sábado, junho 25, 2016

Curiosidade do dia

Ainda acerca do Brexit.




No dia anterior tinha favoritado esta troca de tweets:


A que acrescento este artigo, há dias podia ler-se "Seniores. O novo pote de ouro das marcas?"

Maio de 68 simbolizou a entrada dos jovens no poder, como o grupo demográfico onde estava a moda estatística. O Brexit pode ser uma chamada de atenção para muitas marcas que continuam a replicar movimentos habituais sem se questionarem. Quanto é que estão a investir para trabalhar o segmento dos seniores? Pouco sexy? É onde está a moda estatística, o poder de compra com casa paga e filhos fora dela.

Vislumbrei isto em 2003, neste filme

Feito por e para esta moda estatística.

Desafios do pricing

Por cá, chama-se a ASAE e fazem-se umas sessões de catequese contra os especuladores.
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Por lá, aprende-se que é uma mensagem do mercado a dizer que quem fez os preços deixou dinheiro em cima da mesa:
"What’s clear is that recent prices — starting at $549 for premium seats and $139 for regular seats — are significantly lower than what the public is willing to pay. The result? A paradise for scalpers. The New York Times estimates scalpers earn up to $60 million annually from reselling Hamilton tickets. Estimates of the average resale price hover around $1,000 per ticket.
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To capitalize on this strong demand, Hamilton’s producers raised ticket prices for newly scheduled 2017 performances. Now the top ticket price is $849 (for 200 premium tickets) and the remaining 1,075 regular seats range from $179–$199.
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A ho-hum, across-the-board price boost is a baby step in the right direction.
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Fixed prices also prevent Hamilton from adapting to nuances in demand. Demand is likely stronger for Saturday evening performances, compared to Wednesday matinees, and this should be reflected in price. Similarly, demand is probably higher during the pleasant fall weather, relative to the dregs of summer. Fixed prices don’t adjust to these shifts in value.
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So what should Hamilton have done? Take a cue from other sellers of perishable products with fixed capacities — industries such as airlines, hotels, and car rentals — and employ dynamic pricing."
Trechos retirados de "Hamilton’s $849 Tickets Are Priced Too Low"

O papel da marca em Mongo (parte II)

Bingo!
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""Brands matter more than ever" - worldwide CEO John Seifert opens up on his vision for Ogilvy & Mather":
""There are a lot of people saying brands don't matter much in this world of perfect information, where I can find out almost anything about a product or a service or a company through the transparency of the Internet or what employees think of the brand or this notion of brand choice and brand positioning and brand equity or point of view as not being important. We couldn't disagree more.
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"We believe that brands are more important than ever because in this world where you have more of everything...you need a brand to help you stand apart from all that fragmentation and chaos in the modern marketing world. Brands are not just about saying things in advertising, they are about what the brands do and how do you engage with audiences in a way where the value and service of a brand can really be felt in a very personal way.""
Em sintonia perfeita com:

Acerca do Brexit

"Hoje é verdadeiramente o primeiro dia do resto da vida não da Grã-Bretanha, mas da União Europeia. Daqui para a frente, como diz a canção brasileira, tudo vai ser diferente. E tudo vai ser pior."
Perdoem-me a linguagem: Bullshit!!!
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Há muitos anos... talvez em 1997, estava eu ao princípio da noite sentado num banco no centro comercial Amoreiras, à espera da minha colega Dores para ir jantar, a ler "The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People" de Stephen Covey. Então, li um trecho que nunca mais esqueci:
"Não é o que acontece que conta, é o que nós decidimos fazer com o que nos acontece."
Ou como citei em 2008:
"Highly proactive people recognize that responsibility. They do not blame circumstances, conditions, or conditioning for their behavior. Their behavior is a product of their own conscious choice, based on values, rather than a product of their conditions, based on feeling.
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Because we are, by nature, proactive, if our lives are a function of conditioning and conditions, it is because we have, by conscious decision or by default, chosen to empower those things to control us.
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In making such a choice, we become reactive."
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"It's not what happens to us, but our response to what happens to us that hurt us." 
Assim, por favor, esqueçam mais uma vez a conversa do senhor Nicolau Santos e pensem em como fazer do que encontram uma oportunidade e não uma ameaça. O senhor Nicolau Santos é um dos que parte já derrotado.
"Life handed him a lemon,
As Life sometimes will do.
His friends looked on in pity,
Assuming he was through.
They came upon him later,
Reclining in the shade
In calm contentment, drinking
A glass of lemonade."
Trecho inicial retirado de "União Europeia: o primeiro dia do resto da sua vida"

As exportações e os fragilistas (parte II)

Parte I.
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Recordar a nossa opinião, expressa na parte I:
"A verdade é que Portugal mesmo agora não está a perder quota de mercado, está a ganhá-la em países muito exigentes em qualidade-preço-performance. Mesmo em Angola não é linear que esteja a perder quota de mercado."
Em sintonia perfeita com:
"Na verdade, neste mês de abril de 2016, as vendas para os países da UE cresceram 8,4% face ao mês homólogo do ano anterior.
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Nesse âmbito, no que concerne especificamente às vendas para países da UE, face ao período homólogo do ano anterior, houve um crescimento de 5,1%, tendo passado de 3.667.353.322€ para 3.854.169.450€. Relativamente às exportações para fora da UE, tal como acima se avançou, houve uma queda de 29,4%, com um decréscimo de 1.352.177.524€ para 954.000.220€. Em termos globais, a queda foi de 4,2%, tendo decrescido de 5.019.530.856€ para 4.808.169.670€." 
Trechos retirados de "Exportações do setor metalúrgico e metalomecânico para os países da União Europeia mantêm trajetória ascendente"

sexta-feira, junho 24, 2016

Curiosidade do dia

Lembram-se das indignações sobre "País tem "cofres cheios", diz Maria Luís Albuquerque".
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"Juros de Portugal disparam na maior subida desde o “irrevogável”"
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"Centeno diz que cofres estão cheios para enfrentar Brexit"
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Recordar:



O karma é tramado

ADENDA
Sobre esta cena dos cofres cheios, voltaremos a falar antes do Orçamento de 2017

Código na agricultura (parte II)

Parte I.

Qual é a lógica? (parte III)

Parte I e parte II.

"If you want to position yourself as a higher end brand or if you have slimmer margins, you may want to consider sticking to customer loyalty type offers rather than weekly sales. This helps increase the perceived value of your product and increase your average order value.
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One of the biggest problems with discounting is cutting into your bottom line.
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However, it’s important to consider if price is your only competitive advantage. The thing to keep in mind is that offering discounts is a form of selling on price. When you offer a discount, you are taking the focus from the value you provide and placing it squarely on your price.
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To maintain higher prices, you have to instead be adept at selling value. Discounts erode your ability to do that. Any reduction in prices can damage your price integrity. Later, getting the same customer to stop thinking about price and re-focus on value might be difficult."

Trechos retirados de "Should You Offer Discounts or Coupons?"

Porque falta a paciência estratégica

Há muitos anos que aqui no blogue escrevo sobre os gringos e a sua tradicional falta de paciência estratégica.
Agora, em "Beyond competitive advantage : how to solve the puzzle of sustaining growth while creating value" de Todd Zenger, encontro uma interessante justificação para isso:
"the primary path to value creation results from the creative, theory-building capacities of managers—those hired to see things investors often cannot.
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the CEO’s task is to make strategic choices that will maximize the firm’s long-run profitability, even if capital markets fail to see this value in the short run. After all, the CEO is hired to be smarter than investors. The challenge is convincing investors this is true—a task made all the more challenging because frequently it simply isn’t; sometimes managers’ theories are bad, aimed at building empires and not value.
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The quality of a corporate theory is massively difficult to assess—the product is a mere cognitive vision of a path to sustained value creation. A more difficult-to-evaluate product is hard to imagine; the true value is unknown even to the manager and is revealed only as “experiments” or strategic actions are pursued over a period of years. Accordingly, managers can all too easily disguise poor-quality theories as high-quality ones.
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managers are paid to know more than capital markets about the quality and future value of their theories, but they are often incapable of persuasively articulating that inherent future value. As a consequence, high-quality theories paradoxically may be discounted in capital markets, especially when they are difficult to evaluate.
The big problem with such discounting is that managers rely on capital markets for resources to pursue their corporate theories. Perceptions of low quality elevate financing costs. Moreover, managers’ compensation and continued employment typically depend on their capacity to generate market value in the present. Thus, this lemons problem leads to a strategic dilemma of massive significance. Managers may be tempted to pander to the beliefs and preferences of the capital markets rather than pursue the corporate theories that would maximize value for the firm.
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my experience suggests that managers generally do face a real dilemma as they craft and then sell their corporate theories to capital markets. They can choose simple, familiar strategies that are easy for capital markets to decipher or they can choose complex, unfamiliar, or unique ones based on theories that are difficult toevaluate. In the latter case, valuation is costly, prone to error, and likely leads to a discount in the market.
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four types of corporate theories that differ along two dimensions: quality and ease of evaluation. Type I theories—theories that are of high quality and easily evaluated—are clearly the preferred choice. However, such theories are unlikely to exist in great abundance since, as discussed, good theories are unique—and unique seldom means easy to evaluate. Type IV theories—theories that are of low quality and relatively opaque—are clearly to be avoided. The majority of options, however, are likely to be type II—theories that are lower in quality and therefore long-term value, but are easily evaluated and therefore may maximize investors’ current value— or type III—theories of high quality that maximize long-term value but are difficult to evaluate and are therefore discounted in the present. The correct choice is by no means obvious.
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In capital markets, there are securities analysts who specialize in assessing the merits of each firm’s theory. Their task is to assemble information, monitor performance, and evaluate the quality and likely future performance of the theories that managers propose, as these provide information to investors through earnings forecasts and buy and sell recommendations.
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Analysts, like all individuals, seek to allocate their effort in ways that generate the best return on their time invested. Covering more firms expands order flow and reduces the costs spent per firm in analysis. But to economize on the effort expended per firm, and thereby cover more, analysts prefer firms that are easy to analyze— in other words, those pursuing theories that are familiar and simple.
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firms tend to reshape themselves through divestitures and spinoffs to essentially “match” the “categories” covered by analysts.
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We examined the impact of a strategy’s uniqueness on the level of coverage and the premium or discount that it received in capital markets. We assumed that the most valuable corporate theories are built around uniqueness: either unique foresight about the value of a strategic bundle of assets, or the possession of unique assets that preclude others from enjoying similar value as they pursue complementary assets.
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The bottom line is that this uniqueness paradox is pervasive even in the market for publicly traded firms. Choosing unique theories, which may maximize long-term value, will likely receive a discount in the present."
Assim, é natural que os incentivos para estratégias intuitivas, as baseadas no preço/custo, sejam a opção de base.
"Competir e ter sucesso no negócio do preço mais baixo não tem segredos, é a estratégia mais fácil e intuitiva de implementar."(fonte)
Agora, recordar o título, "Por que as grandes estratégias têm de ser fora da caixa"

A inovação não é a resposta para tudo

Escrevi este postal na madrugada de ontem. Depois, ao final da tarde, desafiaram-me para um projecto sobre: quando a inovação morre na praia.
"Too frequently, companies decide what they’re going to do before determining why they’re going to do it. That’s challenging, because developing innovations that have a lasting impact requires going beyond doing one single thing. Improving innovation is a system-level issue, requiring a coherent and consistent set of organizational interventions. [Moi ici: Recordar o problema dos que inovam produtos sem mudar de modelo de negócio - "Um conselho, um desafio" e "Uma aposta manca (parte I)"] To begin to determine what set of interventions makes the most sense for your company, first you need to step back and answer a fundamental question: What problem does innovation need to solve? The answer to this question matters substantially because it determines in which part of the organization a company needs to intervene, what resources leaders need to be ready to commit to, and how long it will take before any impact is felt.
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Finally, innovation is not a one-size-fits-all proposition. Leaders need to make the strategic choice: whether to isolate new growth efforts, infuse everyday innovation into daily routines or truly institutionalize innovation. Taking the time to determine which choice is appropriate for you will focus your attention and accelerate the impact of your subsequent innovation efforts."
Trechos retirados de "Innovation Isn’t the Answer to All Your Problems"

O fragilismo


O fragilismo espera sempre o melhor do futuro, não prevê sobressaltos. Acredita que os astros se vão alinhar em nosso favor, não vê necessidade de precaução, just in case.

quinta-feira, junho 23, 2016

Curiosidade do dia

Apesar da dupla Costa-Marcelo tentar convencer-nos da contaminação externa:
"A troika tem criticado as várias reversões efectuadas pelo Governo de António Costa e aproveita este relatório para voltar a lançar alertas sobre os efeitos destas políticas. Desta vez diz mesmo que a maior ameaça ao crescimento da economia portuguesa está nas políticas internas e não em factores externos.
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"Apesar de também existirem riscos para as perspectivas económicas no ambiente externo, estes são sobretudo internos e relacionados com a adequação das políticas domésticas", refere o comunicado."
Trecho retirado de "Políticas do Governo português são o principal risco para a retoma"

“plans are worthless, but planning is everything”

Um excelente artigo, "Strategic Plans Are Less Important than Strategic Planning", a esta hora estou numa empresa a lançar o pontapé de saída de um conjunto de iniciativas estratégicas, alinhadas com o mapa da estratégia. Os dois últimos slides são:


Chegámos à fase em que a transformação deliberada da empresa vai começar, com o desenvolvimento e implementação das iniciativas estratégicas. Cada iniciativa é como uma aposta num cavalo. Demos o nosso melhor mas podemos ter apostado no cavalo errado. Além disso, à medida que exercitamos a estratégia transforma-nos e começamos a ver oportunidades que antes não existiam ou nos estavam vedadas. Por uma razão e/ou pela outra podemos ser obrigados a mudar ou a ajustar a estratégia e as iniciativas

Recordar o tweet do @miguelppires.
"Think of the plan as a guidance tool. The problem for many managers is that their expectations are all skewed from what can be realistically achieved via a strategic plan. Their image is more of the house-plan type or travel itinerary. They anticipate that by doing the necessary analysis and writing down how their business will succeed the world will be converted from uncertain to certain. In their eyes the strategic plan becomes a device for control rather than one of guidance.
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Look for disagreements and toward the future. Even though your plan is liable to become immediately irrelevant, you still need to invest in writing it up.
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wasn’t advocating not having a plan to start with but that the plan itself and the planners needed to be flexible because it generates preparedness.
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Focus on the organization and key stakeholders, not individual actions. A plan can’t be “strategic” if it’s simply about action by individuals. While action is fundamental to implementation and success, there’s another level above that — the organization level.
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Assume the plan is a work in progress. A strategic plan is not a set-and-forget instrument. It’s a living and breathing document that guides decision making and helps marshal resources. When managers talk about “giving up on strategic planning” I suggest that they haven’t thought through how to keep their plan fresh. The fact that circumstances are changing rapidly is a very good reason to visit their plan regularly."

Parte V - A via da experiência ou a via do volume?

Parte I, parte II, parte III e parte IV.
"Big box retail stores are losing relevance, while e-commerce and specialty stores grow in appeal. People no longer want — or need — to shop as anonymous customers in large stores with shelves stocked high in aisle after aisle. As a result, big box retail must shift its strategy — from competing on access and selection to staging big experiences and providing big discounts.
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The shrinking demand for big box retail can be seen in the numerous store and company closures across several categories over the last decade.
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These large-store format companies are losing share to Amazon and other e-commerce sellers and to specialty retailers. The former are able to offer a wider selection than even the largest brick-and-mortar store can and their digital tools make it easy to navigate an otherwise overwhelming number of choices with ease, speed, and precision.
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The appeal of the latter is an edited, or even curated, selection of goods targeted to specific customers who self-select into shopping at the store — and these smaller stores often provide superior, personalized service. Not all specialty stores are thriving, but as a whole, the specialty segment of retail is growing while most other sectors have been on the decline.
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Big boxes can shift from being places to stock and sell goods and become venues to stage immersive, memorable, share-worthy experiences. While specialty stores might create an intimate or personal experience, large stores are conducive to experiential retailing that is communal and physical.
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An alternate route for big box retailers is to offer big discounts, using well-honed supply chain and analytics capabilities to offer high-demand products at low margins — with the immediacy and interactivity that e-commerce players can’t. Volume and velocity are required to make this model work"
Estas coisas devem dar um nó na cabeça dos académicos sempre à procura da solução correcta. Não há solução correcta! Não é um puzzle! Cada empresa é um caso, cada caso tem de ter a sua própria solução.

"So, dear politicians, please think first before you act"

Sempre que o mundo económico muda, os prejudicados aproximam-se do governo de turno com a mão estendida em busca de um apoio, de um subsídio, de uma protecção. E, quase sempre, o governo de turno resolve atrasar a mudança diminuindo os incentivos à transformação por parte dos coitadinhos dos prejudicados:
"a typical behavior of an industry under attack. Instead of changing their business model they attack somebody else. It is much easier to blame somebody else and play the victim instead of blaming oneself for not being innovative and for holding too long to a dated business model.
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Times have changed but the business models have not.  So, dear politicians, please think first before you act."
Recordar "Um perfil diferente"

Trechos retirados de "Who says paper is dead? business model innovation in the newspaper industry"

"Growth without profit is perilous"


  1. "Bad customers drive out good customers.
  2. He who liveth by the discount, shall ye also perish by the discount.
  3. All measurements are judgments in disguise.
  4. Ideas are always and everywhere more important than their mere execution.
  5. Prescription before diagnosis is malpractice (First Law of Medicine: Do No Harm).[Moi ici: Ao ler esta primeira lei da medicina lembrei-me logo dos catequistas/fragilistas que não praticam a via negativa]"
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[Moi ici: Segue-se um trecho em completo alinhamento com a mensagem deste blogue e com o nosso trabalho]1. Growth without profit is perilous..
We start with profitability, rather than revenue, because we are not interested in growth merely for the sake of growth - the ideology of the cancer cell. As many companies around the world have learned - some the hard way, such as the airlines, retailers, and automobile manufacturers - market share is not the open sesame to more profitability. We are interested in finding the right customer, at the right price, consistent with our purpose and values, even if that means frequently turning away customers.
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Adopting this belief means you need to become much more selective about whom you do business with; even though that marginal business may be “profitable” by conventional accounting standards. Very often the most important costs—and benefits, for that matter - do not ever show up on a profit-and-loss statement. There is such a thing as good and bad profits. Accepting customers who are not a good fit for your firm - either because of their personality or their unwillingness to appreciate your value - has many deleterious effects, such as negatively affecting team member morale, and committing fixed capacity to customers for whom you simply cannot create value. Growth without profit is perilous."
Trechos retirados de "Episode #97 - VeraSage Laws Part II"

quarta-feira, junho 22, 2016

Curiosidade do dia

Tudo dito:
"O que acontece e que tem de ser explicado, ou o que tem de ser antecipado para que não aconteça, ou o que tem de ser corrigido depois de ter acontecido não são produtos da sorte e do azar. Fracassos, falências, crises, são os resultados, naturais e previsíveis das acções dos que decidiram em função dos seus imaginários, dos seus interesses e das suas ilusões, que não tiveram a prudência de acautelar os equilíbrios de viabilidade no presente e de sustentabilidade no futuro.
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Os que compraram eleitores com promessas e ilusões difundiram a epidemia do imaginário, que prende agora eleitos e eleitores, economia e sociedade, num presente que nem tem futuro, nem quer compreender o que foi o seu passado."
Techo retirado de "A roda dos culpados"

Acerca do mundo das experiências

"Millennials are giving rise to a new concept: the "grocerant."
A grocerant is a grocery store that offers fresh, restaurant-quality prepared foods.
More and more grocery stores are morphing into grocerants and devoting a larger part of their space to prepared foods in a bid to attract more millennials.
Whole Foods' new chain of stores, 365 by Whole Foods Markets, is a perfect example of this trend. Most of the store is devoted to fresh food buffets and a variety of in-store restaurants.
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In-store dining and take-out of prepared foods from grocers has grown nearly 30% since 2008, and accounted for 2.4 billion food-service visits and $10 billion of consumer spending in 2015, according to the report."
Trechos retirados de "Millennials are abandoning restaurants for an unexpected place"

Agora, comparar com estes outros trechos:
"Debido a la caída de las ventas en los establecimientos de gran superficie, las cadenas de alimentación de Europa se han visto presionadas a entrar, muchas de ellas, en la competencia de precios ‘low cost’, así como a crecer dentro del comercio electrónico.
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Una de los principales motivos de esta situación es que los compradores europeos de alimentación cada vez evitan más las grandes superficies a favor de las compras online.
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Pese a que de momento la penetración del comercio electrónico es baja en el canal de alimentación, ya se ha registrado una caída continua de las ventas en los hipermercados."
E uma palavra sobre as experiências?
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Trechos retirados de "El rediseño del sector retail"

Para reflexão

"we could claim that organizations don't create value for the customers but the way customers uses the product create value.
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It is the experience of use that it is decisive.
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When we're drinking wine it is not only the product, the wine that we're drinking, it's also the restaurant setting that we're in, it's also the story, or the origin story of the wine, it's the interaction with the waiter who is telling about the wine, or the somellier and you ask questions and value is created through that interaction.
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You're talking about complementarities to the bottle of wine ... each and every product should link to something that complements it ... experiences, stories."
Quando no passado dia 13 de Junho passeei pelo Porto, visitei a loja de "A Vida Portuguesa", repleta de turistas. Ao dar de caras com esta caixa de lápis:
Reconheci logo os lápis que eu usava em 1970 na minha primeira classe. Depois, recordei um ou outro desenho da altura que fiz... e senti criar-se uma ligação com a criança que fui. Então, pensei, o que é que esta caixa de lápis diz aos turistas? Nada!
Talvez se pudesse criar uma "complementaridade" começando por enquadrar os lápis e referir que se trata da última fábrica de lápis da Península Ibérica. O mesmo que o somellier conta acerca do vinho.
"One interesting factor in all of this is that networks and the focus in interactions, it is now more expensive to internalize thank link and network. Is that mean that buildind large companies doesn«t make sense anymore?" [Moi ici: Eheheh! Conseguem adivinhar a resposta de Esko Kilpi?]
Empresas grandes são boas a extrair valor, empresas pequenas são boas a criar valor. Extrair trata do denominador. Criação trata do numerador.
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Evoluir da transacção para a interacção.
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Perceber que o essencial são relações.


Trechos retirados de "Esko Kilpi and the value of wine and interaction"

Mongo, turismo, economia das experiências e gentrificação no Porto

Mongo, turismo, economia das experiências e gentrificação (a quantidade de empresas tecnológicas, cada uma com dezenas de trabalhadores, situadas na Baixa) no Porto criam as condições para esta experiência: "Centro do Porto terá fábrica de cerveja com investimento de três milhões":
"O projeto, que se quer afirmar como uma “cervejeira regional”, vai criar 50 postos de trabalho ainda este ano e consistirá em juntar no mesmo edifício a fábrica, a cervejaria, uma loja, bar, restaurante e até os escritórios da administração,
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a Fábrica de Cervejas Portuense vai ter uma marca, “que a seu tempo será apresentada”, ambicionando lançar “mais de 100 tipos de cerveja” no longo prazo."
Como eu gosto destes paradoxos: as cervejeiras grandes numa guerra desenfreada pelo preço mais baixo, e a serem disrompidas, perdendo quota de mercado, por marcas mais pequenas e muito mais caras que apostam na experiência e na diferenciação para servir os underserved.
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Recordar:

Ponto-chave deste projecto? Referi-o em "Cuidado com o que os economistas aprenderam nos anos 50":
"Recordar a fábrica de Loulé e viram mesmo algo de interessante sair das mini-fábricas? Não basta a capacidade técnica e os euros quando não há paixão."