Random Thoughts
The Culture of Availability

The Culture of Availability

I’m some 36,000 feet over…what out the window I can only guess is southern France and the Mediterranean Sea….I’ve been working on my presentations for the ECIS Admin Conference that I’m headed to in Portugal.

Trying to find some inspiration and motivation for my presentations I’ve been watching some TED videos that I have on my iPhone and came across this 3 minute gem.

This is the first time I’ve heard this phrase of a “Culture of Availability” and as soon as I heard it, it made the hairs on my neck stand up. I like it when I’m hit with things that until that point I really hadn’t given a lot of thought to.

It’s a good little video and as I think about this new culture that we’re in I can’t help but think of how we want to be, and feel the need to be, available to people. And more importantly how we feel that others should be available to us when we need them.

Of course a lot of this comes from mobile devices and the ideas that we’re “always on” with our cell phones and smart phones.

A perfect example of this was just a couple of hours ago while I was in Istanbul on a 3 hour layover and full out expected there to be wireless. Do you do this when you go places? Just expecting there to be access to the Internet and then find yourself very disappointed when there isn’t?

Of course that’s only the first part. Once I had the connection the second part was this culture piece. This expectation that others would be available to me to “waste time” as I sat in the airport.

I caught my wife on Skype on the iPhone and I let her know via chat that I had landed and was standing in line at the Starbucks. Later on I called her and we talked for about 45 minutes.

Then I went to Twitter fully expecting there to be people available to me and sure enough I had a fun little conversation around peoples individual rules for counting visited countries (for my wife and I it’s 8 hours and must leave the airport).

We are living in a culture of availability. We don’t shut our cell phones off…we just put them on silent mode…and that’s OK. We as a society have adopted that as OK.

It’s OK to answer a cell call while having a conversation with your friends or family.

It’s OK to check an incoming SMS…to take that peak when in the middle of a conversation.

Why? Becuase we know that others expect us to be available to them, because that is our culture today.

Sure some of us of an older generation might find these things rude….but to the younger generation I would think these would be quit normal. Heck, even President Obama understands this culture of availability and would not give up his Blackberry so that his friends and family can contact him.

Because we live in this culture of availabilty or “always on” we participate in shared narratives. I’m still wrapping my head around this…but like where this is going.

“I share, therefore I am.”

I’ve relistened to this part of the presentation three times and like what he has to say.

“What we push out, becomes who we are.”

Whether that’s SMS, Skype, Blogs, Wikis, video, images, or status updates. We are what we share. Our shared narrative is the narrative we create with those available to us in our network…in our world. Not all of this shared narrative is done virtually. We still need to share in our ‘off line’ lives as well. Traveling with friends and family, having deep conversations around the dinner table; These too are shared narratives, narratives that many times manifest themselves on the web in one form or another and are shared via Facebook Status updates or Twitter updates….the lines are continually being blurred.

These status updates give meaning to those in between times. They are part of our shared narrative. As some of use wake up while others go to bed, we share space and time, for a moment in these updates and through them continue to share who we are…continue to write our narrative.

“Let’s make technologies that make us more human, not less.”

I think this is why Facebook and Twitter are so popular. “What are you doing now,” is a simple question but in this shared narrative we do care about what others are doing. We share and expect them to share with us.

Or the text message that simple states: Wht r u up 2?

We want to know, we want to share, we want and expect to be available.

Is it a good thing? I don’t know….there are times I personally don’t want to be available…but those times are few and far between and I, more than once, have ran back into the house to grab my cell phone.

Why?

……just in case someone needs me. 😉

 
Shared narratives

16 thoughts on “The Culture of Availability

    • RT @jutecht: The Culture of Availability http://tinyurl.com/d379z3 > Great post Jeff… Bravo! «What we push out, becomes who we are»

    • Great post by @jutecht on the “Culture of Availability”: http://www.thethinkingstick.com/?p=946

    • RT @jutecht: The Culture of Availability http://tinyurl.com/d379z3

    • Wow @jutecht, great post http://tinyurl.com/d379z3 http://tinyurl.com/d379z3. Does a pause to connect communicate less importance? Hope not

    • The Culture of Availability http://www.thethinkingstick.com/?p=946

    • Author gravatar

      I’d like to take this a bit further into the business realm. The expectation of availability means that customers want a two-way conversation. So businesses that are ‘available’ to customers, allowing their voice to be heard will hopefully be more successful than those that put up a wall.
      I am hoping that this availability (in my case guitar lessons online) will be a differentiating factor, at least for a while before everyone catches up.

    • Author gravatar

      Jeff, the constant availability is something I am particularly enjoying. However, I’m not sure those around me are as well. I don’t see it as a problem if I’m grab my phone and check my email while waiting for dinner, or at a ballgame, or at the grocery store. I disagree, however, that many people feel it’s okay to check for text messages (or some other communication) during a conversation. I don’t think we’re there yet. Will that become a norm? Perhaps, but I don’t think many people are ready for that type of availability. I wrote a post about this topic as well about a month ago: http://imcguy.blogspot.com/2009/03/instant-connectedness.html

    • Author gravatar

      Jeff, I am an old fart. I admit it. It is NOT alright to interupt a conversation with ANYONE to answer your cellphone unless you are a doctor on call or the President of the United States (or some other country). RUDE, like shouting in an blog reply. I really hate it when I call my sister, who lives 10,000 miles away, and am put on hold while she answers another call. If the second caller needs to talk to her, they will call back later. I love Skype. I am trying to stay up with the Facebook group. I am even reading my blog roll favorites every work day. I have even managed to charge my cellphone and carry it with me regularly. I won’t answer it if I have company or am at a restaurant. No one needs to hear my half of a converstation with some else, nor do I need to hear yours.
      -That’s my rant for today. Stay tuned for others. 😉

    • picked this up from Jeff U http://tinyurl.com/d379z3 – “culture of availability” a TED by Renny Gleeson-sharing narratives-food for thought

    • Author gravatar

      I do not think that this is a generational problem. Go talk to anyone of any age and see what their reaction is when their phone (wired or wireless) rings in the middle of your conversation. It drives me nuts.

      Mind you I like to whip out a book to read during the boring parts of social events so I’m far from innocent.

    • […] ·         Jeff Utecht on the Culture of Availability […]

    • Author gravatar

      Sounds a little like the “culture of distractibilty”… How much qualitative one to one time do we actually have these days with another… How many seconds of any given minute are not consumed by a multiplicity of demands from our increasingly gadgetized existence in the developed world? Is it even possible in the culture you describe here to have someone’s “undivided attention.” Just my HO but I believe that if one is to be truly available to another it’s then they make time to turn the mobile, iphone, pda, laptop and even answering machine off or at least down… Just thought I’d would say…

    • Author gravatar

      Sounds a little like the “culture of distractibilty”… How much qualitative one to one time do we actually have these days with another… How many seconds of any given minute are not consumed by a multiplicity of demands from our increasingly gadgetized existence in the developed world? Is it even possible in the culture you describe here to have someone’s “undivided attention.” Just my HO but I believe that if one is to be truly available to another it’s then they make time to turn the mobile, iphone, pda, laptop and even answering machine off or at least down… Just thought I’d would take the time say this… 🙂

    • [from techmentor] The Culture of Availability | The Thinking Stick http://bit.ly/16JC3R

    • […] ·         Jeff Utecht on the Culture of Availability […]

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