From creativity to scalability.
July 30, 2019
By Gonzalo López Martí – Creative director, etc. / LMMiami.com
- When the Winkelvoss twins, Cameron and Tyler, sued their ex Harvard chum Mark Zuckerberg under the accusation that he had stolen their idea for a social media platform, Mark’s answer was a smart one: social networks already existed.
- MySpace, Friendster and other now defunct companies were launched several years before Facebook.
- All Zucks did was improve something that’d already shown potential.
- Originality is overrated.
- Ideas are a dime a dozen.
- What is an idea anyway?
- Anyone can have one.
- Few can execute it.
- Even fewer can scale it up.
- It is extremely difficult to know beforehand whether an idea, a mere hypothesis, is scalable.
- It is a leap of faith.
- The proverbial “proof of concept”.
- Mark Zuckerberg arguably has never had an idea of his own.
- As per the Winkelvoss bros he did not ideate Facebook.
- Zucks’s two other crown jewels, Instagram and Whatsapp, were purchased from their original founders (whom he bullied out the door shortly thereafter).
- But let’s define scalability before we get ourselves into a semantic rabbit hole.
- Lest we incur the same issue we have with “strategy”, which seems to mean something different to everyone you ask.
- Scalability is the ability and proclivity for expansion and growth of a concept, process or platform.
- Not to be confused with “excess capacity”.
- “Bandwidth” can be used as synonym in certain cases though.
- In the business world, it is the ability to streamline and systematize a process with the least possible friction.
- Knowing how to open the spigot with minimum effort.
- When a business initiative gets a life all its one.
- Frequently, it means reducing the human factor or removing it altogether.
- Robotization, automation, etc.
- In some ways, it might entail piggybacking in a judo-like way on pre-existing social or market wide forces.
- Harnessing untapped energy.
- For instance, this is a somewhat crude example but you’ll get the point: using flight attendants as international couriers.
- Or smugglers.
- Birds, bees and pollination.
- Scalability in certain industries such as advertising is not easy.
- In the ad world most of our “ideas” are reactive and short lived: a client presents a problem in the form of a brief, we create a customized solution in the form of a campaign and a couple months later we’re back to square one.
- Unused or rejected advertising ideas, for a number of psychological, cultural, emotional and, sometimes, legal reasons, can rarely be “sold” to another client.
- Advertising is painstakingly inefficient and mired in friction.
- The output of the human workforce in the ad business model is restricted by insurmountable confines.
- Flesh and bone employees.
- Artificial intelligence is not ready to replace the organic intelligence of creatives (yet).
- How many passable campaigns can the most productive of creative teams come up with, say, in a week?
- What’s the limit between a prolific creative and a hack cranking out clichés?
- The SuperCuts parable: the only way to expand its business is by adding more stores, more chairs and more barbers.
- Granted, a trendy hair salon might be able to add value and thus charge a premium through the star power of celeb hairstylists or the addition of perks such as bartenders serving cocktails or espressos, DJs.
- Nevertheless, cutting people’s hair is one unscalable industry.
- Scale, that annoying Silicon Valley mantra.
- A cliché?
- Oh yes.
- We could argue that volume-based business models built single-mindedly on the notion of growth will sooner rather than later hit a ceiling.
- Possibly.
- For the foreseeable future though, scalability is the name of the game.
To be continued next week.