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Featured Title:
Net Attitude
What it is, how to get it, and why your company can't survive without it
by John R. Patrick
Q&A with John Patrick
What is a "Net Attitude?"
A "Net Attitude" is a new way of thinkingbased on the culture of the
Internetthat's based on grass roots. It's very people oriented and
collaborative
in spirit. To get it, spend more time with teenagers. Ask them
what they do on the Net and ask them what they think things will be like in five
years. Explore new Web sites. Pick a product or a service or a subject of
interest to you. Go to Google or other search engines and enter a query. Follow
the links and learn what's out there. Over time you'll get the Attitude.
How have e-companies changed traditional companies?
The flood of Internet companies served as a "wake up" call for
existing
companies. It scared many of themforced them to get their Net acts together
and become e-businesses. However, becoming an e-business doesn't mean you "get
it." It just means you've been able to build a Web site. The real proof comes
when the e-business becomes totally integrated with the existing
businessseamlessly. Buy on the Net and return at the store. Buy at the store
and get customer service on the Net.
Why have so many e-companies gone bankrupt lately? Do you think it means
that
Net businesses don't work?
The number of business bankruptcies in America has averaged a fairly steady
5,000 per month for the last twenty years. There have been a few hundred
Internet companies that have gone bankrupt in 2000. There will be more in 2001.
It has nothing to do with the Internet. Companies succeed or fail for very basic
reasonssegmenting their market and understanding the wants and needs of
customers, setting the right prices, managing their cost of doing business,
having
good distribution of their products or services, and most importantly,
having great customer service. Those are the tried and true methods to succeed.
The Internet provides a new medium for doing business. It enables a business to
be global and it provides a way to enhance the pre-buying, buying, and post sale
service experience.
So this isn't the end of business on the Internet?
Hardly. In fact, we're just at the beginning of the impact of the Net. Less than
5 percent of the world is
using it, and for those who are using it less than 5
percent of their needs are being met. There may not be the rush of "pure"
Internet companies that we saw in 1995-2000, but existing companies are rushing
to the Net to improve their ability to meet the rapidly rising expectations of
their customers.
Why do so many people leave Web sites unsatisfied?
The focus of many e-businesses is "click here to buy." Consumers want more than
that. They're looking for an "end to end"
experience-something that meets all of
their needs. They don't want to see "click here for more info" and then be led
to a web page that tells them to call an 800 number during the hours of 9-5
Monday through Friday.
You talk about the seven characteristics of the next generation of the Internet.
What are they?
Fast, Always on, Everywhere, Natural, Intelligent, Easy, and Trusted. The
cumulative effect of these characteristics results in not just a new medium but
the new medium. The next generation of the
Internet (NGi) will provide a
different experience and one that will enable us to connect to vast information
resources to learn, buy, communicate, collaborate, and be entertained. It has no
arrival date but each day we get a step closer as today's Internet morphs itself
into the NGi.
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