Micromanagement and the seductive lure of high-tech! Or Humans vs Automatons!
17/01/2018


On our travels we often support, along-side other commercial suppliers, learning institutions working to educate and train various professions. At one of these sessions before Xmas, a colleague and Visiting Fellow at Cranfield, Glenn Chambers, heard a representative from one commercial firm say: “With our technology, we can track every employees’ whereabouts 24 hours per day – who wouldn’t buy that technology?” I have heard one technology supplier triumphantly claim: “With our smart AI system, we collect data from every conceivable source, and can tell people at the front-line whether to turn left or right when they start work!”. Ever heard claims like this?
There are so many aspects that are flawed in that way of thinking, but the crux is that there are no examples of organisations demonstrating actual sustained and significant improvements by applying this technology – sometimes at very great cost!
We quoted some examples of this flawed thinking in our blog “Guards all along the watchtowers in June last yearhttps://blogs.cranfield.ac.uk/leadership-management/cbp/guards-all-along-the-watchtowers
But let’s pick up on one critical point. We know the western world we work in, whatever our occupation, can be described quite accurately as VUCA (Volatile, Uncertain, Complex and Ambiguous) – the unexpected happens! It is surely an act of hubris to think that we can design a computer system that can tell a front-line employee what to do next in any given situation (Glenn was on a conference call from home with us when he had to interrupt to accept his weekly grocery delivery. It was late. The driver apologised profusely to Glenn saying “I’m sorry, the system gives me a route to follow that I know hits a traffic bottle neck on certain times of the day – but I’m not allowed to vary from that route!”).
We recently reviewed Stephen Bungay’s book “Art of Action: How Leaders Close the Gaps between Plans, Actions and Results” https://blogs.cranfield.ac.uk/leadership-management/cbp/book-review-art-action-leaders-close-gaps-plans-actions-results
In here he explains: ”In the final analysis it is behaviour that counts. If we close the Knowledge and Alignment Gaps in the ways suggested so far we will be able to gain traction, focus effort and deliver a strategy – until something unexpected happens, which sooner or later it will. At that point everything depends on people. Metrics give us information. Interpreting the information can give us understanding. Taking the right action requires wisdom. Only people can have that!”
Or alternatively, please contact Dilbert – he has the robot for you!
Categories & Tags:
Leave a comment on this post:
You might also like…
Do you know what makes a Technical Report special?
Writing a technical report is a little different to writing a lab report or an essay for your tutors, requiring a different approach, communication skills and format. What are technical reports? Technical reports are formal, ...
Norman C. T. Liu scholarships providing the next generation of opportunities to succeed in Air Transport Management
Cranfield University is proud to work with global industry leaders who believe in investing in the next generation of aviation professionals. One of those leaders, Norman C. T. Liu, has personally committed to supporting ...
Designing the future of space: My group design project experience at Cranfield
For three years, I worked at Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) in India. While my time in the IT sector provided me with a strong analytical foundation, my true passion had always been anchored in ...
How do I reference lecture notes… in the NLM style?
If your course material contains original content that you want to use in your work, it will need to be referenced as follows: What information do you need in the reference? Author – surname initials e.g. ...
From Nigeria to Cranfield: My journey into Future Food Sustainability
My name is Jolaosho Eniola, and I’m studying the MSc in Future Food Sustainability. I’m originally from Nigeria, and I’m passionate about food systems, food sustainability, food supply chain and creating solutions that improve ...
How to present well as a group
You will have put a lot of work into your research or group project and want to show everyone what you have achieved or discovered, so you need to impart this knowledge as clearly as ...
