. Choose criteria to segment by.

A target market can be segmented by a few different variables. Consumers can be split by demographic, geographic, and behavioral factors.

This is essentially the process of creating a buyer persona. You'll divide your target market into several target customers — also known as (you guessed it) buyer personas.

For example, perhaps your target market is midsized companies looking to purchase marketing automation software. You could divide your target customers into several groups, including marketing department leaders, sales leaders, founders, or CEOs.

Here are some of the most common ways to segment a target market:

  • Age
  • Gender
  • Income
  • Location
  • Behavior
  • Lifestyle
  • Values
  • Interests

4. Perform research.

As you begin narrowing your market, the research phase doesn't end there. What marketing strategies should you use to reach your potential target market? Is the target market large enough for your product or service? Market research will help you learn more about your target market.

Picking the right target market can tell you a great deal about your business. Are you looking to become a true velocity business, or do you see yourself as a steadier flow of pipeline with enterprises and consumers?

5. Track and evaluate your results.

Target market analysis should never be static — you don't just conduct one, be immediately content with the results, and stop there. It's an ongoing process. You need to continuously track your results, evaluate what you see, and iterate on the conception of your target market to more effectively appeal to it.

Target Market Analysis Example

Let's imagine a company that sells inexpensive, "function-over-form" athletic footwear that stresses comfort and arch support instead of trendy aesthetics.

1. Analyze the product or service.

When conducting its target market analysis, the business in question would have to start by taking a thorough, objective look at its product to get a solid grip on its value and differentiating factors.

The company would likely find that its shoes are better suited for day-to-day wear instead of legitimate athletic competition, lack trendy appeal, and can help with sore feet while standing.

This initial insight can help shape the personas that the company will ultimately target. It would have a better picture of how to construct its value proposition. In this case, the business might find that suburban men over 50 who don't exercise regularly appear to be the most likely to buy its shoes.

2. Check out the competition.

Next, the company would dig into its competitor's products, how they were selling them, and any noticeable gaps in their potential target markets. After conducting a competitive analysis, the company might find that its competition was ignoring some geographical trends embedded in its target markets.

Let's say its competitors' retail locations and store placements were primarily in cities — ignoring locations like suburban strip malls and local "mom and pop" retail stores. With that information in mind, the company in question could have a starting point for appealing to a target market its competition is ignoring.

3. Choose criteria to segment by.

Here, the company would begin to string more detailed personas together. Again, it would base its segmentation criteria on its product analysis and refine it according to its competitive analysis.

In this case, a significant portion of the criteria would revolve around age, social class, location, and interests — making one of its personas older, working class, suburban consumers who prioritize function over form.

4. Perform research.

After creating its target persona, the company would conduct a market analysis, survey consumers that fit its target market bill, potentially employ more direct tactics like hosting focus groups, and take any other strides it sees fit to ensure that it has a thorough understanding of its target consumers.

From there, it can shape a thoughtful value proposition that will guide its sales messaging, outreach strategies, pricing structure, and other crucial sales-related factors that influence how it reaches consumers.

5. Track and evaluate results.

Once the other steps have been covered, the company would continue to monitor how its efforts resonate with its target persona. If sales aren't where they need to be — or it appears the company might have other personas it can cater to — it might restart this process and shift gears on its messaging, strategies, or target market as a whole.

Let's look at some of the best-in-class companies — both B2C and B2B — to see how they set up their target markets.

Target Market Examples

1. Atlassian Target Market

Atlassian offers a suite of collaboration tools designed to help developers and product leaders take their projects from concept to completion.

Like most larger companies, Atlassian uses target market segmentation to look at different markets and break up its unique value propositions, terminology, and values.

By diving into one segment, like retail, we see they're working with several large companies — especially with their support-related products.

This tells us that while Atlassian can work with almost anyone doing software development, it recognizes how its value proposition changes depending on the market segment in question.

Even the same product for two different customer types creates different levels of value.

2. Nike Target Market

Nike offers products to athletes and other consumers who want to exercise regularly. They offer apparel, equipment, shoes, and accessories.

They work with athletes and a fitness-minded audience, but we know a good target market definition can't be that broad. Let's break two of their segments down:

  • Young athletes — Kids who get frequent exercise and play sports growing up are a huge, growing category for Nike. Nike engages with this market through sports leagues and associations and with endorsements from popular sports stars like LeBron James.
  • Runners — With a focus on new types of shoes, Nike shows it targets consumers based on both demographic information and lifestyle. Nike launches shoes and apparel designed to help the avid runner stay on the road a bit longer.

3. Starbucks Target Market

Next time you're sipping your cold foam Cascara cold brew, ponder the target market of the top coffee destination in town: Starbucks.

Many of their locations have been remodeled and offer a hip, contemporary look. Not that surprising since about half of their customers are between the ages of 25 and 40.

If you spend more than five minutes sitting and drinking your coffee, you'll probably hear a barista shout, "mobile order!" The mobile process now accounts for 24% of Starbucks' transactions which shows they're catering to a tech-savvy crowd.

The next clue we have on their target market is the location of their shops. By positioning its locations in heavily urban areas, Starbucks is attracting on-the-go professionals. To recap, here are a few of Starbucks' target markets:

  • 25 - 40-year-olds — Remodeled locations accommodate their largest demographic base.
  • Tech-savvy adults — Their mobile app has caught on and lends itself to a forward-thinking crowd.
  • Working professionals — Their urban focus tells us the type of lifestyle they're catering to.


4. Apple Target Market

What about a company that occupies both the B2B and B2C spaces? How can it develop a target market with such a broad set of customers? Apple is the textbook case for innovation and product design.

But how does that apply to finding a target market? With its wide array of product offerings, Apple has a little something for everyone. Here are two of their target markets:

  • Tech enthusiasts — A customer category that launched Apple's brand decades ago, technology enthusiasts still get attention from the company. With launches of new tech categories (including wearables, Apple TVs, and HomePods), Apple has shown it's still creating value for this segment. There is also a tremendous ecosystem where owning a suite of Apple products enables better interoperability among your tech.
  • Healthcare — One market Apple has its eyes on is healthcare. By focusing on the appeal of having information right at your fingertips with mobile and the iPad, they've positioned healthcare workers to more conveniently communicate with patients.

Apple doesn't seem to exclude many people from its target market and has positioned itself to benefit both consumers and businesses — even with the same products like the iPad.

Its success has been more about understanding the value of its different segments rather than excluding people from them.

5. McDonald's Target Market

McDonald's target market is broad and encompasses a wide variety of customer personas. Younger professionals represent one of the chain's more prominent target market segments — and that trend is reflected in many of the company's location remodels. Several McDonald's franchises have been revamped to look sleeker, more modern, and better suited for millennials.

Image Source: Community Impact

"Full nest" families with children over six represent another key base for the chain. The franchise takes many strides to appeal to this specific segment, primarily reflected in its Happy Meal options.

But there's another factor that underscores virtually every target market McDonald's tries to appeal to — social class. The chain makes a conscious effort to resonate with lower, working, and middle-class patrons.

Pricing is the basis of McDonald's value proposition. It tries to bill itself as an affordable alternative to more expensive options in the spaces it attempts to sell in. For instance, when promoting its McCafe line, the chain stressed the brand's particularly low price points as a major selling point.


Image Source: McDonald's

Ultimately, the franchise's target market isn't singular and clear-cut in terms of most demographics — but it is specific in terms of its various personas' economic circumstances. Its value proposition fundamentally rests on the fact that its food is inexpensive.

You need to have a firm grasp of your target customers if you're going to develop pointed, effective value propositions. The success and viability of your sales messaging, prospecting efforts, and broader sales process rests on your knowledge of who's buying your product or service and the mindset that makes them do it.

That starts with target market segmentation.

Target Market Segmentation

Target market segmentation is the process of partitioning your target audience into more focused, identifiable, and approachable groups (or segments). It's a broad concept that can take on a lot of forms, including:

  • Geographic segmentation — Dividing your target market based on geographical boundaries
  • Firmographic segmentation — A practice specific to B2B sales where firms are divided based on characteristics like company size or number of employees
  • Behavioral segmentation — Dividing your target market based on behavioral tendencies and decision-making patterns
  • Demographic segmentation — Dividing your target market based on factors like income, education, race, gender, or occupation
  • Psychographic segmentation — Dividing your target market-based elements like personality traits, values, and opinions

How you elect to segment your target market will be specific to your company's needs and interests. In many — if not most — cases, you'll employ more than one of the segmentation methods listed above when defining a target market.

When you identify the customers you want to serve — and the ones you don't — ask:

  • "Do my target customers have different problems they're solving with my product?"
  • "Do my target customers get different value from my product?"
  • "Are either of these things related to demographic, geographic, or lifestyle components?"

In order to segment effectively, you must have a decent way of measuring the value you provide to the market. Then, identify if certain groups are getting more value than others.

This will power the positioning of your product. Suddenly, you can pinpoint pain for your customers while speaking their language.

This helps you refine your position in the market and connect on a deeper level with your customer. Having a target market (or target customer) is all about relevancy and relating to the person on the other side of the cash register.

How Sales Teams Can Leverage Target Markets + Segmentation

Segmentation poses several benefits for sales teams. If you know who will be most receptive to your product or service, you get a leg up when conducting most steps of your sales process.


For one, effective segmentation can be a major asset in prospecting. If your SDRs have a solid picture of the types of customers that show an interest in your offering, cold leads can become a little warmer — letting those reps make more thoughtfully guided use of your sales messaging when connecting with prospects.

Beyond that, segmentation can also help with lead qualification. Knowing whether a lead fits the bill of a class of high-converting customers gives reps a head start during that stage.

You need to have some kind of criteria that can immediately distinguish a prospect who needs your product or service from one that lacks the decision-making tendencies, location, or economic circumstances to actually get something out of it. Target market segmentation gets you there.

Finally, target markets provide sales teams with the necessary information to breach new markets and sell to them effectively. If you're not on top of any emerging markets that might need your product or service, you could hit a wall with your sales potential and lose out on incredibly lucrative business opportunities.

Ultimately, knowing your target markets inside and out is one of the most fundamental tenets of successful sales efforts. If you're not actively analyzing, pursuing, and refining your understanding of your target markets, you're losing out on sales and painting yourself into a corner with your business potential.

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55 Business Model Patterns. #4 Auction

 


Auctioning means selling a product or service to the highest bidder. The final price is achieved when a particular end time of the auction is reached or when no higher offers are received. This allows the company to sell at the highest price acceptable to the customer. The customer benefits from the opportunity to influence the price of a product.


Lufthansa




Auction based business models

Auction based business models have been recorded as early as 500 B.C. They are mostly used for unique items that are not frequently traded, and therefore don't have a well established market value. Some typical uses of the model are within antiques, real estate, collectibles, spectrum auctions (i.e. communication networks) and the sales of businesses. However, several examples of auctions based business models for frequently traded, new and used items exists (e.g. eBay, Amazon).

The basic form of an auction is where several potential buyers repeatedly bid and are aware of each other's previous bids, with the item sold to the highest bidder. The variations on the basic auction form are many, including number of sellers and buyers, limits on bid prices, time limits, open or sealed bids, open or secret reserve price, and rules for determining winning bidder and sale price. The auction broker often charges the buyer or seller a listing fee and/or commission based on the value of the transaction.

In a forward auction (demand) a number of buyers bid for an item being sold (e.g. eBay)

In a reverse auction (supply) a number of sellers offer an item that a buyer requests (e.g. Amazon)


In a double auction (exchange) a number of buyers bid to buy goods from a number of sellers (e.g. NASDAQ)


Open ascending price auction
("English Auction")

Participants bid openly against each other with each subsequent bid higher than the previous bid, and the winner pays his/her bid.

Open descending price auction
("Dutch Auction")

The open descending price auction begins with a high asking price which is lowered until someone is willing to accept the auctioneer's price.

First price sealed-bid auction
("Closed English Auction" or "Yankee Auction")

All participants submit their sealed bids, one per participant, and when the bidding period is over all the bids are opened and the highest bidder pays his/her bid.

Second price sealed-bid auction
("Vickrey Auction")

All participants submit their sealed bids, one per participant, and when the bidding period is over the high bidder wins and pays the second-highest bid for the good.

Sequential second price auction
("Japanese Auction")

Once the bidding starts, no new bidders are allowed to enter the auction and participants must bid at each level to stay in the auction or drop out.

Auctions selling at very low prices
Some auctions based business models are selling items at very low prices, where the price has limited resemblance to the actual worth of the lot being auctioned such as the Unique bid auctions where the winner is the bidder with the highest or lowest unique bid. The business models behind these auctions (or sometimes lotteries) are:
* Bidders paying for each bid they place
* Bidders paying for participation in auction event
* Sponsored by companies using the auction as advertising
* Sponsored by companies using data such as registered emails

Understanding Brand Values

 


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суббота, 13 августа 2022 г.

Flywheel Model

 If we speak in simple language and do not delve into the physical side of the issue, then we can give the following definition a flywheel. It is a device that has the shape of a wheel and serves to accumulate and then release rotational energy. The amount of energy it accumulates depends on three factors: the speed of rotation, the amount of friction, and the size of the wheel. The principle of operation of the flywheel has been known since ancient times, it was used, for example, in a potter’s wheel or windmills.

Over time, the flywheel expanded its scope of application and began to be actively used in the industrial environment, in particular in the automotive industry. In these areas, the flywheel is used for its intended purpose, but this article will focus on the application of the flywheel effect in areas such as management, marketing, and sales. What does it look like in practice? 


The first attempt to shift the concept of the flywheel from the physical field to the field of management was made in the book Good to Great: Why Some Companies Make the Leap … and Others Don’t by Jim C. Collins. Jim C. Collins describes the process of turning good companies into great ones. He explains that not all companies reach the top, most fail on their way, but nevertheless, there are those who succeed. Any changes require effort, nothing happens in one fell swoop, it is necessary to carry out hard work to achieve the desired result. And this process can be compared to the work of a flywheel, when you spin the mechanism turn by turn, gradually at first, and then gaining momentum until you reach the moment of breakthrough.

HubSpot adapted the flywheel model and combined it with an inbound marketing strategy. You can learn more about this strategy in the book Inbound marketing. Get found using Google, Social Media, and Blogs by Brian Halligan and Dharmesh Shah. Inbound marketing is the use of methods by which consumers themselves find sellers using the Internet. What do you need to do to get people to find you?

Brian Halligan and Dharmesh Shah answer this question: it is necessary to have a Remarkable proposition. It should be included in your Remarkable Strategy. In addition to a Remarkable proposition, you should also create Remarkable content. The authors provide the following types of content: Blog articles, White papers, Videos, Webinars, Podcasts, Webcasts.

The effectiveness of your marketing activities these days can be expressed in the following sequence of steps: create Remarkable content, optimize it, publish the content on the Internet, market the content through the blogosphere and social media, and measure which methods bring results, which do not.

The main idea of the HubSpot flywheel model is that in order for your organization to grow, it needs to provide an amazing user experience through inbound marketing. This is what the HubSpot flywheel model looks like.


Funnel

To begin with, the flywheel model is contrasted with the traditional sales funnel. Recall that the goal of any funnel is to turn a potential buyer into a customer, for this, as a rule, he must go through a certain path, which usually has 4 stages:


  • Awareness. This is the stage of getting acquainted with a product or service, when you first encounter them, an initial contact. 
  • Interest. You will learn more information about a product or service and this causes you positive feedback, a response. You are showing interest.
  • Desire. After the Interest stage, your feelings develop and become deeper. You have a desire to get this product or a desire.
  • Action. This is the final stage. You have a clear intention to act.

There are various variants of funnels, but they usually have the following structure:


  • TOFU. Top of the funnel. The beginning of the process. Regarding potential customers, there are many of them, but not all are going to act.
  • MOFU. Middle of the funnel. The middle of the process. Half goes away, but half stays. They had a reason for this. It is necessary to continue to nurture.
  • BOFU. Bottom of the funnel. The end of the process. At this stage, decisions are made. There are not so many customers left, but they are all targeted, they have gone through the process to the end. Don’t leave them.

In the book Inbound marketing. Get found using Google, Social Media, and Blogs Brian Halligan and Dharmesh Shah use a marketing funnel to make decisions about marketing actions (for example, which tools or channels to use or not to use).


All the presented models of funnels are limited to the last stage when the action is completed, that is, the client has turned into a customer. But what’s next? This question is precisely answered by the flywheel model.

As we can see, there are 4 types of consumers in it: Strangers, Prospects, Customers, and Promoters. We can correlate the first three types with the sales funnel, that is, at the first stage a person does not know about you, he is a Stranger, then he receives some information and shows interest, he is Prospect, after which he makes a decision, he is the Customer.

But here is the fourth type, to which it is necessary to strive for business development, which is completely new. This is your brand advocate; he is loyal to you and protects your interests. But you need to understand that this does not happen because of a simple courtesy on the part of your client. This is a constant and time-consuming process on your part, which is aimed at satisfying the interests and needs of your customer. The flywheel model puts customers’ satisfaction at the center, regardless of what stage of the purchase they are at, as well as after the purchase.

HubSpot realized that a typical funnel was incompatible with their desire to satisfy their customers and create an unforgettable user experience, which is why they built the flywheel model into their inbound marketing strategy. This model ensures the transformation of prospects into promoters using frictionless content. We have already mentioned that there are three factors that need to be taken into account in order for your flywheel to work flawlessly. Here they are: 

  • rotation speed – the faster the flywheel rotates, the harder it is to stop it
  • amount of friction – friction can slow down your momentum and hinder forward movement
  • wheel size – the larger the size of the flywheel, the longer it takes to accelerate it, but at the same time it has strong momentum

So, for a successful result, companies must pay due attention to all three factors. The first thing you need is to increase the rotation speed. This can be done by adding force to the most promising areas. Further, we see that friction is the biggest enemy for the development of the organization. Eliminating friction allows your flywheel to rotate freely. The more you increase speed and reduce friction, the more you will create promoters of your business. And all these promoters become the force that spins your flywheel. The more promoters you have, the larger the size of your wheel, thus it will be more difficult to stop it.

Let’s return to the components of the flywheel model, we see in addition to the types of clients, the following phases are also presented here: attract, engage, and delight. What do they mean?

Attract Phase

Already from the name, we understand that the main goal of this stage is to attract. But it should be based on the voluntary desire of people, they should want it themselves, you should not be overly intrusive. The best way to cope with this task is to provide useful content. It works as follows: when a user has a need for something, it does not necessarily have to be a desire to purchase something, but he may want to learn something, then you should already have the relevant content ready. The user will find it, your task is search engine optimization and high-quality content. Do not forget also about working with social networks as the most popular communication channel between you and potential customers.

Engage Phase

You have attracted the attention of a future buyer. What’s next? Then you have to make it easier for them to make a purchase. How? Make it so that they can easily interact with you on their own terms, at their own time, and through their preferred channels. The buyers must decide for themselves, and you must adapt to their interests. Look at the prospect as a partner with whom you want to build a long-term relationship, and not as a one-time wallet. Tools such as website and email personalization, communication with your potential customers, free trial versions, and more will help you with this.

Delight Phase

At this stage, the Customer turns into a Promoter, which means at this stage you have to help and support your customers. Offer documentation and knowledge bases that will help clients get more value from what you offer. Be available to your customers via messengers, chatbots, e-mail, answer their questions, keep in touch, ask their opinion, conduct surveys. Develop a loyalty program. All these tools will help you win the hearts of people and make them your followers who will recommend your product or service.

So, we can conclude that your customers are your best friends who will help your company grow. And the flywheel model is based on this idea. Do not forget that the flywheel has the shape of a wheel, which means that the process of attracting and retaining customers must occur constantly, cyclically. Do not stop, but spin your wheel, give it momentum with the help of additional forces, accelerate, grow and move only forward. 

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The specialization trap

 To understand the difference between an integrated and a fragmented operation, we’ll need to explain the concepts of the division of labor and specialization, which began in the past century.

5.1 - DIVISION OF LABOR

The division of labor is one of the hallmarks of capitalism. Before Henry Ford’s advancement of the assembly line for automobile production, cars were primarily produced by craftsmen or artisans. Every member on the team had a very good working knowledge of virtually all aspects of car manufacturing. With the assembly line, a small team of people designed the car and assembly process, while a larger team of unskilled workers built the cars.

Consequently, the Industrial Revolution brought specialization from the division of labor, by standardizing and allocating work, which brought increased productivity. This specialization, however, decreased self-sufficiency and people became increasingly interdependent on one another, leading to fragmented structures (silos), a limited sense of responsibility and a narrow scope of awareness.

The ‘division of labor’ is often attributed to Taylor, however, it was Adam Smith in An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations (1776) who had made a similar case one century earlier while Plato (424-347 BC) had introduced the concept. Plato believed that ‘only through specialization [..] can disunity between people be erased and a just state is established’. Although all three man made a similar case, their intended application of the concepts of specialization and division of labor differed: Plato described how to run a stable state, Smith on how to run an effective economy while Taylor used the concepts to run an efficient production line.

5.2 - SCIENTIFIC APPROACH

To illustrate the underlying scientific-rational management approach, often attributed to Frederick Windsor Taylor, we’ve created the following figure of the compartmentalized product assembly line:

5.3 - INDUSTRIAL EFFICIENCY

While Taylor sought to optimize industrial efficiency, ultimately leading to robots replacing much of human labor, few will realize that a similar scientific management approach to increase employee productivity has also been applied to today’s customer development processes.

To illustrate this, we’ve created a schematic illustration of the customer creation line (process):


5.4 - FRONTLINE PRODUCTIVITY

Are you confused to see how customers are passing by stationary frontline employees, on an imaginary conveyor belt, similar to how products, like cars, passed stationary factory workers for over a century?

This is in fact how most creative processes are organized today. And it should come at no surprise that this approach leads to employee disengagement, similar to how industrial compartmentalization led to disengaged factory workers.

Margaret Heffernan: “The problem is that efficiency works very well if you know exactly what you are going to need. But when the anomalous or the unexpected comes along then efficiency is no longer your friend ─ especially when the unexpected becomes the norm”. So how are we going to deal with the unexpected if we’re being controlled by algorithms that steer us towards a future that isn’t very likely to happen?”


HENRY FORD: 370% EMPLOYEE TURNOVER (!)

Apparently, Henry Ford did not believe factory workers needed to bother with the final product and would be more than happy to do repetitive work routinely. However, Ford underestimated the effect this had on people: employee turnover rose to 370%. In 1913 Ford hired more than 52.000 men to keep a workforce of only 14.000. Even today, the automotive industry’s track record on hiring and retention is ‘unacceptable’.

5.5 - SURVEILLANCE CAPITALISM

As suggested by Harvard professor and celebrated scholar Shahshan Zuboff there may be a third arrangement: the assembly line of surveillance capitalism. According to Zuboff, companies like Google and Facebook offer free access to their platforms and services in exchange for a user’s behavioral data which allows these companies to predict their future behavior. This data is then sold to advertisers as ‘qualified leads’ to market their products and services against.

"The test of a first-rate intelligence is the ability to hold two opposed ideas in mind at the same time and still retain the ability to function."

~ F. Scott Fitzgerald


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