Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
COVID-19’s entrepreneurial creativity
COVID-19’s entrepreneurial creativity
Jan 27, 2026 7:18 PM

The “new normal” of the COVID-19 pandemic has settled in and, with it, a new host of challenges. Businesses have adapted to the changing needs and desires of individuals in creative ways, sometimes radically changing their products, structures, and strategies. Through the dynamic process of creative destruction, firms that do not adapt to changing customer needs will close their doors panies with real solutions will arise. Businesses in a variety of spheres have demonstrated that they are able to solve real world problems in a rapid manner.

In the healthcare space, panies pivoted to help alleviate the pain caused by the outbreak of the pandemic. Avillino pivoted from genetic data to COVID-19 testing in the span of four weeks. 3D pany 3YourMind changed its strategy in a matter of days to focus on making ventilators. This agility is unique to panies, which have the ability to adapt quickly, take risks, and receive feedback from consumers as to whether their solution is effective.

The entertainment industry is rapidly adapting to the fact that individuals are more likely to consume entertainment from their homes. Streaming services had been expanding before the pandemic, but consumer reluctance to attend movie theaters in person has only accelerated the trend. Before 2020, “straight-to-video” was almost an insult, but that is changing. Disney debuted its big-budget film Mulan straight to Disney+. Releasing films directly to in-home viewing is ing mainstream. In fact, Disney has undergone a major corporate structure reorganization in order to focus more on streaming. Every pany, large or small, will have to reckon with these shifts. Even the old-school Metropolitan Opera hosts nightly streams to attract fans to their online subscription services.

The education industry is likewise poised for a shake-up. College students were less likely to attend this year due to health risks and restrictions on in-person classes. Digital subscriptions could upend the education industry. Google has entered the higher education sphere with its Google Career Certificates. The program is a six-month online certificate that is designed to prepare individuals for specific jobs. Time will tell whether this model will gain traction. But with freshman college enrollment down 16%, some change is certain. Many colleges and universities will have to specialize to stay afloat.

A related story is playing out in the primary and secondary education space. Since many schools have not opened for in-person education this fall, entrepreneurs and parents have created solutions to help students learn at home. Among other solutions, parents have turned to social media to organize Pandemic Pods, and the pany Prenda facilitates small groups of students learning at home with a teacher.

This is only a small sampling of the panies have started to pivot to solve novel problems. Churches that are struggling to collect donations in person can utilize a plethora of services such as the tithe.ly app or PaySimple. Customers who are homebound can use a delivery service for household necessities. Some distilleries have switched from producing whiskey to hand sanitizer. Restaurants have adapted to deliver their products to diners in different ways. There is no end to the creativity that individuals will employ to solve problems.

These changes should not be cause for alarm. Consumer desires always change over time, and the COVID-19 pandemic has pacted these changes into a short period of time. But this sampling panies and products shows that shifts are not debilitating. pany can solve all our problems, but the fleet of firms working independently are able to alleviate individuals’ fort. Different individuals and groups have unique needs, panies adapt to address those various needs. These novel solutions should excite us and create hope for the future. And in perhaps the best COVID-19 business development, Black Friday may be over for good.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Santa’s little helper
In a not-so-subtle take-off of Donald Trump’s The Apprentice franchise, ExperiencePoint e up with a fun interactive game to challenge your event-planning and management skills. The background: Inspired by his favorite reality programs, Santa Claus invited eight elves to the North Pole for the purpose of selecting one as his new protégé. Through a series of rigorous petitions, Santa has whittled down the group to the final two candidates – congratulations, you’re one of them! Now you must manage a...
Toward freedom in the Arab world
In a new Acton Commentary, Anthony Bradley examines a new report from the Fraser Institute that measures economic freedom in Arab countries, an important indicator for cultures that are in many places still struggling to lift their people out of poverty. In discussing the report, Bradley says, “As history demonstrates, individuals or families having freedom to determine their own economic destiny liberates them from government dependence and long-term dependence on charity.” Read the mentary here. ...
Education optimism
Eugene Hickok and Gary Andres give us an optimistic piece on education reform on NRO today. They see even public educational professionals opening up to the positive potential of reforms that shift the educational enterprise into non-governmental hands. No doubt the continued advance of public education threats such as homeschooling and vouchers have prodded some educators into reform-mindedness. Progress on this issue is painstakingly slow and therefore hard to gauge, but one hopes Hickok and Andres have correctly identified the...
Theroux on African development
Paul Theroux, a former Peace Corps volunteer, indicts what he calls the “more money” platform, headed by none other than U2 frontman Bono, in a NYT op-ed, “The Rock Star’s Burden.” “Those of us mitted ourselves to being Peace Corps teachers in rural Malawi more than 40 years ago are dismayed by what we see on our return visits and by all the news that has been reported recently from that unlucky, drought-stricken country. But we are more appalled by...
Global warming in Narnia
Dr. Philip Stott at EnviroSpin Watch shares with us an article featuring an interview with Maugrim, head of Queen Jadis’ secret police from The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe, on the growing threat of global warming to the peaceful nation of Narnia. The so-called “greenhouse gas” in question is Pantheron Dileoxide (PL2), monly known as “Lion’s Breath.” “PL2 is a dangerous, roaring greenhouse gas”, the Chief Wolf, Maugrim, growled. “It melts everything, even frozen fauns and fountains. Climate change...
Crushing the spirits of the young in France
Roger Cohen’s column in today’s International Herald Tribune slams the French economic system by telling the story of Rachid Ech Chetouani, a young French Muslim. (Unfortunately, the column is behind the New York Times Select firewall and available only to subscribers. Isn’t it ironic that the Times can write such moving pieces about social exclusion while practicing it at the very same time?) Chetouani has been to China and North America, so he has some alternative economic systems parison purposes....
Respect my food sovereignty!
Much attention is on the World Trade Organization summit in Hong Kong. Here are a couple of ENI briefs on the WTO: Food, agriculture, subsidies grip faith groups as well as WTO Hong Kong (ENI). Participants at an interfaith conference on economic justice have urged the World Trade Organization to respect people’s food sovereignty and halt the current negotiations on agriculture and the production of food. “People’s food sovereignty is being undermined by the WTO’s Agreement on Agriculture,” a declaration...
Would C.S. Lewis have risked a Disney ‘nightmare’?
A newly published letter by Narnia creator C.S. Lewis shows his distaste for Disney “vulgarity” and his fear of seeing fictional animal characters transformed into cartoonish buffoons. Jordan Ballor, in a new mentary, explores how Lewis might have felt about the new Disney film of The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe. Ballor looks at Lewis’ dislike of animatronic, or costumed people acting the parts of animals, as well as his feelings towards Walt Disney’s “vulgarity.” Dispensing with Lewis’ objections...
New Mexico – gateway to the stars?
Richard Branson’s Virgin Galactic has taken another step forward with the announcement of an agreement with the State of New Mexico: Virgin Galactic, the pany created by entrepreneur Richard Branson to send tourists into space, and New Mexico announced an agreement Tuesday for the state to build a $225 million spaceport. Virgin Galactic also revealed that up to 38,000 people from 126 countries have paid a deposit for a seat on one of its mercial flights, including a core group...
Capitalism and Christianity, part II
Jordan Ballor’s recent post on “Christian Reason and the Spirit of Capitalism” hit onto something big. In today’s New York Times, op-ed columnist David Brooks weighs in with a piece entitled “The Holy Capitalists”. (Once again, the Times has blocked access to non-subscribers. If you aren’t a subscriber, buy today’s Times just to read this column – it’s worth it.) Brooks calls the debate over the foundations of success the most important in the social sciences today and praises Rodney...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved