Disruption comes without warning. By the time most people recognize it, it's already too late. Disrupters at the Gate highlights the huge, world-shifting change arriving from unexpected places that turns business models and human behavior upside down.
Jeffrey I. Cole and Harlan J. Lebo offer a definitive exploration of how disruption happens, why it so often comes from unexpected outsiders, and why even the most powerful organizations consistently fail to see it coming or refuse to understand and acknowledge it.
As digital transformation, artificial intelligence, and global crises accelerate the pace of change,
Disrupters at the Gate provides business leaders, policymakers, and curious minds with a clear-eyed framework for understanding disruption - not as hype or theory, but as an enduring force that reshapes the world
Disrupters at the Gate takes the reader on a journey from the unlikely successes of "two guys in a garage" to the spectacular failures of once-dominant companies. The book uses real-life examples to introduce a powerful method to anticipate and prepare for disruption.
Drawing upon decades of experience,
Disrupters at the Gate illuminates, among many topics:
- From the moment Larry Page and Sergey Brin created Google, they expected the world's most popular application to be disrupted. They just did not expect disruption to take 25 years - and when it came, they were not ready.
- How the simple idea to ship and deliver cargo in the same container transformed the world economy.
- Of the world's 10 biggest companies in 1980, only two made the same list in 2000, and none in 2020. At the same time, technology grew from one in 1980 to eight of ten in 2020.
- How COVID-19 became the first disruption ever that affected everyone, everywhere, all at once.
- For 60 years, scientists have said that AI would have great potential - and that's all. That view abruptly forever in November of 2022.
- How the demise of coal-burning stoves led to the creation of one of the world's most popular toys.
- Why Xerox and Kodak should be bigger than Apple, Google, or Amazon - but aren't, and why Rochester, New York, should have been the American capital of innovation.
- How the recording industry had to stop forcing customers to pay for music they did not want.
- Whose legendary product launches inspired Steve Jobs introduction of the iPhone and iPad?
- How overweight visitors almost ruined Disneyland's most popular attraction.
- Why Uber had no business being in the transportation business.
- How HBO and cable succeeded by discovering outer space.
- Why longer lifespans may not be all good news.
- How Sweden, in one moment, converted driving from the left side of the road to the right.
- How a blunder that made perfect sense almost wrecked the world's best-known product.
At no other point in history has disruption produced such a broad impact. Disruption shifts organizations, countries, and people's lives - often with broad implications that can ripple through society. The impact of disruption can make companies and billionaires - or break them.