This
story appeared on Network World Fusion at
http://www.nwfusion.com/columnists/2000/1009bradner.html
'Net
Insider:
Too much data?
By
Scott Bradner
Network World, 10/09/00
In
the corporate world, Internet technology can do more than make pretty Web
pages, provide employees online access to the personnel manual and enable new
ways for the corporation to invade the privacy of their employees.
Internet
technology can facilitate the re-engineering of corporations by making the paths
of communications more flexible. No longer is it necessary to have 20 layers of
management between the worker on the shop floor and the CEO.
The
upside is a more streamlined corporation in which the CEO has a far better
understanding of the details of how the corporation works. The downside is the
CEO has a far better understanding of the details of how the corporation
works.
Once upon a time, when hierarchy was king in corporations,
information was filtered, summarized, annualized and simplified at each level
as the data bubbled to the top. In this model, the further up you were in the
company, the fewer details you would see and the more likely it was that you
would have your own secretary or executive assistant to guard your door and
screen your calls. You only had to deal with what seemed important to your
personal protector.
Networks have changed this idyllic structure. It
is now rare for corporate executives to have a private secretary or executive
assistant to protect them from the minutia of corporate life, and e-mail gives
any employee access to the CEO.
For some executives in some companies
this has been a blessing. For others it has been a disaster. It takes a
specific kind of skill to see patterns in chaff and not have them be as
substantive as faces in clouds. A potential CEO candidate that is not fluent in
the use of the Internet and who does not type well has a hard task of
explaining why during the interview process. This is somewhat of a reversal of
the time when any woman applying for any kind of job at most corporations had
to take a typing test.
Executives who once relied on layers of
bureaucracy to shield themselves from too much detail are so buried in details
that finding a big picture (or even any picture) is a daunting task. Hundreds
of memos and thousands of facts flow in a churning torrent, with the executive
seeing more of them in one day than executives would have seen in one year a
few years ago.
Some modern executives seem to thrive on this. But many
others are overwhelmed. These executives need help. It seems to me that the
same content-parsing tools that are being used to sort the mess that is the Web
can be used to sort through the mess that is corporate information. I expect
this is being done, but I don't know about it. This column is the result of a
lament from one of those old executives who is now looking for an executive
assistant so he can wind the clock back just a little bit.
But that
seems like the wrong answer.
Disclaimer: Some of Harvard is dedicated
to old ideas, but I didn't check to see if the Business School is one of them,
so the above must be my observation.
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