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posted by janrinok on Tuesday October 25 2016, @04:24AM   Printer-friendly
from the er,-yeah,-maybe dept.

The Fall 2016 issue of the MIT Sloan Management Review contains 14 short essays from researchers and businesspeople on the transformative impact of 21st century digital technology (social media, Big Data, mobile, AI, robotics, IoT) on the practice of business management; it's part of a feature section called Frontiers which they intend to run on a regular basis.

Two of my favorites (warning: open access may be withdrawn at a future date) were:

Tim O'Reilly, tech book publisher, contrasting workers in Silicon Valley's customer facing businesses (Google, Amazon, Facebook, Uber, etc) with factory workers of the previous century:

If you think with a 20th century factory mindset, those workers spend their days grinding out products, just like their industrial forebears; only today, they are producing software rather than physical goods. If, instead, you step back and view these organizations with a 21st century mindset, you realize that a large part of the work of these companies — delivering search results, news and information, social network status updates, and relevant products for purchase — is performed by software programs and algorithms. These programs are the workers, and the human software developers who create them are their managers.

Rita Gunther McGrath, prof. at Columbia Business School, wrote on unintended consequences of technology and the emergence of novel "complex systems" (chaotic, subject to unpredictable destabilization) in the business world. She used the analogy of the introduction of shipping container technology 60 years ago:

Once it became possible to ship even low-value goods and make a profit, the rules of competition changed. Rather than being a relatively fixed commodity located in one physical place — the docks — labor could now be sourced from anywhere containers could be packed. And rather than employer and worker being tied to each other in one relatively enduring relationship, an army of outsourced and freelance workers came into play and redefined the dynamics between management and labor. The advent of shipping containers created global competition for jobs and transformed entire supply chains. As former Intel chairman and CEO Andy Grove lamented in 2010, the unintended consequences of all this were to undermine job creation in the United States, even as employment growth among U.S. trade partners in Asia skyrocketed.

BTW I just picked up my dead tree copy of the Fall issue of the Sloan Review; well worth it for $12.95 (there's a full complement of regular-length business articles in addition to the short Frontier essays). Look for the retro comic book graphic.


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  • (Score: 2) by The Mighty Buzzard on Tuesday October 25 2016, @11:02AM

    by The Mighty Buzzard (18) Subscriber Badge <themightybuzzard@proton.me> on Tuesday October 25 2016, @11:02AM (#418468) Homepage Journal

    O'Reilly can kiss my entire ass. I won't touch their books since they went full on SJW (imported an SJW blocklist on Twitter and invited Randi Harper to speak at OSCon).

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    My rights don't end where your fear begins.
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  • (Score: 2) by https on Tuesday October 25 2016, @06:00PM

    by https (5248) on Tuesday October 25 2016, @06:00PM (#418644) Journal

    Do you even register how fucking insane you appear? Here's a hint: very. I would forgive a casual observer for giving up and telling themselves, "smile, nod, and back away slowly." You're labouring under the delusion that there's an entire legion or two of evil miscreants under a single leadership that wants to take away all of your GOD GIVEN RIGHTS to be a jerk. Exhale. The truth is, if someone's being a jerk, an awful lot of disparate people are going to have identical reactions, which is why your delusion that they're acting as a unified group appears plausible to you.

    Please, either seek professional mental health services or stop being a jerk. Either way, SJWs will no longer be on your mind.

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    Offended and laughing about it.
    • (Score: 1, Insightful) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday October 25 2016, @11:27PM

      by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday October 25 2016, @11:27PM (#418762)

      Pretending that there is no problem is just as dishonest as pretending the problem is omnipresent. It's no laughing matter when people accused of rape in many universities are punished without any actual due process and alleged victims are automatically believed. It's also disconcerting when many mainstream websites (Facebook, Twitter, etc.) pretend they love free and open discourse (there's always a "but" attached, and it is often subjective and has nothing to do with the legality of the speech) and use subjective, draconian rules to censor certain speech; they may be legally allowed to do it, but that doesn't make it right. I like SoylentNews and its policy of basically never censoring anything, so I'd rather see 'jerks' running around than have these awful rules.