In school they teach you that one of the drivers of economic progress over the centuries has been society's increasingly accurate management of time. The seasons had to be tracked so that farming cultures would know when to plant. Once people started sailing across the oceans, they needed reasonably accurate chronometers to measure longitude. When railroads were built, the idea of uniform time zones became important so that the trains could keep predictable timetables. The term "railroad time" is still sometimes used to mean keeping an accurate schedule.
By the time I was growing up, it was universally accepted that rigorous scheduling was one of the hallmarks of an advanced economy. We scheduled everything well in advance -- classes in school, meetings at work, even social events like parties and dates. How many movies and television shows have you seen where a character says, "pick you up at eight"? And don't be late.
A lack of rigorous time discipline, we were told, was one of the factors holding back economic growth in the developing world. That belief was so well accepted in the US that I don't think anyone even debated it.
So it's very interesting to see what electronic communication -- on PCs, but especially on mobiles -- is doing to time management in the world's most advanced economies. Where my generation pre-arranged its social calendar, I watch my kids make it up on the fly. They'll decide on IM that they all want to get together in an hour, or they'll agree via SMS that they're all going to hang out downtown that evening, where they then call or text each other to link up on the fly.
I have seen this developing for years, but I didn't have a gut feel for its power until earlier this year, when I took my family to Disneyland. Touring the Magic Kingdom with two kids was once an exercise in controlled paranoia. The place is so complicated and crowded that you lived in constant fear of losing one or more members of the family. If you did, it might take hours, and a long trip to the lost child center, to find them again.
Anytime we separated -- mom going with one child to one ride, and dad with another child to a different one -- we had to carefully agree on when and where we would meet up. Inevitably someone would be 15 or 20 minutes late, and you'd spend the whole time worrying that the vacation might fall apart.
It wasn't the walking that wore you out at Disneyland, it was the fear.
But the last time we went was the first time when everyone in the family was old enough to have a mobile phone. Suddenly, as we walked through the park on one of the busiest days of the year, we realized that we didn't have to worry any more. If a child got lost, they could call us. If two people wanted to go off in a different direction, that was no problem at all; we could just use the phone to find each other later.
In other words, we could stay together without staying in sight of each other.
That may not sound like a big difference, but it completely transformed the Disneyland experience. The food was still overpriced, and the lines way too long, but the whole thing was much less stressful. It was almost, dare I say it, relaxing.
It made me realize that a similar transition is happening throughout our society. Ubiquitous personal communication makes it much less important to rigorously schedule many elements of your day; you can just make it up as you go along.
As smartphones arose, we thought they were going to absorb the calendaring function of the PDA. They have somewhat, but I think mobile phones are also making the personal calendar less important.
The first time I went with Palm to China, our employees in Beijing cautioned me that I shouldn't talk about the great calendaring built into Palm handhelds, because people in China just didn't care about it. They didn't schedule meetings, I was told. If they wanted to talk to you, they would just give you a call. At the time I assumed that was just a transitional thing, that over time as their economy grew they would learn to do more and more scheduling. But now I'm starting to think that maybe they were ahead of the rest of us all along.
Good article. It’s not only scheduling though. The power of the internet in one’s pocket is also transforming everything. People will start doing much more spontaneously. The tremendous flexibility of say being able to book a flight from your phone, find a business of interest or check times of a movie at a theater near you are just one of the few that will completely change how people manage/plan (or not have to ) their time.
ReplyDeleteMike, I saw this at SXSW, using mobile phones and Twitter. This was prevalent at the event, happening not only with us but seemed to be happening with many other SXSW attendees.
ReplyDeleteOur small group of Milwaukee people used a combo of on the fly connection via SMS or phone, Twitter and established base camps.
For instance the bag pickup area at SXSW was conveniently near the front doors of the Austin convention center, so we would separate for sessions and simply say "meet at the bags at noon" or meet at the bags at the end of the day.
We never set times ahead, but simply used this location as a loose point of reference. I even used it to locate others on the fly, grabbing this space and then texting someone that I was at the bags.
But we also did much on the fly too. We each had a mobile and would text each other to see where we were, or to determine when to meet.
With friends I hadn't met, I emailed them ahead of time with my mobile number, and in a couple of cases, a friend would call, tell us where he was and we would group and meet at that location.
You post reminded me of this and how freeing it was, once you accepted the fluidity of the process. For someone super tightly attached to the structured day, I could see this possibly driving them crazy until they made a decision to go with the flow.
Good article, the whole 'keeping in touch without being together' thing is definitely true. With the Chinese though, I suspect part of the reason they don't schedule is that they don't need to. Asian societies are much more hierarchical than western ones, and if the boss wants to talk to you, you'd better drop everything, and come running. Is that a more efficient way to do things? I don't know.
ReplyDeleteGood article. I think the recent announcement launching the Center for Future Banking at MIT will get at some of these questions.
ReplyDeleteLooks like an interesting examination of mobile convergence.
Center for Future Banking
Doing business I use the internet and a telephone. When I combine the two I save money and literally do whatever I want and can still earn money. When I work on a site or serf I use my computer but otherwise I'm mobile
ReplyDelete