Last week I wrote about Machine, Platform, Crowd: Harnessing Our Digital Future, a recently published book by MIT’s Andy McAfee and Erik Brynjolfsson. The book is organized into three main sections: Mind and Machine, Product and Platform, and Core and Crowd, each based on a business trend that’s significantly reshaping the business world. I based my discussion on the Mind and Machine section, which I found to be an excellent explanation of recent advances in artificial intelligence.
I now want to focus my attention on the provocative questions raised in the book’s latter chapters. “In this era of powerful new technologies, do we still need companies?” How are firms likely to evolve given the continuing advances of Internet-based technologies, as well as emerging blockchain-based technologies such as distributed ledgers and smart contracts? “Are companies passé” in an increasingly decentralized economy?
Following the Great Depression and WW2, the country welcomed the stability promised by corporate capitalism. Big, multinational companies dominated most industries, - GM, Ford and Chrysler in cars, Citibank, American Express and Morgan Stanley in finance, and Esso/Exxon, Mobil and Texaco in oil and gas. It was an era characterized by bureaucratic corporate cultures, - not unlike military hierarchies - focused on organizational power and orderly prosperity.
This all started to change a few decades later with the advent of a more innovative, fast moving entrepreneurial economy. The 1980s saw the rise of young, high-tech companies, - e.g., Microsoft, Apple, Oracle, Sun Microsystems, - and Silicon Valley became the global hub for innovation, emulated by regions around the world. Turtlenecks and jeans replaced blue suits, white shirts, and ties.
The advent of the Internet and e-commerce pushed all these trends into hyperdrive in the 1990s. The Internet made it much easier for companies to transact with each other around the world. Vertically integrated firms evolved into virtual enterprises, increasingly relying on supply chain partners for many of the functions once done in-house. Management experts noted that large firms were no longer necessary and would in fact be at a disadvantage in the Internet era when competing against agile, innovative smaller companies.