Thursday, May 14, 2020
Surviving Creative Destruction in the 2nd Half of Life - Career Pivot
Surviving Creative Destruction in the 2nd Half of Life - Career Pivot Creative Destruction? Copyright: vicnt / 123RF Stock Photo According to Wikipedia â"Creative destructiondescribes the âprocess of industrial mutation that incessantly revolutionizes the economic structure from within, incessantly destroying the old one, incessantly creating a new one.â Creative destruction is nothing new. I was listening to the Freakonomics Radio podcast calledHow Safe is Your Job? (Rebroadcast)and they were discussing that in 1905 there were 400,000 pianos made in America. If you wanted music in your house you learned to play the piano. The phonograph was created in 1877 but it was not until 1915, did phonograph sales start to take off. Later came the radio. Pianos did not go away but today there are about 30,000 pianos made each year or 8% of the number made in 1905. The piano industry was changed forever by technology. For More:Has Your Job Been SMACed? If not Yet, It Will! Creative Destruction and Kodak Kodak was another classic example of creative destruction. Kodak created the digital camera in 1975. Yes, 1975! It was not commercially viable but Kodakâs management team could not see the future. That future would destroy how Kodak made money ⦠chemical film. In 2001, Kodak had the #2 digital camera on the market but lost $60 on every sale. Fast forward to 2012 and Kodak declared bankruptcy. In both these cases, creative destruction took 20, 30 or 40 years to destroy an industry. Listen to the most recent episode Now that pace is accelerating. For More:Living in a âCareer Disaster Areaâ at the Age of 65 The Destruction of the Brick and Mortar Store by Amazon Amazon.com was found in 1994 and initially just sold books. In 2015, Amazon passed Walmart to be the most valuable retailer in the world by market capitalization. With almost every major brick and mortar retailer with the exception of Walmart are in trouble, Amazon and other online retailers are wreaking creative destruction on the retail industry. Even Walmart is feeling the heat as they acquired Jet.com in August of 2016. Jet.com was created by the founder of Diapers.com which was acquired by Amazon in 2011. The original idea behind Jet.com was the only source of income would come from the $50 annual membership fee. All products would be sold at cost. It did not work out that way but you can see the creative business models that are possible online that are not possible in a traditional brick and mortar store. I recently had a discussion with a board member of my breakfast club about the large number of realtors that attended our meetings. The gentleman I was speaking with said: âthe breakfast club was a great place for anyone who owned a brick and mortar business to networkâ. My response was â the only brick and mortar establishments I go to are grocery stores and restaurantsâ. That is a bit of an exaggeration but not by much. Creative destruction is wreaking havoc in the retail industry. The Apple iPhone The Apple iPhone turns 10 years old this month. What do I get from my iPhone 6S that I did not 10 years ago? The weather report from the Weather Channel app Manage my social media (LinkedIn and Twitter) I removed the Facebook app after the last Presidential election Take pictures View pictures Edit files in Google Drive or Dropbox Communicate with clients over Skype Check scores on the ESPN app Find my keys using the Tile app Listen to podcasts and audio books as I no longer listen to the radio Find the new coffee shop via Google and Apple Maps Enter the YMCA by swiping the bar code in the YMCA app Manage multiple credit cards and bank accounts Show the police officer my proof of insurance via the State Farm app Check airline schedules to see if my sonâs flight home is on time Search google to answer the question my wife just asked me Watch International House Hunters on the HGTV channel via the Sling TV app The list goes on and on and on. How many industries, jobs, and careers have been touched? LOTS! The Apple iPhone started a revolution of creative destruction that will do nothing but accelerate as more industries figure out how to leverage the technology. For More:Beware Automation and Robots Will Sabotage Your Career What Should You Do? You can survive creative destruction.You should always be looking for new opportunities. As I wrote in my post last week, you mustCreate Opportunities and Stop Reacting to Opportunities. All of this creative destruction creates opportunities. You can write and publish books. If you are not sure how to publish your own book check out Mark Dawsonâs Self Publishing Formula.I have no affiliation other than I listen to their podcast. Record audio books. Use ACX.com to either record the books yourself or find voice talent to record the book. Become a Virtual Assistant. I have published one post on this topic â" Cash In On Your Skills: Become A Virtual Assistant [Guest Post]. Buy products at discount and sell them on Amazon. Amazon even has an app for that. Build an online business where you teach anything to anyone in the world. I currently belong to the Flipped LifeStyle community where I am working on building the Career Pivotâs Repurpose Your Career community. More on that in coming months. Work freelance, full time or part time remotely. Check out FlexJobs for opportunities. (affiliate link) Be a rideshare driver. Check out the guest post,Uber â" What Baby Boomers Need to Know Rent out a room in your house as a short term rental. Recently, we traveled to Ecuador and stayed at an AirBnB managed by an American who rented the property from a local dentist. He then listed it on AirBnB as a short term rental. This was how he supported himself. There are many more opportunities created every single day. These opportunities do not look like the safe choices we expected earlier in our career. Remember playing it safe is now the new risky. I live in Austin Texas where the unemployment rate for those 18-49 years of age is 3.2%. However, the unemployment rate for those 50 and over is12.2%. You can no longer sit back and expect nothing to change. If you want to be viable and continue to earn an income after 50 you must be nimble. What opportunities are your going to create? Marc Miller Like what you just read? Share it with your friends using the buttons above. Like What You Read? Get Career Pivot Insights! Check out the Repurpose Your Career Podcast Do You Need Help With ...
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.