Friday 30 March 2012

The impact of social media on business and politics

[This is an article I posted to another blog back in April 2010 which is about to be shut down, so I thought I would rescue it.  Sometimes it's interesting to look back at perspectives from the past.  I like this post because it barely mentions IT stuff.  Although technology is the underlying enabler, it is in effect just the amplifier of human interaction.  It's the people element that is most important - and that applies to IT as much as it does to anything else.]

In prehistoric times, when monolithic companies ruled the earth, there were few competitors, no saturated markets and every industry had a handful of established leaders.  Driven by market research, these companies responded to the world’s requests for ‘more of the same but cheaper please’.  The monolithic companies were good at managing expectation.  Customers didn’t expect much, so they didn’t get much.  Change was slow, but nobody was in a hurry.  Standardization was the key to mass production and these monolithic firms got so good at producing standard products that it became the business model that defined the best part of the 20th century.  Despite what some people might think about the past, interaction with the market was impersonal, driven by interruptive one-way advertising on TV and radio networks.  Salesmen were the top dogs and doing anything to get a customer to part with their cash was the way to go.  Organizations were regimented into functional silos and slow-moving decision hierarchies.  The world wasn’t changing fast, so these monolithic firms could afford to be slow.  Markets were steady, supply chains were solid and blue chips were unassailable.

Then the world got connected and everything started to speed up.  Look at what’s changed over the last 20 years.  Yet the internet still reaches fewer than 30% of the population.  As technologies do become more widespread, tending towards 100% coverage, the rate of change is going to increase exponentially.

Any individual will be able to communicate with any other individual in the world in real-time.

Telephone, cell phone, VOIP, email, instant messaging.  Many methods are available to us now.  More (or indeed more likely fewer) will be available in the future.  I’ll leave you to ponder why pervasive real time communication should be a fundamental objective for us as a race.  Of course, this is only effective if it is supported by universal freedom of speech.

Heading back to the topic of the changing business environment, people in business are evolving to meet the challenges of rapid change.  Rules and rigid structures slow things down.  Agility is now the key to survival.  Standardization of products and services has been replaced by a custom approach.  Hierarchies are being dissolved to make way for business process management models, with horizontal processes cutting across silos to deliver what the individual customer wants.

The rules are – there are no rules.  The large blue-chips that dominated the world’s markets are finding themselves left behind.  Cumbersome structures and old-world thinking is giving light-weight competitors an advantage and with new attitudes towards partnerships and the latest technology supporting them they can deliver faster and better than the monoliths.

The internet meteorite has hit, and the old-world dinosaurs are choking on the dust, while the nimble warm-blooded mammals have taken a foothold.  There are still a lot of dinosaurs about, but their time is short.

Wednesday 28 March 2012

What will IT 4.0 look like?

There has been much talk about IT 3.0 of late – shifting the focus away from technology and process towards people and their needs: meeting user-centric demands for access to technology, any time, any place, on any device.  We have a pretty good idea of what IT 3.0 looks like, which raises the question - what will IT 4.0 look like?

  • Rocketpacks for faster desk-side visits.
  • Cold fusion powered servers that put power back into the national grid and smell of pine forests.
  • A 4D user interface which allows service desk analysts to go back in time and solve the root cause at the application development/infrastructure purchasing stage.
  • CMDB models the entire universe for Ultimate Impact Analysis©.
  • HiveMind crowdsourcing tool taps into the knowledge of advanced alien cultures.
  • Hot-swapping of staff in business units, as these are the components most prone to failure.
  • Borg monkeys hooked up to HiveMind provide cheap tech support staff.
  • Hypochondriac bio-servers that self-medicate when they get a sniffle.
  • Empathic network switches that also provide dating tips for tech support staff.
  • 7thSon™ module automatically orders and builds infrastructure in anticipation of the CEO’s 'back-from-a-conference' whims.
  • A 3D IT performance dashboard that picks up on the CIOs concerned facial expressions to automatically drill down into the database.
  • The Redundanator5000™ - A sentient service management system which monitors Twitter for emerging service demands - and designs and deploys new web services without human intervention or human error.
  • Solar-powered TCP/IP helmets turning people into thought-crowdsourcing internet nodes.
  • Edible hardware makes upgrades something to look forward to.
  • Mechanical pterodactyls automatically deployed to deliver cup-and-string-based communication solutions at short notice as a workaround for when VOIP and video-conferencing facilities fail.
  • Bruce Lee clone robots police the IT infrastructure to make sure servers don't get 'out of line'.
"What do you mean 'Fatal error in disk mode'?  I'll tear you another A drive!"

Contributions to IT 4.0 invited as comments.