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« The Strategic Enema | Main | What else is in the shed? »
Tuesday
Mar142017

Learning from drug dealers

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Addicts or Customers?

I begin my weekdays with a short exercise routine followed by a 20-minute meditation. Then its breakfast, a shower and into my office and online where I look at two news sites, check overnight markets, open my email inbox, AND, take a quick scroll through Facebook.

The last item is contentious. Much of Facebook’s content is odious. It feeds egos, disseminates fake views, betrays a variety of bigotries and provokes ideas I’d call unfathomable were they not so shallow. Yet, I do my morning scroll.

Like most disorders, social media and/or mobile phone addiction is a spectrum. At one end are occasional users; at the other are people who can’t leave it alone. Excessive use shares the characteristics of medically defined addictions: users feel anxious when deprived of access; attempts to curb usage persistently fail; constant use can jeopardise relationships and jobs; increased usage is required to achieve the same desired effect. 

From a business perspective, it’s a little like drug dealing. People keep coming back for more.

What is the flip side of these negatives?

For a start, there are such things as healthy habits. Part of my morning routine is healthy. It’s become a habit because I’ve made it easy — it starts with leg stretches while I’m still in bed. Make something convenient and it’s got a stronger chance of getting traction. If you can sell your product or service online, the fewer clicks it takes to transact, the more sales you’ll make. Even from bed.

Another is the power of free. Unlike drug dealers, successful apps don’t charge their customers for access. Think Facebook, Instagram, Uber, Airbnb, Google, Twitter, eBay, Alibaba, Trip Advisor, Baidu. Most make money from advertising or related transactions. You don’t have to deal to get access.

Nor do they make that much money relative to their value. What they do have are ridiculously high share prices and massive numbers of users. 

Making money out of those users seems less important than the value they represent, at least for now. Facebook bought Instagram for US$1 billion when it was making no money at all (it still doesn’t) and had fewer than 30 employees. If you are working on a startup you hope to sell for a lot of money, you need to make it easy for users to join. Being free is a big help.

Both those things — ease of use and ease of access — are the basis of strong habitual relationships in business, be they with suppliers or customers. If you examine the relationships you are involved in, from the suppliers of your most basic inputs through to transactions and on to any aspect of after-sales service, what can you do to make it habitually easy?

Can I justify my Facebook scroll? I’d argue I am actually interested in what some friends are up to, and I’ve got three daughters who post stupid things. I find them amusing. Mostly. 

Occasionally though, I deal, and I click on some click bait. That’s when I make money for Facebook.

Reader Comments (2)

This post was really amazing. I hope that more people will have time to read this article and share this to everyone especially for teens and students that are having this kind of problem and help themselves fight this kind of illness.

August 7, 2017 | Unregistered CommenterJian

Its great information what you have shared, thanks for writing and share this information.I really appreciate it.

August 29, 2017 | Unregistered CommenterANITA SARKAR

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