Karl Edwards presents Working Matters

Tag: technology

  • Listen In -> Tech Changes #3: The Upgrade Quandry

    Upgrade decisions are a fact of life in the fast-changing tech world.

    Are you torn between wanting to stay abreast of advances in technology and wanting to keep spending to a minimum? When does an expense shift from being a resented and avoided intrusion caused by others to an investment that is anticipated and incorporated into one’s business strategy?

    This week software developer Jorge Rosas and I tackle the upgrade investment quandry. We discuss decision-making criteria that lead to solutions that fit, not pre-fab solutions that force you to fit into some rigid upgrade formula.

    Listen in.

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  • Listen In -> Tech Changes #2: Gadget Obsession or Early Adoption?

    Innovation is a double-edged sword. New gadgets can enhance effectiveness or undermine focus.

    In this week’s interview with software developer, Jorge Rosas, (a self-confessed innovation addict) we discuss the difference between the type of early adopter—whose play leads toward multiplied productivity—and those whose fascination with new gadgets results merely in distraction and loss of focus.

    The point is not to label ourselves so much as to help those of us fascinated with all things new to recognize when this passion is serving us well and when it is luring us off track.

    Listen in.

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  • No Magical Answers for Tech Change

    Instead of joining an extremist camp: either always buying the latest innovation as soon as it comes out, or always waiting as long as possible before making a change, we need our own decision-making criteria.

    Our needs are different than anyone else’s. Our financial resources are limited. Our teams’ openness to change and learning new things is a factor. Our industry might be one of relative stability or rapid innovation.

    In this week’s podcast with software developer Jorge Rosas, we discuss three “tension spectrums” across which to consider our next decisions:

    1. Risk versus reliability. Can you or your firm handle some of the inherent risks associated with emerging technologies while the kinks are being ironed out? Or do you need a certain level of reliability which would suggest that you wait?
    2. Focus versus distraction. Do new features help you get more done or distract you? For some of us, innovation is key to how we increase our personal and professional productivity. For others of us, new things take our eyes off of our goals, and we lose precious time and energy playing or forcing solutions that don’t really fit.
    3. Arithmetic versus exponential benefit. Unless an innovation provides an exponential increase in value to one’s productivity, internal processes, or company capabilities, you may want to reconsider the money investment, the learning investment, and the investment in team morale that any technology change brings.

    What criteria informs your decisions about adopting new technologies?

  • Listen In -> Technology Change: New Tools or New Obstacles?

    Friend or foe?

    Our new podcast series helps us think about a constant business reality: technology change.

    Do you leap headlong into every innovation or upgrade? Or do you avoid the expense and disruption of learning something new as long as you can?

    There are advantages and disadvantages to both strategies. Instead of adopting a rigid stance, listen in to my conversations with Jorge Rosas, tech guru, software developer and confessed obsessive early adopter of all things new.

    1. Technology Change: New Tools or New Obstacles? (playing now)
    2. Tech Changes #1: Gadget Obsession or Early Adoption?
    3. Tech Changes #2: The Upgrade Investment Quandary
    4. Tech Changes #3: Leaders Lost in Database Hell
    5. Tech Changes #4: Swamped by the Communication Tidal Wave?

    Listen in.

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