Listen

Description

This episode is about the productivity paradox. The Productivity paradox has been around for a while, and it's the economist's way of saying “we don't see the productivity value from our investment in IT”. So the question is, companies and people have invested a ton of cash in, I'll say, desktop IT. Over the 40 years we've been doing this, we're not seeing a productivity increase.
 
The background: Most analysts believe we saw a productivity increase when there was huge investment in industry. In other words, the productivity of manual labor, in Peter Drucker’s terms, increased dramatically through the entire 20th century.
 
And economists being economists, they're looking for the same kind of thing based on our IT investment, and we're simply not seeing it in the larger aggregate numbers. We're just not seeing it. And this is a real, real curious idea, because we want to think about your productivity, you being productive as a knowledge worker. Desktop IT – why no productivity increase
 
The height of knowledge worker technology is the desktop stuff that we use. I don't mean desktop versus laptop. I mean Office Productivity stuff. I wonder if the problem is not how we're going about it. If we agree with the economists who say that we're not seeing a productivity increase, then the very next question for us is why? What I believe the “why” is
 
In this episode I’ll talk about what I believe the why is, and then we'll work on some actionable steps from that to help us be productive. If you're thinking the computer, by itself, makes you more productive, then I don't believe that. I believe that there's some secret sauce that we can add to our current technology that will make you disproportionately productive in the work world.
 
The good news – we can gain an advantage
But, everything has changed, right? NO
OK, Why?
Bad habits we get from technology
I buy it, what do we do about it?
What I’ve learned from Attention Compass research