The Preliminary Specification Part CCLIII (K&L Part XXVI)
We’ve been discussing the expansion of the service industries markets and how the specialization and division of labor are to be employed to expand economic output. The role that the Joint Operating Committee will have in coordinating the operations in the field and how the People, Ideas & Objects Knowledge & Learning module of the Preliminary Specification needs to identify and support these markets and changes. Today we want to discuss how these changes will come about and the probable speed at which they will occur, given if everything these markets need in terms of market supporting institutions were available. Our quotes for today’s post come from Professor Richard Langlois paper “Institutions, Inertia and Changing Industrial Leadership.”
I want to take as an example the accounting service providers that were discussed in the past week. These I think would be fairly representative of the firms that make up the service industry marketplace and therefore would make a good example for the purposes here today. In the two examples that I noted I was slightly condescending and comical toward the accountants in my comments. A little levity is always healthy and everyone likes to poke fun at the accountants. Since accountants make up fully half of the marketplace for users of ERP systems this would seem counter to what is productive in terms of developing People, Ideas & Objects market. There will be those that find the comments offensive and off putting. However there will also be those, and these are the people that I will be most interested in, that find the opportunities that are being discussed. Of spinning off the accounting function from the producer firm to a stand alone service provider as a once in a lifetime business opportunity.
Ruttan Hayami (1984) have proposed a theory of institutional change that is relevant to my story of organizational and institutional change. As they see it, changes in relative scarcities, typically driven by changes in technology, create a demand for institutional change by dangling new sources of economic rent before the eyes of potential institutional innovators. Whether change occurs will depend on whether those in a position to generate it - or to block it - can be suitably persuaded. Since persuasion typically involves the direct or indirect sharing of the available rents, the probability of change increases as the rents increase. And the more an institutional or organization system becomes misaligned with economic realities, the more the rents of realignment increase. pp. 36 - 37
It is the profit motivated accountants that see the opportunity to make a substantial change for their clients and their own personal situation. One that is more enduring and profitable. That is the motivation for the change that will make the transition in the marketplace for the accountants. And it will be the similar changes that are made in the field service offerings. They will see alternative ways of organizing their firms, or have new firms start up, and provide for a further specialization of their skills, experience and knowledge.
Thus the vanishing hand is driven not just by changes in coordination technology but also by changes in the extent of markets - by increasing population and income, but also by the globalization of markets. Reductions of political barriers to trade around the world are having an effect analogous to the reduction of technological barriers to trade in the America of the nineteenth century (Findlay and O'Rourke 2002). Is this a revolution or the continuation of a long - standing trend? Again, the answer depends on one's perspective. My argument is that, just as the American "globalization" after the Civil War was revolutionary in its systemic reorganization of production toward standardization and volume, the new era is revolutionary in its systemic de-verticalization in response both to changes in coordination technology and to plain-old increases in the extent of markets. pp. 52 - 53
As we have discussed the need for these markets to grow and to change must have a dedicated software development team available to support the growth and change. The Joint Operating Committee, the producer firm and the service industry marketplace all need to have People, Ideas & Objects available to change the software to meet these growing and changing needs. Without the ability to have the technology changed will leave the situation in a stagnant and unchanging environment. Despite the demands for change nothing will happen without the software being changed first.
For the industry to successfully provide for the consumers energy demands, it’s necessary to build the systems that identify and support the Joint Operating Committee. Building the Preliminary Specification is the focus of People, Ideas & Objects. Producers are encouraged to contact me in order to support our Revenue Model and begin their participation in these communities. Those individuals that are interested in joining People, Ideas & Objects can join me here and begin building the software necessary for the successful and innovative oil and gas industry.
Please note what Google+ provides us is the opportunity to prove that People, Ideas & Objects are committed to developing this community. That this is user developed software, not change that is driven from the top down. Join me on the People, Ideas & Objects Google+ Circle (private circle, accessible by members only) and begin building the community for the development of the Preliminary Specification.