By Michael Lev
There is nothing positive about a pandemic. Yet COVID-19, says Kevin Parikh, has become the equivalent of chief transformation officer for manufacturers, triggering the rapid adoption of digital manufacturing innovations that will spur organizations to be more creative and productive.
โWhat the coronavirus did was flip a switch to the point that you canโt survive now unless you internalize these things,โ says Parikh, chairman and CEO of Avasant, a global management consulting firm.
Parikh, also an author, is a whiz at recognizing fast-moving workforce trends. His insights are designed to give business leaders and factory managers a clearer understanding of where the world is going, and how to get there before the competition.
The business and social transformations Parikh sees herald a new digital age when humans finally tame technology and unleash its full potential. Factory managers, and workers, should take note now. โThe analog jobs that are getting replaced by digital automation and innovation are actually creating more time for us to be together,โ he says. โIt gives us a platform for new innovations, with unlimited data access and an opportunity to have unlimited time to create.โ
Here are four top takeaways from MxDโs conversation with Parikh.
1. Congrats for surviving the Information Age โ Parikh is all about the need for business leaders, entrepreneurs, engineers, and others to gain breathing and thinking space in order to create. He says the early 21st century, which we spent utterly beholden to nascent digital technology, could go down as one of the worst periods in human history. Email, smart phones, desktops, laptops and PowerPoints robbed us of time, focus, and relationships. โThe Information Age is all about information overload,โ he says. โHuman beings lost connected touch with each other.โ
But donโt worry, itโs temporary. The coronavirus was a wake-up call. So was that recent one-day Facebook outage, which encouraged humans to look up from their screens. Given temporary respite from the office grind, a lot of people recognized new more independent ways to work. Millions of Americans left their jobs because of the pandemic, and economists believe many wonโt return soon, if ever, to traditional employment. The Great Resignation is a real phenomenon. โPeople donโt want to do it anymore. They want off the treadmill,โ Parikh says. โThat free time will breed a desire to do something new. God knows what, but I believe in humanity. Weโre going to innovate.โ
2. Get ready for the Imagination Age โ Parikh places us in a new post-Information Age period he calls the Digital Singularity, โwhen omnipresent technology and humanity combine.โ Consider: The Internet of Things is happening. Video conferencing is embraced. Digital watches donโt just tell time, they monitor health. This current digital era sets up society for the next great transformation to what Parikh calls the Imagination Age, when technology both advances and recedes into the background, allowing it to serve its purpose of making work life more efficient in order to spur creativity. For example: Picture a team of executives videoconferencing โ while seated in a moving Tesla.
โLess focus on the machines, less focus on the processes, less focus on the hardware, but more focus on the ideas,โ Parikh explained in a June speech. โTodayโs companies are looking for ideas and data, and thatโs the currency of tomorrow. Any investment level required to get there is what our clients are willing to make.โ
Imagine, Parikh says, going into a smart room. Biosensors recognize the occupant, turn on screens and access all relevant data and files to make working easier. โThe room becomes your room,โ Parikh says. โThat experience is where the workplace is going in the future.โ
3. How about digital job sharing? โ The prerequisites for manufacturing innovation in the digital age include the cloud, artificial intelligence, advanced sensors, and IT and OT cybersecurity. Implement those breakthroughs in a connected 5G world and Parikh says the economic impacts are profound: Traditional communities and borders dissolve, replaced by trans-boundary communities of like interests. People can care more about, say, a singing group in China or India than anything in their own neighborhood. โThis is a key tenet to how businesses need to work differently,โ he says. โWe have to appreciate that these communities exist, and to consider them as organizations that need to be marketed to or interacted with. These are micro-communities we can sell cars to, etc.โ
Digital and social change can impact the way employees interact with employers: Workers have greater leverage to negotiate terms of employment. A popular term coming out of COVID is โjob crafting,โ in which employees rewrite their own job descriptions to increase satisfaction and productivity. โExtensive research suggests that when employees have the flexibility to customize their work, theyโre more effective, more satisfied and more likely to stay,โ The Wall Street Journal reported.
Parikh flips that paradigm on its head and says companies can also job-craft. He cites a form of the sharing economy or crowdsourcing in which employees split their professional time between several companies. HyperloopTT, a company building advanced trains, started with no traditional employees, Parikh says. Forbes said Hyperloopโs early days combined facets of the gig economy with distance collaboration and crowdsourcing. It recruited engineers to moonlight in exchange for stock.
4. Lab groups for all โ Parikh makes the case that automation and other advancements are not as scary for the future of individual workers as they might appear. He doesnโt worry much about robots destroying jobs. He puts a lot of faith in the ability of workers to adapt and innovate. The drop in the labor participation rate is more evidence that people are ready to make their own decisions about where to work. โHuman beings are incredibly adaptable,โ he says.
But thereโs work for company leadership to do. โTheyโve got to be investing in people who are willing to imagine and dream their new products, and communicate and marketโ to the billions of people now available online. Smart employees need to think both in terms of global markets and micro-markets.
To get there, more companies, Parikh says, should follow the lead of Google and develop their own internal laboratories of innovation. โEven in our firm we have a lab group called Avasant Labs. Theyโre innovators. They take the data and information we have and whatโs in the marketplace and they come up with new products and services.โ
The lab approach is vital to future success. โWhen you bring that into the culture of an organization, it is inspiring,โ Parikh says. โIt gets people thinking differently. Now the metrics are not how many widgets I turn, but how many new ideas do I come up with? How many new products?โ
He says creative thinking helps identify surprising levels of interconnectedness, which spurs product development. โToday we have everything at our fingertips to design or build or manufacture anything we want,โ Parikh notes. โBut the one thing that weโre missing is the dreaming of what we could (have). The hardware, the machines, we donโt need people to run it. What we really need and donโt have enough of are creative-minded people.โ
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