When geographic location stop to matter
The new (yet early) cyber economy made it possible to provide our services directly on the web in real-time and cheaply accessible.
In 1946, having a phone call between Europe and the USA cost approximately $650 for a 3 minutes session. You better get straight to the point to make those trades profitable.
I will not mention all tools that help us communicate, plan, collect, organize, categorize, analyze, and design together with our clients directly online.
Since services are more accessible worldwide online, it's wiser to find the best talents for the project for the right price.
It's getting abundant trying to find and make relationships with local mediocre service providers when you find the most merited talents for the next project, with just a google away.
Once again, geographical location gets slaughtered in the new cyber economy.
This thinking gets us to the question, is the location dead?
Or what purpose could location possibly have in our life in the age of the internet and cyber economy?
Maybe the geographic location could be more about providing the physical necessities we are looking for to have a more meaningful daily life with those we care about the most in the age of the internet?
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