The Prof G Pod with Scott Galloway - No Mercy / No Malice: Post Post Corona
Episode Date: February 25, 2023As read by George Hahn. https://www.profgalloway.com/post-post-corona/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices...
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I'm Scott Galloway, and this is No Mercy, No Malice.
Three years ago, the world came off its axis.
I wrote a book examining what the world might look like once the dust had settled.
Today, we revisit those predictions.
What's the same, what's different, and what has endured.
Post-post-corona, as read by George Hahn.
Three years ago today, there were 53 known cases of COVID-19 in the United States.
The first U.S. death was recorded five days later at the Evergreen Health Medical Center in Kirkland, Washington.
At that point, the only lockdown was in a city that would become the most famous on Earth, Wuhan.
Now to growing concerns about the deadly coronavirus.
Airports around the world are stepping up health screenings on passengers arriving from Wuhan, China.
The CDC is on guard. More than 100 officials in San Francisco, Los Angeles, and New York are screening...
Within weeks, the world came off its axis.
As we grappled with a new societal playbook of masks, social distancing, lockdowns, and death,
markets tanked and then ripped.
Wall Street set new expectations of an economy in which Peloton would supplant Nike
and Bitcoin the dollar. For a moment, Zoom was more valuable than Exxon.
For the first time in 30 years, I wasn't spending 10 plus days per month on the road and,
with my newfound time, I decided to write a book about the world.
More specifically, what the world might look like once the dust settled.
Anniversaries are useful as they prompt reflection, and this is an opportune juncture to look
back at how we thought today would look then.
Even the title of the book stirs nostalgia.
Post-Corona, as we all called the illness Corona back then.
The opening chapter, The Great Acceleration, was a summation of what Lennon said.
Quote, nothing can happen in decades, and then decades can happen in weeks, unquote.
Actually, it wasn't Lennon,
but Scottish MP George Galloway.
No relation.
Lennon sounds more gangster.
Put another way,
COVID's changes,
considered strange or irregular at the time,
were in fact pre-existing shifts unfolding on an expedited timeline.
The exemplar of the Great Acceleration was supposed to be
e-commerce. Between 2000 and 2020, e-commerce penetration had grown half a percentage point
each year. Then COVID hit, and overnight e-commerce exploded by a third. In the U.S., 16% of all sales were conducted online. Then, just as the book hit the
shelves, the e-commerce rocket ship did a U-turn and burnt off a point and a half before flattening
at around 14.5%, where it stayed until completing its regression to the pre-COVID trend. The COVID bump was a blip. Something we didn't foresee
intervened. A global supply chain gunk up that contributed to a global inflationary cycle.
It's worth noting one supply chain that endured, largely uninterrupted, was the internet. There
were no significant outages and people were able to get Tiger King,
video conferences, and available groceries delivered into their homes pretty seamlessly.
One COVID-prompted shift within e-commerce may prove structural. Food. Grocery and meal delivery
had both been startup graveyards. Nobody had been able to get to the required scale.
A multi-trillion dollar opportunity left to the family pizza shop and the corner grocery.
Rest in peace, web van.
Then, in 2020, the food delivery market doubled.
Unlike e-commerce, though, it kept growing. Today, grocery delivery vans are ubiquitous,
and Chick-fil-A is opening break rooms specifically built for couriers.
From the book Post-Corona, page 18, quote,
Of everything wrought by the pandemic,
perhaps the most visible and widespread trend acceleration
is the radical transition to working from home.
The dispersal of work has arrived.
Post-corona, working from home on Friday, or Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, will be a new normal.
End quote.
We got this right.
In the third grade, I was once so sick I threw up on Debbie Brubaker and passed out.
The nurse called my mom, and my mom wasn't allowed to leave work to come get me.
My first job was at Morgan Stanley at 1251 Avenue of the Americas in Manhattan.
The firm had many commandments, but first among them, I had to be in the office before anybody senior
to me and not leave until they were all gone. Today, foot traffic at 1251 is down 50%,
as is office occupancy elsewhere across the largest U.S. metros.
New construction is down 38%. Some commercial landlords are offering free rent.
Remote work in Tokyo has jumped from 3% to 14%.
And peak hour demand for the London Underground, the tube, is down 30% from 2019.
Manhattan workers are spending $12.4 billion less per year in the city,
$4,661 per person, thanks to working 30% fewer days in the office.
This, too, was an acceleration.
Peter Drucker, the most important business theorist of the 20th century, said office buildings would be similar to the pyramids.
We'd come to marvel at them, but they'd serve no functional purpose.
The tectonic shift in the plates of labor and corporations has unleashed an earthquake whose aftershocks we can't yet register.
Something I missed in post-corona is how leverage would shift to
labor, which would exercise that leverage by refusing back-to-work orders, mandates, requests,
pleas. Work from home is now viewed as an inalienable right. There's upside, but there's a
lot the younger generation is missing out on.
Mentorships, greater chances for promotion, learning how to act in groups, friendships, and romantic relationships.
15% of Americans met their partner at work.
30 pages of the book discuss higher education.
My position?
Higher ed is a product whose value proposition would stop making sense
in a post-COVID world, and colleges would overhaul their business models in response.
That is, dramatically expand enrollment, offer robust online accreditation, raise acceptance
rates, and build satellite campuses in less wealthy parts of America,
i.e. in Jackson, Mississippi, not Beijing or Dubai.
It was a nice idea that received a lot of media attention,
and for a moment I thought I'd broken through.
We have raised, when I say we, I mean the academic community,
we've raised prices faster than healthcare. And at the same time, the underlying innovation,
if you walked into a class today,
it wouldn't look, smell,
or feel much different
than it did 40 years ago.
So I think we've kind of stuck out
the mother of all chins
and the fist of COVID-19
is coming for us.
I think this involves huge disruption.
But the price-fixing cartel
that is higher education
and their brands
proved more enduring than my vision.
Colleges doubled down on exclusivity. 2021 was the toughest year in history to get into an Ivy League school.
The average acceptance rate went from 7.3% to 5.7%. Meanwhile, the average private college tuition,
which has grown at triple the rate of
inflation over the past five decades, reached nearly $40,000 per year. One of my more niche
post-corona predictions? Twitter would switch to a premium subscription model.
I felt Twitter didn't have the scale to compete on an ad model, and its ad tools were substandard.
I tried to get the company to make this change myself, advocating as a shareholder and as a writer to no avail.
I was even putting together an activist investor team to put capital behind my ideas when this bullshit broke out.
Elon Musk took the Twitterverse by storm today with an unsolicited bid to buy the social media platform.
I doubt any prediction I've made will prove correct in a more unpredictable way.
Elon's antics dealt Twitter's advertising-based model its fatal blow.
But it was a mercy killing.
The platform's only hope has always been subscriptions.
Musk's vision for subscription will be realized at Meta,
which has likely learned from Musk's disastrous rollout
that offering subscriptions with identification verification can have real benefits.
Smart.
Subscription versus advertising.
iOS versus Android.
Red versus blue.
It's a divide that's deepening elsewhere.
Twitter and Meta's subscription products give users perks that include greater reach and visibility online.
In other words, pay-to-play speech.
Dating apps are testing offerings that reserve the best potential mates for paying subscribers.
With some entry prices reaching as high as $500 per month.
Since COVID, we've seen the arrivals of Snapchat Plus, Uber One,
Netflix Premium, Instacart Express, the list goes on.
Telehealth is another enduring feature of the pandemic
that could yield huge societal benefits.
The percentage of virtual visits exploded tenfold during the crisis.
And while they've come down, they're still much more common than pre-crisis.
This week, Amazon closed its acquisition of One Medical and devoted its homepage to promoting the company's dispersion of healthcare to smartphones and delivery vans. This, writ large, could be an enormous unlock.
Evolve healthcare from a defensive, disease-driven industry to, wait for it, healthcare.
The worst thing about the world is that it is unpredictable and harsh.
The best thing about the world is that it is unpredictable and joyous.
There were examples of each few saw coming.
Though we misread some of the implications,
I believe acceleration was the macro effect of the pandemic.
America becomes more like itself every day.
Our media complex runs increasingly on the capitalism of enraging and catastrophizing,
and we've become colorblind to nuance, seeing only green, money, red, conservative, or blue, progressive.
Zoom and Moderna brought innovations to maintain productivity
and reduce death. But they were also, maybe more so, opportunities to make money.
The last refuge from politics should be science. Argue about ideas and, once the data is in,
coalesce. No longer.
Somehow masks and vaccines became the deep state and a progressive plot.
We ignored whichever data ill-fit our agenda,
either facts about the transmission of the virus
or the evidence in front of us
of the toll our preventive measures were taking
on kids' emotional and mental health.
The guardians of GACcha still haven't acknowledged
that obesity won't help you find an inner truth,
but an ICU.
None of the top 100 television channels
are focused on health.
The Food Network doesn't count.
But CNBC, Fox News, and MSNBC
enjoy robust ratings
fueling our green, red, and blue obsessions.
In America, more than a million people perishing is bad, but the NASDAQ declining or not taking
a principled stand against the other side is a tragedy. And where we once exported Mickey Mouse and Levi's to the globe, extreme factionalism and election denialism now top our export roles, seemingly trying to make the world more like America every day.
As insane as things got, remember banging on pots and washing our mail?
America cemented its position as the premier superpower. The most important product
of the century thus far was not an app or a rocket ship, but the vaccine. And as with phones and
chips, we make the best. Nobody is lining up for Chinese or Russian vaccines. Despite our own
inability to recognize our strengths, or even one another, the performance of our government, companies, and supply chain is the strongest buy signal for USA, Inc.
We are still processing the loss of 1.1 million Americans, the population of Las Vegas and Tucson combined.
One of them was my cousin, Andrew Levine.
On any list of people vulnerable to the virus,
Andy would have been at the bottom.
Young, strapping, slim.
The UK and US branches of my family haven't been together in two decades,
but we're gathering next month.
Thousands of people had to say goodbye to their
loved ones in the ICU over FaceTime. It's not a bad practice to imagine such a call and use that
image as a reminder that the longer you go without seeing each other, the more you risk no longer
having the option. The best thing coming out of COVID is that people in every part of the world started spending more time helping people they will never meet.
Planting trees the shade of which we will never sit in.
This is how societies grow great.
Life is so rich. to that question is probably more complicated than you want it to be. The average U.S. company
deploys more than 100 apps, and ideas about the work we do can be radically changed by the tools
we use to do it. So what is enterprise software anyway? What is productivity software? How will
AI affect both? And how are these tools changing the way we use our computers to make stuff,
communicate, and plan for the future? In this three-part special series, Decoder is surveying the IT landscape presented by AWS.
Check it out wherever you get your podcasts.
Hello, I'm Esther Perel, psychotherapist and host of the podcast, Where Should We Begin,
which delves into the multiple layers of relationships, mostly romantic.
But in this special series, I focus on our relationships with our colleagues,
business partners, and managers.
Listen in as I talk to co-workers facing their own challenges with one another
and get the real work done.
Tune into Housework, a special series from Where Should We Begin, sponsored by Klaviyo.