By Dion Chang
IN a 2020 article on WIRED, “How businesses can reorganise for an unpredictable world,” they introduced a new acronym B.A.N.I (don’t try to Google it, your search will point you to, Ban Asbestos Network of India).
Bani, they recommend, is much more appropriate for a pandemic-impacted business world than the more commonly used acronym Vuca.Vuca, which stands for, volatility, uncertainty, complexity and ambiguity is frequently used by executives and business schools to illustrate, navigate and map strategies for a disrupted business environment, specifically business disruptions associated with the Fourth Industrial Revolution.
The acronym was popularised by the US Army as a result of the extreme conditions in Afghanistan and Iraq. The conditions were new and changed the nature of warfare, hence the parallels to tackling digitalised and ever-changing business environments.
Bani, on the other hand, stands for brittleness, anxiety, nonlinearity and incomprehensibility, which sadly, better illustrates the Covid-19 world of 2020/2021.
The article states: “Businesses would look to a linear model of how the world worked. That’s good up to a point. And the point at which it ceases to be good is the one that we have reached very definitively over the past few months.”
Every business owner would agree that it is not only the past 12 months of lockdown that have been devastating to their business, but now there is the added insult of uncertainty for 2021.
But forge ahead we must.
And when we do, we need to frame our business challenges using the Bani acronym and be specifically mindful of the last two letters of the acronym: nonlinearity and incomprehensibility.
In a previous article on anticipatory grief I wrote: “Re-starting your business is becoming less about simply reviving it, but considering very carefully, how (and more importantly, if) your original business model fits into a changed and radically altered societal mindset.”
And therein lies the key. Is your business model relevant to a radically changed world?
If you embrace nonlinearity and incomprehensibility, you might need to come to terms with the harsh reality that your original business model – or some of it – is frozen in a pre-pandemic state and needs reframing. But if nonlinearity and incomprehensibility are all you have to work with, how do your strategise for goalposts that are not anchored?
This is where transient, short-term strategies have to be tested. There are no fixed rules, and this state of limbo will continue well into 2021. It’s time to adopt the sailing manoeuvre of tacking: the art of turning the bow (front) of the boat through the headwind, so that the wind changes from one side of the boat to the other side.
One way of ensuring your business is best prepared and better placed to forge ahead in the right direction is by means of the Futurist in Residence service by Flux Trends. Futurist in Residence provides businesses with access to 15-years plus of local and global trend research, forecasting and future-thinking insights distilled specifically for the organisation to keep abreast of the latest business and consumer trends in order to maintain a competitive advantage.
The depth of uncertainty for the rest of the year is unsettling, which is why long-term strategies are futile. No one knows how the world will emerge from the pandemic, so the best you can do is ensure your business survives, whatever it takes. In most cases that means trial by error: test new services, new product offerings, new communication avenues and language. Some ideas might even seem illogical or off-centre from your core business model, but if they help weather the storm, it’s all that matters.
Who knows, you might ditch the transient strategy when the pandemic is under control, or you might just find you’ve inadvertently pivoted your business into something more appropriate for a post-pandemic world?
But you’ll never know unless you tack into unchartered waters.