Transitional Services
I’m about to coin a phrase, or make a fool of myself by describing a concept that has been around for ages. Hold on to your hats, here come my thoughts on “transitional services”.
Transitional Services are services that facilitate a user’s transition from one platform to the next – or at the least, ease their pain.
Whenever there is a platform shift, there is transition, and straddling. For example, for the past ten years the photography industry has been shifting from celluloid to digital. The industry and its consumers are undergoing a transition from one platform to another. This transition has consequences. Many users are reluctant to transition because they are invested in the first platform (i.e. “I have cameras and film, slide projectors and photo albums”). Once the decision to transition has been made, users may want to bring their old platform content (think printed photos) with them to the new platform format (think scanning photos) and they find themselves at a point where they are straddling the new platform and the old. Both the transition and the straddling phases create pain and opportunity in the marketplace.
With me so far?
I wrote Paul Kedrosky a note saying I think there is a huge and growing market for transitional services in the Web 2.0. I pointed out how helping people get from offline processes to online processes – while helping to ease the pain of the straddling phase – will be a strategy that start-ups and established players can leverage and that I foresee an increasing number doing so in the coming years.
This whole conversation was sparked by FreshBooks recent release of its transitional ground mail service. The solution FreshBooks is selling is to help business transition their invoicing/receivables process online where significant benefits can be realized (streamlined processes, reduce costs, and improved customer relations). Businesses want to get online, but there is a world of pain awaiting them in the transition phase (“How do we build the service we need?”) and straddling phases (“How do we manage our cash flow when half our clients pay us online and half pay us offline?”)
That ability to painlessly transition customers from ground mail invoices to online invoices and recurring billing is what FreshBooks offers, but there are other examples of businesses that facilitate traditional office activities. You can create and send photo albums as gifts via Flickr. This is an example of a reverse transitional service where Flickr is facilitating a transition from the new platform (digital images) to the old (printing and mailing images).
What’s magical about all of this, and a hallmark of a transitional service in the Web 2.0, is how the line between the online world and the offline world blurs. The slicker the service, the more seamless the delivery, the more the offline world gets pulled online.
In terms of opportunities, I foresee more and more services leveraging transitional strategies and delivering transitional services as value added backend services and incremental revenue generators.
So, while none of these concepts is new, and the act of delivering such services has been around for some time, I have seen no overt attempts to define the phenomenon, so I have done it here. If it has been done elsewhere, please let me know – rain on the parade, it’s okay. As I have not had as much time as I would like to consider all the implications of transitional strategies, I encourage you to sound off with your own thoughts. Can you think or other examples? Better yet, can you think of industries in need of transitional services, where ripe opportunities exist? Please comment below.










12:33 pm
Yep, makes sense. Especially crucial in getting the boomer market to buy into web services.
1:26 pm
Mike,
Your making a lot of sense (perhaps I should go on holidays more often?!). Mark Cuban offered up three business ideas in a blog post a few weeks ago that could definitely be defined as transitional services (http://www.blogmaverick.com/entry/1234000770073824/). The third one, going door to door with a laptop and offering to scan people’s family photos, is a quitessential transitional service.
- Levi
1:29 pm
I think you’re on to something, but I have somewhat of a biased opinion.
I’ve spent a fair amount of time thinking about this issue as part of my vision for my startup is to help bring small businesses “off the sidelines” and “into the game”. In order to do this, we think a fair amount about bulding bridges from the old to the new and providing an adequate level of “hand-holding” to help our customers make the transition.
I think too many Web 2.0 style services expect to put software up on the web, collect credit cards (or eyeballs) and let the customers sift through the challenges of the transition. In my opinon, companies like FreshBooks that invest in thinking about getting customers through the painful change process will fare better over the long term.
1:44 pm
[...] As posted on the FreshBooks Blog: [...]
2:04 pm
Thanks Dharmesh.
By the way, for those of you who don’t know him, Dharmesh is a great source of advice for startups. He is the man behind OnStartUps.com and he recently released a small business blog. You can find a reference to this article, and some more insights on it here.
10:49 am
[...] You don’t need to give up an email address to use BubbleShare, only if you want a lasting account and profile, and you can get started in less than 30 seconds. You can also make prints and photo albums of your images meaning BubbleShare is a nice example of a transitional service. What more can you ask for? [...]
8:56 pm
Great idea if you’re going to have older accountants use it. I know a few who can’t even look at a monitor without glasses.
10:03 am
[...] Analysis At first blush you might say that it is counter-intuitive to see an increase of 25% in the number of invoices send by ground mail versus email. The truth is we have many users who create invoices with FreshBooks but do not send them by email. The reason for the increase here is the increasing adoption of our new ground mail service. Released in August we expect significant growth in ground mail sending to increase over the next year or so – until an equilibrium is reached. Then, gradually over the following 5-10 or so years we expect to see a decline as businesses make a concerted effort to transition their processes online. Eventually a new equilibrium will be reached as some invoices will always need to be sent by the post to a fraction of the population who does not accept email invoices. Browser Usage – Internet Explorer 7 – October 5.02%, November 9.68% – IE 6 – October 37.64%, November 36.77% – FireFox 2.0 – October 6.61%, November 24.51% – FF 1.5 – October 44.26%, November 22.07% [...]
2:33 am
Hi All,
I did get a chance to write a paper on security concerns in Web 2.0.
This paper has been published by OWASP (www.owasp.org) now and is available at link below:
PDF version:
http://www.owasp.org/index.php/Category:OWASP_Papers
HTML version:
http://www.owasp.org/index.php/OWASP_Papers/Jeopardy_in_Web_2_0
Happy reading !!!
Please feel free to drop in your comments about the paper.
You can mail me at dharmeshmm_at_gmail_com
Wregs,
Dharmesh M Mehta
Mastek (www.mastek.com)
4:40 pm
[...] someone else had already done a great job of introducing the topic. Mike McDerment of Freshbooks gave this definition: Transitional Services are services that facilitate a user’s transition from one platform to the [...]