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30 December 2003

Jakob Nielsen from the Nielsen Norman Group has written a short but funny article about the increasing role of instant messaging (IM) in most office worker's communication, and the loss of productivity as a consequence thereof - just because of the interruptive aspect of instant attention.

It is naïve to believe that IM is the answer to the information overload that's ailing e-mail. Continue current trends a few years and most people will get so much IM that they will have to tune it out to get any work done.

The increasing overload of information of minor or short-term importance is what he calls Information Pollution. The ability to not filter this information on a realtime basis is the biggest challenge for the office worker of the future. Rather than turning to control centers, like Jacob suggests, a more effective method is to regularly turn the IM, Skype and e-mail client off. It's great for productivity and reflection.


This happened at 12:24:00 PM  Ideas and comments to this [] or trackback []


But wait. What can possibly be wrong with that? After all, we worship innovation as an absolute corporate good, along with such things as teamwork and leadership. Even more than these virtues, it has come to be seen as synonymous with growth. Political economists have assigned tremendous significance to it since at least the mid-20th century. Innovation is at the heart of Joseph Schumpeter's idea of creative destruction, for example: the process of "industrial mutation" that keeps markets healthy and progressive. Management theorists embraced the notion in the intervening decades, and a stream of academic papers and books promoting innovation as the critical element of business success issued forth from the likes of Peters and Drucker, Foster and Christensen. Innovate or die, we were told. It's the core of excellence and the root of entrepreneurship. It's the attacker's advantage, the new imperative, the explosion, the dilemma and the solution. (You can play this game at home, too, with any of the 49,529 titles that come up for "innovation" on Amazon.) And yet it's hard to look at Apple without wondering if innovation is really all it's cracked up to be.

Very interesting article from the January 2004 edition of Fast Company about Steve Jobs and Innovation at Apple. My suggestion is to read the sidebar (at the end) first, then the whole article.

Sidebar: Getting Innovation Right

If Apple teaches us anything, it's that effective innovation is about more than building beautiful cool things. A few thoughts for innovating well in your own shop:

  1. Not All Innovation Is Equal
    Technical innovation will earn you lots of adoring fans (think Apple). Business-model innovation will earn you lots of money (think Dell).
  2. Innovate for Cash, Not Cachet
    If your cool new thing doesn't generate enough money to cover costs and make a profit, it isn't innovation. It's art.
  3. Don't Hoard Your Goodies
    Getting to market on time and at the right price is vital. If that means licensing your idea to an outside manufacturer or marketer, do it.
  4. Innovation Doesn't Generate Growth. Management Does
    If you covet awards for creativity, go to Hollywood. Managers get rewarded for results, which come from customers.
  5. Attention Deficit Has No Place Here
    Every innovation worth doing deserves your commitment. Don't leap from one new thing to another. If your creation doesn't appear important to you, it won't be important to anyone else
    .

This happened at 12:12:04 PM  Ideas and comments to this [] or trackback []


© Copyright 2005 Erik van Bekkum.

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