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Slaves to the smartphone

The horrors of hyperconnectivity and how to restore a degree of freedom

Mar 10th 2012 | from the print edition

THE SERVANT (1963) is one of those films that it is impossible to forget a

merciless dissection of the relationship between a scheming valet (played by

Dirk Bogarde) and his dissolute master (James Fox). The valet exploits his

master s weaknesses until he turns the tables: the story ends with a cringing

Fox ministering to a lordly Bogarde. The film was an indictment of the class

structure of Harold Macmillan s Britain. But it is hard to watch it today

without thinking of another fraught relationship the one between businessfolk

and their smartphones.

Smart devices are sometimes empowering. They put a world of information at our

fingertips. They free people to work from home instead of squeezing onto a

train with malodorous strangers. That is a huge boon for parents seeking

flexible work hours. Smartphones and tablets can also promote efficiency by

allowing people to get things done in spare moments that would otherwise be

wasted, such as while queuing for coffee. They can even help slackers create

the illusion that they are working around the clock, by programming their

e-mail to be sent at 1am.

But for most people the servant has become the master. Not long ago only

doctors were on call all the time. Now everybody is. Bosses think nothing of

invading their employees free time. Work invades the home far more than

domestic chores invade the office. Otherwise-sane people check their

smartphones obsessively, even during pre-dinner drinks, and send e-mails first

thing in the morning and last thing at night.

This is partly because smartphones are addictive: when Martin Lindstrom, a

branding guru, tried to identify the ten sounds that affect people most

powerfully, he found that a vibrating phone came third, after the Intel chime

and a giggling baby. BlackBerrys and iPhones provide relentless stimuli

interspersed with rewards. Whenever you check the glowing rectangle, there is a

fair chance you will see a message from a client, a herogram from your boss or

at least an e-mail from a Nigerian gentleman offering you $1m if you share your

bank details with him. Smartphones are the best excuse yet devised for

procrastination. How many people can honestly say that they have never pruned

their e-mails to put off tackling more demanding tasks?

Hyperconnectivity exaggerates some of the most destabilising trends in the

modern workplace: the decline of certainty (as organisations abandon

bureaucracy in favour of adhocracy), the rise of global supply chains and the

general cult of flexibility. Smartphones make it easier for managers to change

their minds at the last moment: for example, to e-mail a minion at 11pm to tell

him he must fly to Pittsburgh tomorrow. The dratted devices also make it easier

for managers in one time zone to spoil the evenings of managers in another.

Employees find it ever harder to distinguish between on-time and off-time

and indeed between real work and make-work. Executives are lumbered with two

overlapping workdays: a formal one full of meetings and an informal one spent

trying to keep up with the torrent of e-mails and messages.

None of this is good for businesspeople s marriages or mental health. It may be

bad for business, too. When bosses change their minds at the last minute, it is

hard to plan for the future. And several studies have shown what ought to be

common sense: that people think more deeply if they are not constantly

distracted.

What can be done to keep smartphones in their place? How can we reap the

benefits of connectivity without becoming its slaves? One solution is digital

dieting. Just as the abundance of junk food means that people have to be more

disciplined about their eating habits, so the abundance of junk information

means they have to be more disciplined about their browsing habits. Banning

browsing before breakfast can reintroduce a modicum of civilisation. Banning

texting at weekends or, say, on Thursdays, can really show the iPhone who is

boss.

Together we can outsmart our phones

The problem with this approach is that it works only if you live on a desert

island or at the bottom of a lake. In Sleeping with Your Smartphone , a

forthcoming book, Leslie Perlow of Harvard Business School argues that for most

people the only way to break the 24/7 habit is to act collectively rather than

individually. She tells the story of how one of the world s most hard-working

organisations, the Boston Consulting Group, learned to manage hyperconnectivity

better. The firm introduced rules about when people were expected to be

offline, and encouraged them to work together to make this possible. Many macho

consultants mocked the exercise at first surely only wimps switch off their

smartphones? But eventually it forced people to work more productively while

reducing burnout.

Ms Perlow s advice should be taken seriously. The problem of hyperconnectivity

will only get worse, as smartphones become smarter and young digital natives

take over the workforce. People are handing ever more of their lives over to

their phones, just as James Fox handed ever more of his life over to Dirk

Bogarde. You can now download personal assistants (such as Apple s Siri) that

tell you what is on your schedule, and virtual personal trainers that urge you

take more exercise. Ofcom, Britain s telecommunications regulator, says that a

startling 60% of teenagers who use smartphones describe themselves as highly

addicted to their devices. So do 37% of adults.

The faster smartphones become and the more alluring the apps that are devised

for them, the stronger the addiction will grow. Spouses can help by tossing the

darned devices out of a window or into a bucket of water. But ultimately it is

up to companies to outsmart the smartphones by insisting that everyone turn

them off from time to time.

Economist.com/blogs/schumpeter

from the print edition | Business