digital Archives - Innovation Lab Stay relevant Tue, 10 Jul 2018 09:28:54 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.1 https://innovationlab.net/app/uploads/2018/05/cropped-favicon-01-32x32.png digital Archives - Innovation Lab 32 32 171249639 Holiday – time to disconnect? https://innovationlab.net/blog/holiday-time-to-disconnect/ Wed, 27 Jun 2018 09:01:12 +0000 https://innovationlab.net/?p=1303 Summer means recharging your batteries - we collected some great advice from our Lab Agents about how to disconnect when going on holiday.

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Getting ready for vacation? Did you know that we touch our iphones 80 times a day? Some say it hinders us from being creative and most likely we have all had the feeling that we are not 100% present! So what can we do during vacation to disconnect? We asked around at the Innovation Labs to hear how our colleagues unplug and some thoughts about the importance to do so….

Kristine Moe Sirnes - Partner, Norway

As a startup-entrepreneur I don’t think I’ll be able to completely disconnect this summer, but I have decided to:

1) Use my phone’s feature “do not disturb” for at least 10 hours every day. 2) Not keep my phone on my bedside table as I’m going to sleep for as long as I want!
3) I’m going to carrying my old Leica camera around with me instead of my technical devices.

Marcus Hølland Eikeland - Partner, Norway

Over the last 4 years, I’ve been playing around with the concept of “workcation” – combining work and travel in pursuit of an optimal lifestyle for restless individuals. I even found a Podcast about it at www.remotivationpodcast.com. But this summer for the first time in a long time, I will try to disconnect fully. And to do so I have chosen a jungle retreat outside the coast of Sumatra. Here, I will ride waves all day, do Yoga and watch the most breathtaking sunsets. That should at least be a good start.

Anette Priess Gade - Circular by Innovation Lab

The board game HINT is a favorite in my family – and absolutely no mobile devices are allowed to be around. Even teenagers don’t complain when asked to leave their phones in the other room. The competition, being together, and the personal involvement makes all players 100% relaxed and just have fun. Board gaming is a great face-to-face activity – leaving phones and ipads behind. No wonder why retailers see an increase in sales of all kinds of board games. And the Danish developed game HINT is really fun. Check it out! To be creative, remember to play (be inspired by the TED talk by Tim Brown from IDEO about creativity and play). This year I will also “try” a family iphone detox – from 11.00 to 17.00 for 2 days. Wonder how that will end!

Dite Cepule

I find that changing environment is the best way to relax and disconnect, so I never miss a chance to take a little trip. I always have a mobile phone on me, especially when traveling – using google maps, checking TripAdvisor or posting an occasional Instagram story. In reality – I’m never truly disconnected from my devices. But I always make sure to set an automatic e-mail response and turn off all the notifications for e-mail and social media apps. This way I can avoid distractions and only check my messages when I feel like it!

Kia Kruse - Marketing & Communications

In my job, I need to stay updated on a lot of areas within new tech, organizational development, innovation formats…and of course my colleagues! This means, that I – amongst others – manage to sign up for a lot of newsletters throughout the year. As summer approaches, I use this opportunity to clean out in my subscriptions, really thinking about where I will get the very best and condensed information onwards. A sort of digital detox which helps me stay focused and ready for when the holidays end.

Anders Sahl Hansen - Sputnik5 by Innovation Lab

I do 1-2 hours of analog reading daily but hope to increase that to 4-6 hours during July though I also have 4-500 unread tabs in my phone that I need to file in Evernote – because it is really important to start with a clean slate in August. But most importantly, I unwind by drinking a lot of red wine while doing different projects on my kolonihavehus (small summer plot) or gazing at the horizon in France with a notebook in my pocket. Having ditched SoMe I already leave my phone in the charger from morning to evening.

Anneli Bartholdy - Sputnik5 by Innovation Lab

I’m one of those who doesn’t travel in July since it’s so busy with other travelers. When I’m unwinding but still at home I work on a daily meditation and yoga practice. Making sure to bring myself back to the present, reconnect with my thoughts, ideas, and emotions helps recharge me. When it’s hard to disconnect on my own I use apps like Insight Timer to guide me through it. We can’t all go to Sumatra (Marcus ;)) so I try to create a small space at home where I can block the world out for half an hour a day and really allow myself to be alone with my thoughts.

Mads Voigt Hingelberg - Big Data by Innovation Lab

I go off the grid for a week. I use the phone as GPS and perhaps light reading or a casual game, but mails, SMS, IM are all off. For me it is not the no-screen option, rather the no-outside-comms option.
Also, when I do connect again, the phone is not in my pocket, unless for safety purposes, e.g. when in a small boat or hiking. I always bring my laptop, but I plan to not use it, and rarely do, except for when the kids want to crash and watch a movie.(No Netflix in Sweden) – at least that’s what I tell them.

Mads Thimmer - CEO, Innovation Lab

I usually have 3 weeks of complete offtime in an offline area. I need to go cold turkey on all connectivity at least once a year. Books, people, food take the place of email, project work, and research. It is a great way to shortcut answers to bigger questions – and something I tend to do every Saturday as well. Off buttons are crucial to online existence and thriving – otherwise, we lose touch of what is essential and end up as the debris that Nicholas Carr describes in Shallows. Get grounded and post about it later. Inhale!

Agne Strimaityte - Visuals by Innovation Lab

I feel that the best digital detox for me is getting outside in nature, being active or traveling. Most of the time I have the phone with me, but it is used only for taking photos or checking directions. I usually tend to be less connected during the weekends, when I don’t check e-mails or SoMe. However, having a few longer digital detox breaks during the year that allow to disconnect fully are very important to me as well.

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How and Why the Digital Era Has Redefined the Concept of a & … https://innovationlab.net/blog/digital-era-generation/ Mon, 02 Oct 2017 08:59:43 +0000 https://innovationlab.net/?p=425 What's a generation anyway?

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Note from our editor:

In his last article of the series, Diego takes us to an uncomfortable space where the concept of generations ceases to apply. In this lively piece, Diego explains how technology – specifically the part of it that has connected the world – creates a paradox he calls “polarization-unification,” that brings people of a similar age closer together and at the same time separates them. He gives vivid examples of how him and fellow blogger Marc, separated by just a couple of years, use social technology in markedly different ways.

This is good advice for all of us in business. Approaching the way we design, hire and market using a concept that is not longer relevant – like the concept of generations – will only ensure we hit a wall we didn’t even know was there. Another insight from a kid who just left the neighborhood playground and is now playing in ours. Take note.

Written by: Diego Martinez

The concept of generations has prevailed throughout modern history as a socially constructed and widely accepted differentiator between ages. Traditionally we’ve used this concept not only to help us group cohorts of people together, but also to distinguish between them. It’s easier to analyze advances in society when you split society into the comfortable intervals of time we call generations. Even at the personal level it’s easier for us to relate to and find comfort in the people of our own age – our generation has traditionally felt like our “tribe.”

So what marks generations? Traditionally anything from advances in technology to cultural eras such as the baby boomers, the rock-n-roll or the Apollo was enough to mark the differences amongst generations. But that handy way of segmenting is fading. We’re currently advancing so quickly that we can no longer distinguish between technological or artistic epochs. There no longer exists the idea of an artistic “trend.” Artistically, there are infinite niches one could fit. Simply put, the Internet has expanded the social realm so much so that it has completely redefined what it means to belong to a generational period.

Generation gaps, by tradition, are the core agents of societal conflict. It is nearly impossible to change that because it’s in our nature to exploit seniority. What is changing is the separation between generations, both polarizing and uniting age groups. Let’s have a look at the different ways generations are brought together and are completely separated in 2017, and reflect on what that means for you in terms of businesses and innovation.

The paradox of Polarization-Unification

We feel a certain irreplaceable comradery with the people in our age groups, principally because they are the ones whom we identify with when we are affected by social changes. We live through and develop artistic trends, political crusades and advances in technology together. Yet, as we find ourselves moving more towards collective global knowledge, we begin to see how it is much more difficult for us to distinguish between “generations.” Information sharing has advanced so much so that it has come to both bridge the gaps between generations and separate them completely.

In a way, we are living in an era which both polarizes age groups and unites them like never before. This paradox of polarization-unification through technology can be seen in media, art, business and most social trends.

For example, ask any twenty-year old, like myself, if they use Facebook and the answer is most definitely. I was there when it launched, and I’m still here. Ask any seventeen-year old that same question, like my friend Marc (go read his blog if you haven’t already), if they use Facebook and the answer is most definitely no. Email? His answer is “Why would I want to write letters to everyone?”

Wait: kids are not on Facebook?

The simple nuances in technology use between age groups now take place within an impressive one or two-year span of time. It no longer takes us 10 to 20 years to find major differences in social upbringings; the newer “generations” are separated by a small margin that only shrinks in size every year. I remember my first phone, the Motorola Razr flip phone, as a revolutionary step in communications and cellular tech. My brother is a mere three years younger than I am and doesn’t even know what Razr is. This is the “polarization” part. What does that mean for you as an employer? It just means you have to be wearier of your new hires’ age gaps and understand that in 2017, we don’t really connect with people on the age basis as much as we used to. Don’t trust two employees to get along just because they are in their twenties, one or two years’ difference may mean completely different approaches to the world.

Now to the “unification” aspect of our social paradox. Technology and especially social media have broken the typical marketing barriers that small companies faced before. All you need these days is a well set up Instagram page and you can take your product straight to your consumers. Forget the laws of supply and demand. Haven’t you heard? It’s trendy to be “rare” these days. Forget professional experience, too.

Just look at Mo’s Bows, the bow-tie company which was started by twelve-year-old entrepreneur Moziah Bridges a couple of years back and has now struck a seven figure deal with the NBA. When was the last time your savvy professional marketing team landed a similar feat for your company? Again, there is the paradox of the polarization in technology trend and the unification of social trend. Mo and I may have grown up in two completely different periods of time in terms of technology (mind you we are only 5 years apart) yet he built a million-dollar business and I didn’t, using the same tools I have at my disposal. The older generational standards are centered on a strict level of seniority, experience and hierarchy, but the digital era has thrown us all in the same jungle and said: “play!” Any game is anyone’s game, and the social image of the generation is slowly fading into a synonym for anti-progressivism.

Why not be unified? Why not work with competitors simply because it will make a better product? Imagine if we took age out of the equation when hiring employees and took them on based on their ideas for business innovation. These are the questions that the unification aspect brings along with it – the total re-invention of what it means to be with, act like or work with people your own age. At the end of the day, age is just a number, right?

Simply put, the Internet has expanded the social realm so much so that it has completely rede ned what it means to be- long to a generational period

Diego Martinez, Innovation Lab

What’s next?

So we find ourselves in this paradoxical mess of society losing the ages-old concept of generations, where things don’t seem to make sense yet they flow as easily as ever. What can we take from our current state of affairs to help us make wiser choices in the future? Luckily, the ages-old advice for businesses and managers to be open to new ideas without bias towards the source of innovation still applies. Every single year businesses will harvest new minds and cater to new audiences, so it’s essential to keep up to date with how social trends are affecting people regardless of age.

Designs need to keep track with movements and innovators need to keep track with new innovators. Age should be no factor here.

Photo courtesy of friend of Innovation Lab and photographer Christopher Michel.

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