August 13, 201900:23:45

Podcast 22: What can we learn from our environment for gamification design?

Welcome to this week's Question of Gamification. My name is An Coppens. I am the Chief Game Changer at Gamification Nation, and this week's question of gamification is one I have. I suppose it's in light of all the global politics that are going on everywhere. It made me question, are we just all part of one large strategy game by a certain amount of players? Before I go into that, I want to draw analogies to strategy games, and what's happening around this, both in the world of politics and the world of business, because that's how, A, I see business but also, B, I think there's a lot we can learn from it. It also encourages you, and that's my hope that I can inspire you to think critically. Okay, if you were in charge of that game, how would you play it? What cards would you play, and what would winning mean? What's the win condition? Is there a win condition, or are we just heading for a zero sum game where there are no winners, only losers? I guess it's probably out of I would say frustration or desperation. I don't know. It's a blend maybe of the two. As you know, I'm a European working a business in the UK, and with Brexit looming we have a workforce that's all spread over the world. For me, being a global business was always the way I wanted to play the game. I never thought of my business as being just a British company. I actually always felt it was a company playing on a global scale, but now currently the strategy of the politicians is potentially pushing a major, I suppose, spanner in the works, let's just say. It's making me adjust my strategies in order to still continue to play the game I wanted to play. Then I also wonder if I'm only part of the larger playing field. I mean, we're a tiny company in comparison to some of the big names in industry, but in the end of the day we all have a role to play in the strategy game whether we're a low-end small business or a high-end major player like an Apple, an Amazon, an IBM, a Google, whatever. We all have a role to play, but also politicians have a role to play because their sense of government's lack of or insights and wrongdoings can have major impacts. I mean, trying to grow any business in war-based countries is no mean feat. Trying to do business when your company or country is at war with other countries is not so simple. Very realistically, I've had one client refused a platform I advised to use because of the company or the country they were from. They said, "Well we can't possibly, as a Muslim nation, do business with a company from that particular nation." It's real, and I would say an oversight by maybe or maybe not politicians in the UK is that EU companies will choose an EU company to do business with as opposed to a British company unless the British company is the cheapest one on the market and offering lower values, which if you think about, I suppose the EU as a governing body, it has a lot of good to offer. It offered the whole continent of Europe peace for nearly 50 years. It brought about lots of rules that are actually good for business, good for humans, and good for the planet. Do we like them all of the time? Of course not. That's the nature of rules. Just like in any game, we don't like having to stick to rules and having some ways they may impede us from doing how we wanted to do certain things. Yeah. I mean, in a strategy game you will always pivot and choose a different strategy based on the feedback you get from the market, the feedback you get from the game, the choices that are left to you. In the current political climate, I'm having to make choices, and the first choice I made was to wait and see. Now with an impending leaving the EU or Britain leaving the EU after all, unless a general election comes up, which is also still a possibility, it may mean having to set up the group entity, increasing the cost space by having to do double accounting and double offi...

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