Tuesday, January 31, 2017

Educating Gen Xers’ or Advising Millennials?

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At a certain age, learning something new seems to be more of a burden rather than a discovery. They say “you can’t teach old dog new tricks” but if it’s a question of survival, in this case as an entrepreneur and your business hangs in the balance then perhaps survival instinct lords over any inhibitions or reluctance to learn new things.

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The growth of the Internet and its mobile counterpart has broken many preconceived barriers in business. Suddenly, almost anyone can buy and sell, transact and pay online, through the use of their mobile devices. The rate of adoption is nearly doubling every year and the Philippine market is experiencing near that, but unfortunately, not quite fast enough compared to our neighboring countries.
BigBenta CEO, Mr. Charlie Fong

As a founder of an online marketplace (www.bigbenta.com) and a strong advocate of digital entrepreneurship, I’m pondering on whether it would make more sense for me to push the idea of Filipino digital entrepreneurship to the current business owners (who are mostly Gen Xers’ that are resistant to change and learning new things like e-commerce) or just advising the Millennials and let their sheer number and eventual mass adoption take the market further.

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While it may appear that the Millennials are easier to take on due to their inherent openness to the use of new technology and ease of advising, rather than educating/teaching, it is the Gen Xers’ that represent the larger size of the business pie but such requires a stronger effort in educating and teaching them to adopt digital entrepreneurship. From my actual experience with several Gen Xers’ with their brick and mortar business mindset, they cannot easily move to digital unlike their millennial counterparts that are almost ready to adopt. The Millennials with their sheer number will someday dominate the entrepreneur market in the coming years, but not yet for now.
So the question perhaps given the limited resources is what group should we focus on pushing for digital adoption? The current, bigger player but harder to adopt or the smaller, easier to adopt, but represents the future of the entrepreneur market. Choices like these are never easy and no one says that business decisions are that easy to make. Though I could play it safe by taking on the Gen Xers’ and Millennial at the same time, since I will be serving the existing and leveraging for the future, business conditions don’t allow me to play with that wide capability.

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We therefore chose to tackle the challenges of “Now” and take on the Gen Xers’ for several compelling reasons. The Gen Xers’ present the bigger challenge but provides the biggest reward in terms of market share, market size and loyalty if we convince them to take this path. The existing business and reach of the Gen Xers’ entrepreneur are well established and running. Securing their business for the future is an easier argument to convince them to move to digital. The Millennials with their young, adventurous lifestyle will always find digital in all its form as part of their own way of life. They will consciously seek digital adoption whether it is for or work, like its second nature to them. We might not even be required to advice them on how to become a digital entrepreneur. They are in their own ways, hooked on digital already, through their community and social network. The future is always with them.


 BigBenta Marketplace is the only e-commerce platform in the Philippines that features free classified ads (buy and sell), online stores, and service bookings. Through these platforms, it aims to help the Filipino entrepreneur and MSMEs use the internet to grow their business
Picture credits: adweek.com, infinityconcepts.net, fool.com/investing/, rismedia.com

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