Why Technology Is The Future of Business

As businesses become more dependent on technology and digital procedures, it becomes necessary for business schools to prepare entrepreneurs for this aspect of doing business in a modern world. Without a focus on the technology that drives modern business, business schools would not be preparing students for what to expect in real world, practical business applications.

 

As technology becomes more pervasive throughout the business world, it becomes evident that more and more businesses exist because of innovations in technology, not simply to use technology to gain an edge over competitors. Consequently, the future of business depends heavily on how the evolution of technology shapes the business landscape, and the following are some reasons why business schools are forced to keep up with this trend in order to stay relevant.

 

Top companies Are Tech-Based

 

As much as we might not want to accept it, tech-based companies are the top companies in America and abroad. From Google to Amazon, these tech companies are edging out former top companies like Berkshire Hathaway and ExxonMobil. This demonstrates that there is an academic need for entrepreneurs to understand why this phenomenon has become such a major business trend.

 

It is the responsibility of business schools to not only identify these trends, but to thoroughly examine their reason for existing too. This way students will have the insights necessary for anticipating the mechanism behind why technology is driving this outcome, and how it can be more effectively leveraged in the businesses of the future.

 

Technology and Business Learning

 

Today, people go to work to do things with technology, but technology plays a major role in how people learn on the job. While it is common for people to turn to websites like YouTube to learn how to do something from watching a quick video, a digital business platform employed to help employees better learn to advance their understanding at work works much the same way. Although, the medium of tech-based knowledge acquisition may not be video-based only. Therefore, it becomes an important academic matter of future businesses for business schools to help entrepreneurs to determine which methods of tech-based learning leads to the most cost-effective and efficient means for helping employees advance their insights in corporate learning models.

 

STEM Is Central to Emerging Business Practices

 

The nature of business practices gives rise to the need for students of business schools to also be oriented in core STEM subjects. Stem subjects, those subjects involving science, technology, engineering and mathematics, are all subjects that open the door for technology to expand and evolve how business is done and will be done in the future. For business schools to remain relevant in how they approach teaching modern business practices, it becomes essential for student entrepreneurs to understand the role STEM subjects play in how tech-innovations are reshaping these business practices across numerous industries.

 

Conclusion

 

The business world is rapidly becoming more about technology and less about how businesses used to operate before tech-innovations took over said business world. Once the business world learned how to leverage technology to make rapid advances in how things were done, this tech-based revolution changed how people thought about business in a way that makes technology a powerful force for shaping and reshaping even the future of business.

For business schools to not capitalize on helping their students understand this driving force of modern business would be to hold tomorrow’s entrepreneurs back from a solid understanding of where the future of business is heading. To prepare their students for what the future of business will bring, it is inevitable that teaching students to embrace technology and its countless innovations is a central pillar of how future businesses will evolve beyond where business is today.

 

Craig Middleton

Craig has worked in health, real estate, and HR businesses for most of his professional career. He graduated at UC Berkeley with a bachelor's degree in Marketing.

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