To embrace 4IR, humans require ‘software upgrade’ – motivational speaker

29th November 2018 By: Marleny Arnoldi - Deputy Editor Online

JOHANNESBURG (miningweekly.com) – People will need to change their thinking, before the mining industry can change, international business motivational speaker Michael Jackson said during a keynote address at software company Dassault Systemes’ Natural Resources Forum conference, on Thursday.

“Our software requires an upgrade,” he said, referring to the human brain. “Doing more of what we do, in a world that has changed during our lifetime, is not working. The future is different. We need to break away from familiar patterns. We are creatures of routine, hoping for a better result but doing the same thing.”

“Business has evolved faster than we have. Business has become complex”, Jackson pointed out. “We need a way of thinking differently, because the world changed. The industrial revolution no longer exists. The industrial revolution began in 1760, ending in 1970. It is now outdated, it has come and gone.”

He noted that computing has evolved to communication, connectivity (the Internet), to collaboration in a bigger ecosystem. The old formula was simple and suitable for a slowly evolving world, he stated.

There is now a new formula where the past and present do not matter, since the one is over and the other is not long-lasting. Jackson said thinking and processing should be centered around the future.

“When you look at the winners today in business, they are concerned with skills and knowledge, decentralisation, networks, alliances and partnerships, artificial intelligence and customisation, versus the old focus of capital and labour, command and control, bureaucracy, hierarchy, mechanical and standardised processing.

“Companies fail because they refuse to change. Innovation that used to take a generation, now takes weeks or months.”

Jackson said a modern Fortune 500 company has objectives, projects, teams and information, which should all be open to change.

“We agree with people who agree with us, other beliefs are our greatest enemy. Memories become facts. We have stereotypical thinking, grouping people into categories and labelling them. We suffer from observational selectivity.”

He added that humans prefer conformity and fitting in, which is the main cause for stagnation and is not conducive to innovation.

“Identify what is important to you, eliminate everything else and if you can not do it yourself, automate, delegate or get help.”

Further, towards smartening up, Jackson said humans learn by replicating stories.

When you begin the learning process, you start at a state of unconscious incompetence – “you do not know what you do not know”. Next is conscious incompetence – “you know what you do not know”, following by conscious competence – “you know what you know”.

Then follows unconscious competence – “you do not know what you know,” meaning you have forgotten what you learnt, even though you do the implementation, meaning it has become more habit than a conscious effort.

At the tip of this pyramid is excellence, which some believe takes 12 years to fortify, with constant conscious competence.

Around specialisation, Jackson said it involves a continuous strategy of learning, tuning, refining and developing. “We cannot just wait for the future to happen.”

“The light is not the illusion, but the length of the tunnel you create,” Jackson said, adding that humans limit themselves to grow and harness opportunities.

“Upgrade your software and your business will follow suit.”