Quarry Southern Africa January 2019 | Page 3

www.quarryonline.co.za  D o you fear the Fourth Industrial Revolution (also known as Industry 4.0) will take your job? Do Generation Z’ers sound more alien than human to you? In reality, these aren’t real ‘things’ but tools for marketers to sell us stuff. After all, how can retailers sell us their products unless they can pigeonhole us into convenient categories? The Fourth Industrial Revolution is supposed to create disruptive innovations in every sector, with many of our jobs being replaced by robots. But is technology really something to be feared? It bears similarity to Y2K: a minor glitch relating to the way microchips processed dates ending in the digits ‘00’, it was predicted by some experts to cause a cataclysm, bringing down financial markets, power grids and critical national and international infrastructure. Governmental committees were formed and enormous fees were paid to IT consultants to tackle the crisis. This potential doom coincided with the millennium, a date fraught with symbolism and portents – a bit like everyone poised to lose their jobs through automation. In the event, Y2K came and went with nothing remarkable happening. The first step to getting people to buy things out of fear, is to create a new buzzword. And so we have Industry 4.0, Millennials and Generation Z. But do these things really exist? One common myth is that each generation has a unique set of characteristics that differentiates it from every other generation. Certainly the Baby Boomers had a post-war frugal mindset which was real. That was a real step change: the rash of births nine months after tens of millions of involuntarily-chaste soldiers returned home after World War II was unique. Not so the impulse since to similarly try label each subsequent generation. While people of a similar age have characteristics in common, people of other generations often share those characteristics. For instance, Generation Z is made out to be virtually alien, but actual studies show they share much the same qualities as any other generation. They’re just people – but others will ‘box’ and categorise them for their own marketing purposes, so they can group them into convenient consumer categories and market product to them. This is not a real ‘thing’, but a marketing thing. The Industrial Revolution was a real revolution which upended the traditional life of people (the Second and Third being mass production followed by computerisation – but nobody heard of DEBUNKING MYTHS OF INDUSTRY 4.0, MILLENNIALS AND GEN Z COMMENT Eamonn Ryan, editor [email protected] those ‘revolutions’ until the Fourth was packaged and announced as a thing). The Fourth now postulates work being taken over by robots. Actually, there’s nothing sudden or violent about what is happening. The reality of life is that every time there is an innovation, that becomes the foundation for someone else to build on – something new becomes possible. This is all that is happening and there is nothing particularly unusual about it. With Industry 4.0 we’re led to imagine there’s some big step change that’s going to come – along the lines of Uber – when in fact change is happening all the time. It has been happening incrementally since the 17th century, and it is continuing now albeit at an accelerating pace – but there’s no imminent revolution that one has to anticipate or fear. Innovation is constant. What is happening is Industrial Evolution. Automation is of course already replacing many jobs – but those who fear all mankind will lose their jobs and be replaced by robots are unaware of the fundamental nature of mankind. We are problem-solving machines and will come up with solutions. AI, automation or machine learning isn’t why the economy is bad. The threat to your job or business is not posed by some robot, but a new competitor opening up. The way to address that threat still comes down to the fundamentals of doing business as efficiently as possible and creating an amazing customer experience. If anything, technology is taking us back to a time when relationships were important and we had to focus on the fundamentals.  QUARRY SA | JANUARY/FEBRUARY 2019_1