The need for speed in the age of
rage.
Ten years ago Internet users still marveled at the utility of
navigating through cyberspace. Back then web surfers joyfully maneuvered
from one website to the next, waiting patiently for each web page to
open. Now, waiting just a few seconds for a page to load can incite a
user to rage against the machine.
Computer users (according to humorist Dave Barry, "user"
is the word used by computer professionals when they mean
"idiot") have become accustomed to real-time speed. Now any
bump in the "information superhighway" (remember that term?)
can drive a web surfer to distraction.
The trouble with progress is that once technology users are granted
speed, utility, and efficiency, they tend to immediately take it for
granted. Once the remote control became standard, nobody wanted to get
up again to change a TV channel. Once answering machines were invented,
no one needed to stay home waiting for a call.
In The Age of Speed, a recent New York Times bestseller, Vince
Poscente, business consultant, inductee into the Speaker Hall of Fame
and former Olympic speed skier, employs speed metaphors and "fast
facts" to make some quick points about today's business
landscape. Though somewhat sketchy (it's a quick read), the
hardcover book includes some fascinating nuggets. For instance, Poscente
references a Google study that found web surfers preferred getting only
10 search engine results to 30--if they had to wait a half-second longer
for 30 results. "So Google decided to give the people what they
want: fewer immediate hut faster results," Poscente writes.
The thesis of the Age of Speed (subtitled Learning to Thrive in a
More-Faster Now World) is that the 24/7-style of today's business
means that the business office is no longer a place, but rather a state
of mind. To survive in this new climate, Poscente says it's best to
be fast, fluid, and high-flying like a jet - rather than slow,
cumbersome, and archaic like a zeppelin.
Records and information management (RIM) professionals already know
as well as any professionals how to adapt to a
"more-faster-now" business environment. Perhaps more pertinent
for them is The Future of Success, a book written seven years ago by
political economist and former U.S. Labor Secretary Robert B. Reich.
Reich observes that rather than making life simpler and workdays
shorter, more technology means more frenzied lives, less security, more
economic and social stratification, and the loss of time and energy for
family, friendship, community, and self. "There was a time when we
were told that technology would make our lives easier," he writes.
"So why is it that the Internet, e-mail, and e-business actually
seem to have made our workdays more hectic and our job futures appear
more insecure?"
An irony to all this talk of more-faster-now business technology
can be found in a news item on page 22 of this issue. U.S. medical
doctors, among the most highly skilled of all specialists, have been
behind the eight ball, and way behind other professionals, when it comes
to using recordkeeping technology to run their businesses. Most doctors
still don't use computers to e-mail patients, prescribe medicines,
consult with other doctors, and maintain electronic health records
(EHRs). Turns out that some of the best and brightest have been behaving
more like zeppelins than jets.
Because medical records affect everyone, many believe that the
government should provide incentives or subsidies to speed the use of
computerized patient records in the United States. The U.S. government
recently announced a $150 million Medicare project that will offer
doctors incentives to move from paper to EHRs. The program is intended
to help up to 1,200 small practices in 12 cities and states make the
transition. Individual doctors will be offered up to $58,000 over the
five-year span of the project, which is intended to test the impact of
incentives on the spread of EHRs.
Meanwhile, the RIM profession remains nimble and tech savvy, in
spite of the fact that many members of the profession are getting a
little long in the tooth. As Nancy Barnes points out in her review of
Bruce Dearstyne's Leading and Managing Archives and Records
Programs (on page 72), many RIM professionals are "baby
boomers," with retirement looming near. So could it be that these
graying RIM managers know even better than medical doctors that a stitch
in time saves nine?
COPYRIGHT 2008 Association of Records Managers &
Administrators (ARMA) Reproduced with permission of the copyright holder. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without permission.
Copyright 2008 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights
reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.
NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.