Organisations Must Rethink Fundamentals – Accenture
(Headline abbreviated, original headline: Business
Reconsidered: Organisations Must Rethink their
Fundamentals,
Reveals New Fjord Trends Report from
Accenture Interactive)
NEW ZEALAND; 16 January, 2020 – Following an unprecedented streak of fast-paced growth and profitability, businesses are beginning to feel the need for deep soul searching. As a new decade approaches, they must look inwards for a total re-examination of their purpose and place in the world, says a new report by Accenture (NYSE: ACN). Now in its 13th year, Fjord Trends 2020 takes its annual look ahead to the future of business, technology and design, according to Fjord, design and innovation from Accenture Interactive.
2019 has been a year of climate crisis activism, Big Tech
accountability, the booms and busts of the gig economy, and
the commitment of 181 top CEOs to redefine
the Statement of Purpose of a Corporation. Changing
mindsets, accelerated by rising digital adoption, have
reached the C-suite, forcing leaders to reconsider the very
principles their organisations are built on. The report
notes that economics and politics, capitalism and resources,
and technology and society have long been entwined, but only
now have the consequences of their entanglement burst into
the public consciousness.
“Protests about
capitalism’s trajectory of endless growth defined by
profit alone are moving from shouting in the streets to
conversations in the boardroom. With this comes an
imperative to find new ways to measure growth,” said Mark
Curtis, co-founder and chief client officer at Fjord.
“These new values may change how we perceive the meaning
of business in the decade ahead. One thing is clear: winners
will be those organisations with sustainable business models
and a long-term view of themselves and their impact on the
world.”
Ben Morgan, Accenture Interactive New Zealand
Managing Director added: “We’re starting to see our
clients reorienting towards purposeful transformation. The
decade ahead will see a challenging of fundamentals, which
provides an opportunity for businesses to transform their
offerings into something more mindful, meaningful and
forward-thinking. The shift from a ‘me’ to a ‘we’ mindset will
prompt a need for design to switch from a user-centered to a
life-centered approach.”
Fjord Trends 2020
examines seven emerging trends expected to shape the
business of experience and provides practical advice on how
organisations can embrace the new era
ahead.
1. Many faces of growth:
Capitalism is facing a mid-life crisis. Success no longer
solely equates to growth and organisations must start
reassessing corporate purpose and recalibrate how they see
their role in the world around them.
2. Money
changers: How we perceive money and pay for things
is rapidly changing. These tectonic shifts create numerous
opportunities for a host of new products and players.
3. Walking barcodes: Our physical
bodies are becoming as trackable as our digital selves. When
it comes to facial and body recognition technology, what is
the trade-off between privacy and
convenience?
4. Liquid people:
Consumption habits are changing as people perceive and
define their identity in ever more liquid ways. Considerable
opportunity exists in providing new experiences of
consuming.
5. Designing intelligence:
The human experience is growing increasingly complex. The
next step for AI is to move beyond automation to designing
systems that blend human and artificial intelligence and
enhance the interplay between both.
6. Digital
doubles: Make way for your digital double who works
for you and knows what you want. Digital twins are evolving
beyond industry and into our daily lives.
7. Life-centred design: The focus of
desirability, viability, and feasibility is moving from
“me” to “we.” Can design extend beyond its own
ecosystem, shifting from a user-centred to a life-centred
approach?
Fjord Trends 2020
draws upon the collective thinking of Fjord’s 1,200+
designers and developers in 33 studios around the world. The
annual crowdsourced report is based on first-hand
observations, evidenced-based research and client work. This
year, the contributions from Fjord’s new Tokyo studio and the acquisition INSITUM
have added another 250 points of view from Japan and across
Latin America, making this the most globally diverse set of
Fjord Trends ever. To read the report, visit: Accenture.com/Fjordtrends2020 or trends.fjordnet.com and discuss on
Twitter #FjordTrends.
About
Accenture
Accenture is a leading global
professional services company, providing a broad range of
services and solutions in strategy, consulting, digital,
technology and operations. Combining unmatched experience
and specialised skills across more than 40 industries and
all business functions — underpinned by the world’s
largest delivery network — Accenture works at the
intersection of business and technology to help clients
improve their performance and create sustainable value for
their stakeholders. With 492,000 people serving clients in
more than 120 countries, Accenture drives innovation to
improve the way the world works and lives. Visit us at www.accenture.com.
Accenture Interactive drives sustainable growth for clients by creating meaningful Experiences that live at the intersection of purpose and innovation. In helping leading brands design, build and run Experiences across the entire journey—be it for a customer, employee, patient or citizen—Accenture Interactive leverages deep capabilities across three core offerings: New Propositions, Products and Services; Marketing, Content and Engagement; and Experience Platforms. Accenture Interactive is ranked the world’s largest digital agency in the latest Ad Age Agency Report, for the fourth year in a row, and was named a 2019 Most Innovative Company in Advertising by Fast Company. To learn more, follow us @AccentureACTIVE and visit www.accentureinteractive.com.