This blog is the second in the series, Fighting Fraud Requires Anticipatory Skills.
Disrupters are changing our world. Those who are threatened by the disrupters are the disrupted. The government even plays a role in this process of change and is sometimes forced to respond. In some cases, people see the government’s role as putting up road blocks to slow the disruption.
Uber is the first company that comes to mind as an example of a disrupter. Uber changed the face of transportation within urban communities. The Uber concept wasn’t invented by a cab driver or a transportation company. It is focused on the software that makes it easy for riders and drivers to connect. This disrupter has pushed local governments to change regulations and laws. It is amazing how fast a software company disrupted the taxi companies’ business environment.
Another disrupter is Airbnb, a company that connects people with properties for rent. It is reshaping the travel industry, but the company is fighting numerous battles with governmental entities that are trying to regulate users. Hotel businesses did not develop this concept, and they are being disrupted.
The disrupter versus the disrupted isn’t a new concept. It is merely new terms to describe what happens when something new replaces something that has been around for years. Older examples that come to mind are the car versus the horse buggy, the light bulb versus the candle, Google versus the encyclopedia, and the mobile phone versus the pay phone.
Below are five ways to become the disrupter and not the disrupted:
We have a choice either to become a disrupter or to get disrupted. Over the next few weeks, I will write about anticipating changes in fraud fighting which can help you change your business environment. Will you become the abandoned pay phone left for dead on the side of the road?
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