It may also be useful to identify how rapidly a new concept is being adopted. When a
product or service is adopted rapidly this is known as rapid diffusion. The access to the
Internet is an example of this. In developed countries the use of the Internet has become
widespread more rapidly than the use of TV, for example. It seems that interactive digital
TV and Internet-enabled mobile phones are relatively slow-diffusion products! Activity 3.1,
later in this chapter, considers this issue further.
So, what action should e-commerce managers take when confronted by new tech-
niques and technologies? There is no straightforward rule of thumb, other than that a
balanced approach must be taken. It would be easy to dismiss many new techniques as
fads, or classify them as ‘not relevant to my market’. However, competitors are likely to
be reviewing new techniques and incorporating some, so a careful review of new tech-
niques is required. This indicates that benchmarking of ‘best of breed’ sites within sector
and in different sectors is essential as part of environmental scanning. However, by wait-
ing for others to innovate and review the results on their web site, a company has
probably already lost 6 to 12 months. Figure 3.6 summarises the choices. The stepped
curve I shows the variations in technology through time. Some changes may be small
TECHNOLOGICAL FACTORS
Figure 3.5Example of a Gartner hype cycle
Source: Gartner (2005) Gartner’s Hype Cycle Special Report for 2005
Maturity
Technology
trigger
Peak of
inflated
expectations
Trough of
disillusionment Slope of enlightenment
Plateau of
productivity
Linux on Desktop for Mainstream Business Users
Micro Fuel Cells
Desktop Search
BPM Suites
Biometric Identity Documents
P2P Vol P
Inkjet Manufacturing
Electronic Ink/Digital Paper
Model-Driven Approaches
Carbon Nanotubes
Podcasting
Business Process
Networks
Augumented Reality
Text Mining
Corporate
Semantic Web
4G
Grid Computing
Wikis
SOA
Speech Recognition for
Telephony and Call Centre
Web-Services-
Enabled Business
Models
Really Simple Syndication
Biometric User Identification
Corporate Blogging
Prediction Markets
Network Collective Intelligence
Quantum Computing
DNA Logic
802.16 2004 WiMAX
Organic Light-Emitting Devices
Mesh Networks – Sensor
Location-Aware Applications
Business Rule
Engines
VoIP
Text-to-
Speech/
Speech
Synthesis
Internal
Web
Services
Software as Service/ASP
Handwriting Recognition
Videoconferencing
RFID (Passive)
XBRL
Tablet PC
Internet Micropayments
Trusted
Computing Group
less than 2 years
Plateau will be reached in:
Acronym key:
4G Fourth generation
ASP Application service provider
BPM Business process management
P2P Peer to peer
RFID Radio frequency identification
SOA Service-oriented architecture
VoIP Voice over Internet Protocol
WiMAX Worldwide Interoperability for Microwave Access
XBRL Extensible Business Reporting Language
2 to 5 years 5 to 10 years more than 10 years
As of August 2005
Visibility