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The World is Flat

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Title: The World is Flat


1
The World is Flat
  • Thomas L. Friedman

2
Flattener 1When the Walls came Down and the
Windows Went Up
  • The fall of the Berlin Wall tipped the balance of
    power across the world toward those advocating
    democratic, free-market-oriented governance.
  • It also allowed us to think about the world as a
    seamless whole.
  • The first version of the Windows operating system
    shipped in 1985 and the real breakthrough version
    Windows 3.0 shipped on May 22, 1990.

3
Flattener 1When the Walls came Down and the
Windows Went Up
  • The diffusion of personal computers, fax
    machines, Windows, and dial-up modems connected
    to a global telephone network all came together
    in the late 1980 and early 1990s to create the
    basic platform that started the global
    information revolution.

4
Flattener 2When Netscape Went Public 1995
  • Today we take the browser technology for granted,
    but it was actually one of the most important
    inventions in modern history.
  • Netscape helped make the Internet truly
    interoperable.
  • Netscape eventually fell victim to overwhelming
    competitive pressure from Microsoft.

5
Flattener 3Work Flow Software
  • When the walls went down, and the PC, Windows,
    and Netscape browser enabled people to connect
    with other people as never before, it did not
    take long before all these people who were
    connecting wanted to do more than just browse and
    send e-mail, ionstant messages, pictures, and
    music over this Internet platform.
  • They wanted to shape things, design things,
    create things, sell things, buy things, keep
    track of inventories, do somebody elses taxes,
    and read somebody elses X-rays from half a world
    away.
  • And they wanted to do any of these things from
    anywhere to anywhere and from any computer to any
    computer-seamlessly.

6
Flattener 4Open-Sourcing
  • The Open Source Movement involves thousand of
    people around the world coming together online to
    collaborate in writing everything from their own
    software to their own operating systems.
  • The word Open Source comes from the notion that
    companies or ad hoc groups would make available
    online source code- the underlying programming
    instructions that make a piece of software work-
    and then let anyone who has something to
    contribute improve it and let millions of others
    jus download it for their own use for free.

7
Flattener 5Outsourcing
  • Y2K led to this mad rush for Indian brainpower to
    get the programming work done. The Indian
    companies were good and cheap, but price wasnt
    first on customers minds- getting the work done
    was, and India was the only place with the volume
    of workers to do it. Then the dot-com boom comes
    along right in the wake of Y2K, and India is one
    of the few places where you can find surplus
    English-speaking engineers, at any price, because
    all of those in America have been scooped by
    e-commerce companies.
  • After the dot-com bubble burst, American IT
    companies needed low cost Indian engineers.

8
Flattener 6Offshoring
  • Every morning in Africa, a gazelle wakes up
  • it knows it must run faster than the fastest
    lion or it will be killed.
  • Every morning a lion wakes up.
  • It knows it must outrun the slowest gazelle or
    it will starve to death.
  • It doesnt matter whether your are a lion or a
    gazelle.
  • When the sun comes up, you better start running.
  • Ever since the Chinese joined the WTO, both they
    and the rest of the world have had to run faster
    and faster.

9
Flattener 6Offshoring
  • This is because Chinas joining the WTO gave a
    huge boost to another form of collaboration-offsho
    ring. Offshoring, which has been around for
    decades, is different from outsourcing.
    Outsourcing means taking some specific, but
    limited, function that your company was doing
    in-house such as research, call centers, or
    accounts receivable- and having another company
    perform that exact function for you and then
    reintegrating their work back into your overall
    operation.
  • Offshoring, by contrast, is when a company takes
    one of its factories that is operating in Canton,
    Ohio, and moves the whole factory offshore to
    Canton, China. There, it produces the very same
    product in the very same way, only with cheaper
    labor, lower taxes, subsidized energy, and lower
    health-care costs.
  • Just as Y2K took India and the world to a whole
    new level of outsourcing, Chinas joining the WTO
    took Beijing and the world to a whole new level
    of offshoring-with more companies shifting
    production offshore and then integrating it into
    their global supply chains.

10
Flattener 7Supply-Chaining
  • Supply chaining is a method of collaborating
    horizontally- among suppliers, retailers, and
    customers- to create value.
  • Supply chaining is both enabled by the flattening
    of the world and a hugely important flattener
    itself, because the more these supply chains grow
    and proliferate, the more they force the adoption
    of common standards between companies the more
    they eliminate points of friction at borders, the
    more the efficiencies of one company get adopted
    by the others, and the more they encourage global
    collaboration.
  • That is how Wal-Mart became the worlds biggest
    retailer.
  • But as workers, and local retailers, we are
    ambivalent or hostile to these supply chains
    because they expose us to higher and higher
    pressures to compete, cut costs, and also at
    times, cut wages and benefits.

11
Flattener 8Insourcing
  • Go online and order a pair of Nikes from its Web
    site, Nike.com. The order, though, is actually
    routed to UPS and a UPS employee picks, inspects,
    packs, and delivers your shoes from Nike only
    from a warehouse in Kentucky managed by UPS.
  • This process is called insourcing a whole new
    form of collaboration and creating value
    horizontally, made possible by the flat world and
    flattening it even more.
  • Insourcing came about because once the world went
    flat, the small could act big- small companies
    could suddendly see around the world.

12
Flattener 8Insourcing
  • Consider the collaboration today among eBay
    sellers, UPS, PayPal, and eBay buyers. Say I
    offer to sell a bicycle on eBay and you decide to
    buy it. I e-mail you a PayPal invoice, which has
    your name and mailing addres on it. At the same
    time, eBay offers me an icon on its Web site to
    print out a UPS mailing label to you. When I
    print that mailing label on my own printer, it
    comes out with a UPS tracking bar code on it. At
    the same time, UPS, through its computer system,
    creates a tracking number that corresponds to
    that label, which automatically gets e-mailed to
    you- the person that bought the bicycle- so you
    can track the package by yourself, online, on a
    regular basis and know exactly when it will reach
    you.

13
Flattener 9In-Forming
  • Googles goal is to make easily available all the
    worlds knowledge in every language. And Google
    hopes that in time, with a PalmPilot or a cell
    phone, everyone everywhere will be able to carry
    around access to all the worlds knowledge in
    their pockets.
  • In-forming is the individuals personal anallog
    to opensourcing, outsourcing, insourcing,
    supply-chaining, and offshoring.

14
Flattener 9In-Forming
  • Informing is the ability to build and deploy your
    own personal supply chain- a supply chain of
    information, knowledge, and entertainment.
  • Informing is about self-collaboration- becoming
    your own self-directed and self-empowered
    researcher, editor, and selector of
    entertainment, without having to go to the
    library or the movie theater or through network
    television.
  • Informing is searching for knwoledge.

15
Flattener 10The Steroids
  • The steroids are the new technologies that
    amplify and turbocharge all the other flatteners.
    They are taking all the forms of collaboration
    among outsourcing, offshoring, open-sourcing,
    supply-chaining, insourcing, and in-forming, and
    making it possible to do each and every one of
    them in a way that is digital, mobile, virtual
    and personal.
  • The steroids are
  • Speed
  • Storage
  • Wireless technology
  • Devices

16
Convergence
  • The ten flatterners needed time to converge and
    start to work together in a complementary,
    mutually enhancing fashion.
  • Around 2000 (Y2K) began the convergence with the
    creation of a global, webenabled playing field
    that allows for multiple forms of
    collaboration-the sharing of knowledge and work,
    in real time without regard to geography,
    distance, or, in the near future, even language.
  • This is what I mean when I say the world has been
    flattened. It is the complementary convergence of
    the ten flatterners, creating this new global
    playing field for multiple forms of
    collaboration.
  • The flattening of the world is largely
    unstoppable, and holds out the potential to be as
    beneficial to a society as a whole as past market
    evolutions have been. There is only one message
    you have to constantly upgrade your skills.
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