This represents fresh territory and openings for startups, if you can see them early and if you are in a position to act.
What might some of those opportunities be?
The obvious ones will be all the economic niches left open by businesses that did not survive such as the vast number of retail and restaurants. I wonder what other opportunities there might be?
While it might seem that we already have all the necessary tools and services at our disposal right now, in my opinion we're not even halfway there yet:
Currently, and to some extent understandably so, the focus is on video conferencing, somehow re-enacting the way the office used to work (only remotely), and restoring at least a semblance of normality.
However, in the long run this won't nearly be enough. We need to adapt and rethink offline processes in order to not just make them work in online, distributed settings but to actually reap the benefits and efficiency gains such settings potentially provide.
This will require an entirely new set of tools and processes.
Maybe, something not unlike the "Agile" movement (hopefully without the "Yeah, we're agile, too. Actually, of course it's same old micromanagement bullshit but now with a cool, buzzwordy label." twist this time around) but for business processes in general.
ButcherBox style businesses may get a lot of traction.
Local business variant of Shopify+Stripe to put DoorDash, UberEats, ChowNow and the like out of business. Possibly a co-op ownership model.
Autonomous delivery services will happen faster and be well received.
Thoughts, nothing more.
Whole new markets will arise providing middleware to help suppliers, shippers, warehouses and sellers find each other and ensure degrees of separation.
Enterprise IT is certainly very inefficient at all levels, starting with using technologies that are incredibly inefficient with hardware (I can understand you do not program in C / assembly anymore, but man, all those awful scripting languages...). I could quote also commercial software with licence prices unrelated to the value delivered.
I hope this may be an opportunity for my open-source lowcode project, that could replace many commercial software at a very limited build and run costs.
It’s be great if they could make nice scarves with a patch that sort of acts like an n95. Then it would be same as bundling up with a scarf around your face in the winter. It would just look like a regular scarf.
It's 2020, people getting sick should not prevent supply chains from operating at peak efficiency, considering how advanced our manufacturing and distribution capabilities can be.
The technology is there, it just hasn't been implemented at scale.