Keeping up with Technology in 2024

Keeping up with Technology in 2024

Debbie Ireland Adoption, Conference, Productivity, Training

The rate of change is mind-boggling. As Kurzweil said, we are going to see 20 thousand years of progress this century, compared to 100 years last century! If you think you are tired now – things are only getting faster!

In this blog we will cover:

  1. The exponential growth of technology
  2. The increased pace of our lives
  3. How this impacts us
  4. Coping with this extreme acceleration of change.

Technological change is exponential – look at it this way:

No wonder we are tired! We are fighting to keep up with this pace. Predictions years ago, thought that technology would give us more time. They were wrong. We are instead time poor. People are stressed, overwhelmed, and constantly in a hurry.

This image, put simply, shows change over time and the pace of technological change. Just think! Half a century to adopt the telephone, 8 years for the mobile and then a magnitude of changes in computer hardware, the internet, AI and connectivity like we have never seen before. The Digital Workplace Conference was created specifically to help professionals stay ahead of this curve.

Published November 25, 2021 by technoxian

Image Published November 25, 2021 by technoxian

The PACE of our lives is spinning faster and faster

  • Important life updates become moments of scroll time on social media
  • We abbreviate messages and speak in acronyms
  • We shop online with unrealistic expectations
  • Slow internet speeds frustrate us
  • So does waiting in line
  • If videos bore us, we play them on fast speed
  • Fads/quick fixes and shortcuts are common requests
  • Fast food, throwaway consumables are the norm
  • We are spoilt for choice and still demand more

Have we got to the point where the pace of change can’t keep up with our own expectations?

The IMPACTS on us are also higher

  • Sedentary lifestyle and sleep disruption
  • FOMO, pressure to stay connected and cyber-bullying on social platforms
  • Overwhelm and anxiety from the constant need to adapt to new tools
  • Competition is at its height causing overwork
  • Increasing rates of anxiety attacks
  • People bombarded with notifications, information which leads to cognitive stress
  • Remote work causing home and time pressure

Stay ahead of the curve by compounding your learning

Much like compounding interest, our learning needs to accelerate in line with change. Cumulative learning gives you a competitive edge, in-depth knowledge and skills development and personal growth. It helps you adapt, do your job better, or change course.

We have amazing speakers and workshops at the Digital Workplace Conference Feb 27-28 for all professional roles. This is so you can get ahead of the competition and further develop your skill set.

If you’d like to learn more about what to expect, click here to see what is in store at NZ’s biggest Microsoft 365 conference. Alternatively, you can secure your place at DWC by buying a ticket here.

Compounding can also be related to improvement. Make small incremental gains from daily enhancements to what we do. This leads to widespread process improvements, and increased productivity.

Note that it can be as important to quickly find out what “not to do or not bother learning” so you have band-width for the good stuff.



Look at your perspective to help you adapt to change

Where do you focus your energy?

Do you put all your energy into resisting change? Do you look for alternative ways to do things or stay stuck with your head in the sand?
OR
Do you put all that energy into learning? Do you see what is coming as exciting and inspiring? Do you look for ways we can enrich and improve our lives, our work and our productivity? Can you see new opportunities?

It is important to keep an open mind and be flexible to move with change.

Every single day, every project, every relationship, every task – we make a choice.

We can also choose physically how we adapt. I recall during speaker training, that instead of experiencing the butterflies in my tummy as nerves, I could acknowledge they are in fact the same sensation as excitement. Seeing them as excitement changed my perception. It made the presentation something to look forward to.

The same can be said about stress. The symptoms of sweaty hands, a pounding heart and fast breathing could be seen as signs you are not coping. Reframe your thoughts to seeing it as energizing yourself to face the oncoming challenge.

Change the perspective, change the outcome.


Your Big Goals Are Silently Sabotaging Your Success | LinkedIn

The threat to knowledge workers is not AI or automation. It’s their horrifying lack of productivity | by Michael Simmons (blockbuster.thoughtleader.school) | Accelerated Intelligence | Medium