Two decades ago, The Digital Economy changed the way the world thought about the Web and Internet. While everyone else was in awe of “websites” and "dot coms," Don Tapscott was among the first people to argue that the Internet would fully transform the nature of business and government. It goes without saying that his predictions were spot on.
Now, in this new edition of his classic work, the New York Times bestselling author provides topical updates with a sweeping new analysis of how the Internet has changed business and society in the last 20 years, covering:
Natural frictions between present-day Industrial Capitalism and the Digital Economy
The radical effects of the Internet on traditional corporate structures and systems
Dramatic changes in business collaboration and culture thanks to social media
The rise of web-based analytics and how they have transformed business functions
Government transparency, citizen empowerment, and the creation of public value
Teaching and learning?revolutionary developments driven by digital content
When Tapscott was writing the original edition in 1994, he was living in a world where Netscape had been just introduced as go-to browser, websites didn’t do transactions, dial-up was the only way to get online, and mobile phones sightings were rare. Google, YouTube, eBay, Facebook, Twitter? They didn’t exist.