Tiers of Enterprise: Difference between revisions

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Tiers of Enterprise refer to classifying the market segmentation of an enterprise based on their distributive vs. concentrative nature for wealth.  
Tiers of Enterprise refer to classifying the market segmentation of an enterprise based on their tendency to distribute vs. concentrate wealth.  


*'''Tier A''': refers to extreme-performing concentrators of wealth, such as typical outcomes of the leading accelerators like [[Y Combinator]]. Such enterprises are:
*'''Tier A''': refers to extreme-performing generators and concentrators of wealth, such as typical outcomes of the leading accelerators like [[Y Combinator]]. A good example of a Tier A enterprise is Apple or Google. Such enterprises are:
:*Closed source at most or all levels, as far as [[Open Design]] is concerned in the broad sense
:*Closed source at most or all levels, as far as [[Open Design]] of their products is concerned in the broad sense
:*Focus on market monopolization as one of their key competitiveness strategies
:*Lead to extreme concentration of wealth
:*Tend to violate basic human rights of privacy
:*Favor patent protectionism, trade secrets, secrecy, etc in their culture and operations

Revision as of 05:28, 28 February 2016

Tiers of Enterprise refer to classifying the market segmentation of an enterprise based on their tendency to distribute vs. concentrate wealth.

  • Tier A: refers to extreme-performing generators and concentrators of wealth, such as typical outcomes of the leading accelerators like Y Combinator. A good example of a Tier A enterprise is Apple or Google. Such enterprises are:
  • Closed source at most or all levels, as far as Open Design of their products is concerned in the broad sense
  • Focus on market monopolization as one of their key competitiveness strategies
  • Lead to extreme concentration of wealth
  • Tend to violate basic human rights of privacy
  • Favor patent protectionism, trade secrets, secrecy, etc in their culture and operations