The Stakeholder Economy & The Prospects of Collective
Ownership
Brands have become decentralized — the memes, content, and
daily conversations of the masses increasingly define a brand. The next
generation of projects and businesses are also on a path to becoming
decentralized — where new block chain-driven organizational constructs turn
owners and customers into a community of stakeholders. This confluence of
decentralization will advantage emerging brands and local businesses, and could
prove to be the most disruptive force against the internet behemoths and global
marketplaces that rule the world. Yes, a bold proclamation, but bear with
me here… The Antiquation Of One-To-Many Businesses
A theme of the last few decades in tech has
been massive internet-based business behemoths using their pricing power and
algorithms to crush local small businesses. Most of us are customers of these
companies, but they’re owned and operated by a precious few (sure, you can buy
stock, but you‘re just along for the ride). Similarly, such companies have long
leveraged traditional media to define and force feed their brand to the masses.
While I have long marveled at the speed and prowess of such companies (and
enjoy pithy taglines), I also wonder what insight or innovation could shake
things up. How might emerging or local businesses ever compete?
I see two exciting disruptive forces at play
that, together, could change everything. The first has been boiling for
over a decade: Brands are now collectively determined by the content generation
of the masses as opposed to a creative agency and a nationwide ad
buy. Today, for all but the most iconic brands in the world, a brand is
only as good and fresh as the latest content and conversations taking place. In
a sense, brands are at the mercy of memes and social sentiments. Brands have
become decentralized. What your friends say — or even a stranger authentically
expressing satisfaction or disappointment — seems to have more sway than super
bowl commercials. Why? Because we still crave the ancestral “small town” of
reputation and brands built on trust. The consensus in real-time from
individuals on social media is powerful. In early 2018, I wrote a post
about the idea of Micro brands, thousands of tiny brands with low
overhead, high on design merchandise, and supremely efficient customer
acquisition tactics. Now looking back, many of these brands are no longer
“micro,” thanks to the organic growth and user-generated content they got on
social media —from customers and influencers, and often for free.
The second disruptive force at play is the
construct of decentralized organizations turning customers (and employees) of
businesses into owners. We’re seeing this happen in the aptly named “Web3”
space. Picky McCormick defines Web 3 as “the internet owned by the builders and
users, orchestrated with tokens.” And the pioneering all-things-crypto investor
Chris Dixon (also one of my early seed investors for Balance back in 2011)
further explains,
“In Web 3, ownership and control is
decentralized. Users and builders can own pieces of internet services by owning
[or earning] tokens, both non-fungible (NFTs) and fungible…Tokens align network
participants to work together toward a common goal — the growth of the network
and the appreciation of the token. This fixes the core problem of centralized
networks, where the value is accumulated by one company, and the company ends
up fighting its own users and partners.”
While Chris’ focuses mostly on the benefits
of decentralized online services and big platforms, I can’t help but imagine
the same technology being applied to the long tail of smaller businesses both
on and offline. Imagine if your favorite online publications, e-commerce
brands, and small businesses in your town — from restaurants and Laundromats to
ice cream shops and barbers — were able to frictionless (read: without a
prohibitively expensive “IPO” or massive infrastructure to manage) distribute
ownership to every stakeholder. Might the benefits of collective ownership of
small companies be the biggest threat to big companies? If every stakeholder of
these businesses was deeply incentivized to help build, improve, market, and
patronize the brands, would that become a competitive advantage against the big
guys? Would a “many-to-many” business out-market a “one-to-many” businesses in
a material way?
In A Stakeholder Economy, Every Business Is Its Customers
The concept of “stakeholder capitalism”
describes a system in which corporations are oriented to serve the interests of
all their stakeholders. But I think the confluence of decentralized brands and
decentralized businesses gives rise to a new era where the boundaries between
companies and their customers are harder to discern. This idea is most powerful
where there is the most pain right now: small towns and locally-owned
businesses.
What might this look like in the future?
Perhaps we will all own a piece of the many online businesses and marketplaces
we frequent, as well as our favorite local restaurant, ice cream shop, and
coffee house. Imagine every subscriber to your newsletter becoming a
stakeholder as well as a reader, and what that would do to viral marketing?
When you like a brand or service, you can buy tokens or earn them by
contributing labor in the form of clearly defined and measurable tasks. Our
tokens would entitle us to vote on certain decisions (flavors of the month?),
serve as an engagement vehicle, turn us into passionate unpaid marketers, and
would carry (perhaps even grow) a residual value that can be sold on an open
24/7 market to new residents and customers (or speculators seeking exposure to
mom and pop shops in stable communities) — or perhaps these tokens can even be
redeemed for merchandise? Perhaps you’d be able to buy your ice cream with
(tokens in the) ice cream (shop)?
There are a number of technologies and
increasingly popularized business models and product experiences that could
help make this possible. First, there is the rise of the DAO (decentralized
autonomous organization) that makes it far easier to incorporate a business and
sell tokens (with or without a vesting period) to a community of new and
interested “owners” that feel incentivized to patronize, improve, and grow the
business. These DAOs are increasingly turnkey and a broad variety of tools are
being built to administer them. Second, the concept of subscriptions could
easily be leveraged for local shops and services and managed centrally in a
town subscription app. With the stability of subscription-based revenue (and a
modern tech stack and CRM), many small businesses would not only survive but
thrive by doing more bundles with other shops and efforts to surprise and
delight customers.
The Stakeholder Economy & The Good Ol’ Days
I’ve come to call this concept “The
Stakeholder Economy” because the traditional construct of “owners and
customers” is being replaced by a far larger and more deeply incentivized group
of “stakeholders” that will, with the right system design, give the advantage
to decentralized marketplaces and businesses with better retention and business
stability, and radically cheaper costs of customer acquisition and marketing.
Perhaps the reason I am most excited about
the Stakeholder Economy is that it takes us back to the way things once were.
When forecasting the future of tech, I’ve long subscribed to
the sentimental reflex of tech — that we inherently long for the
way things once were and, in every transaction and experience, seek a return to
intimacy, relationships, and small town mechanics. We want to be known, we
want to support people we trust, and we feel a personal benefit when our
community benefits. Suddenly, our local shops are not only supported by the
community, but grown and advantaged by a level of dedication only felt by true
owners, but at scale. The Stakeholder Economy can restore a sense of small
town pride, at scale to the world of brands and business.
As we all have the opportunity to own a part
of everything we enjoy — from an online marketplace, a publication, a local ice
cream shop or your favorite beverage company — the key levers of business like
marketing, sales, and distribution will be transformed by the natural
tendencies and preferences we’ve always had within us. There’s nothing more
authentic and effective than helping sell something you genuinely love and own.
~~~
Continue the conversation and connect with
Scott on Twitter, check out other recent posts like “What
is Seeing The Matrix for Product Leaders?” “8 Themes for the Future of
Tech,” get his latest book — The Messy Middle, or sign up for an
infrequent newsletter of insights.
No comments:
Post a Comment