The Impact of Technological Disruption

Speakers
- Gad Allon, Jeffrey A. Keswin Professor and Professor of Operations, Information, and Decisions, the Wharton School
- Azmat Yusuf EE02 ENG02 W02, Founder and CEO, Citymapper
- Reshma Sohoni ENG98 W98, Managing Partner, Seedcamp
- Will Shu WG12, Co-Founder and CEO, Deliveroo
Reshma Sohoni offered an investor’s take on technological disruption in the health-care industry, observing that as new detection and delivery services transform health care, personal health is the largest market and preventive care is key. “We need to prevent more rather than cure,” said the executive at investment firm Seedcamp. “The biggest movement we see with that is attacking these sectors around prevention and biohacking.”
Alumni-led companies such as Deliveroo and Citymapper propel similarly dramatic shifts in other fundamentals of daily living: eating and travel.
Panelists debated the difference between niche and scale ventures, asking why more people don’t already buy all their groceries online or make decisions based on health tracking. “Embedded systems in place are a bottleneck for innovation,” said Azmat Yusuf, CEO of Citymapper. Will Shu, Deliveroo’s CEO, noted that innovative growth takes time and that his company took six years to gradually build its market share.
In a fast-changing world of endless choice, the panelists reflected on what remains constant: people’s need to belong to communities, to take care of their own and their family’s health, to move, and to eat. “Basic human needs don’t change, but we find new ways of addressing them,” said Gad Allon, Wharton professor of operations, information, and decisions.