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Shelly Palmer

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The Attack of the Pridefully Ignorant

Posted: 01/03/12 11:28 AM ET

I had to take a one-day trip to Boca Raton, FL this week to attend a family event. During my trip, I met several people (of a certain age) who feigned interest in my profession. I was drawn into conversation after conversation where I had to defend the existential necessity of digital literacy. Would it be a cliché if I told you how many of these individuals had flip phones? Would it be stereotypical to describe the number of doctors, lawyers and retired investors who have their secretaries print out their emails? Would it be hackneyed to recount the pridefully ignorant way that each individual espoused the reasons they lead an unconnected life? Perhaps. But, based upon the hundreds of emails I received requesting a follow-up to last week's article, "Are You Employable In 2012?," I'm going to give it a shot.

An attorney, who has a remarkably successful practice in South Florida, told me that he doesn't see any reason to follow the industry trend of hiring electronic discovery experts. He boasted to me that remaining antiquated protected his practice from modern invasive electronic discovery techniques. He went on to tell me how he knew all about this "tech stuff," but it just wasn't important enough for him to invest in it. I pointed out that we were in the Information Age and that practically everyone who communicated did so using digital tools. About five seconds into my response, I just changed the subject; I am not prepared to argue with the pridefully ignorant.

I have about ten other examples of this kind of insanity, but I'm sure you get the point. So, if you are willing to think about overcoming the digital divide in 2012, let's go over a few key points.

First, and foremost, inject yourself in the process. If you want to become more digitally literate as a means of enhancing your ability to transfer the value of your intellectual property into wealth, you must dive in. How? Start by listening.

Do you have a Facebook profile? If not, go sign up now. It is extraordinarily easy. If you are daunted by the task, screw your courage to the sticking place and click this link www.facebook.com. Follow the instructions. If you can read, you can get this done in less than 10 minutes. Don't worry about your privacy settings right now. You're not going to do anything on Facebook today that will compromise your privacy, or open you up to identity theft. I promise.

Once you have a Facebook profile, start sending friend requests to your actual friends. Resist all temptation to make it a popularity contest -- just invite people you know well. And, only friend people you know well. Once you've got a bunch of Facebook friends, start listening. Forget about your wall and your profile page, just watch the news feed. It will only take a few days for you to start understanding what Facebook should (and should not) be used for in your community.

Want to get more into social media? Join some groups. There are Facebook groups on almost every subject you can think of. Join, and just listen. There's no need to post anything until you are ready.

Next, do exactly the same thing with Twitter. Set up a profile page, start following people you know and people you want to know and work with and just listen. It is the fastest way to become digitally literate in the world of social media.

If you want to interact with people on Twitter, consider replying to their Tweets instead of just Tweeting stuff out. It changes the dynamic of Twitter and will make you an instant part of the community.

The world is bifurcated. There are only two types of people and two types of devices: connected and not connected. The mantra of the pridefully ignorant is: "Digital is for kids!" If you wish to be pridefully ignorant, keep saying it. You will soon fade into complete unemployability and communicative irrelevance.

To lead a connected life, you need to be connected. This means having a smartphone and learning to use it. If you really don't want a smartphone, get a tablet (like an iPad) or a high-end color e-reader (like the Kindle Fire) and carry it with you everywhere. You will need a device to be connected to the Internet -- you can't connect without a device, get one!

Not a smartphone, nor a tablet person? Tough! You need to be. So get with the program. The only way to make this leap is to make it.

How will you know what gear to buy? It doesn't matter what you get as long as you get something. iPhone, Android -- I don't care. You won't care either, at least not now. There will come a time when you will care, at that point you will make another purchase and you won't need anyone's advice about what it will be.

Lastly, make a New Year's resolution to learn how to use some keyboard shortcuts and some digital productivity tools. It could be as simple as forcing yourself to use all of the Microsoft Word keyboard shortcuts for formatting, or as adventurous as installing Text Expander (Mac) or Phrase Express (PC) to enhance your word processing efficacy. Like I said, the only way to become digitally literate is to inject yourself in the process -- enhanced productivity is a big step towards that commitment.

Although I was brutally attacked by a horde of pridefully ignorant technophobes in Boca Raton, I escaped. I hope you will too.

Are you employable in 2012? Check out my previous article about what skills you need to make yourself an asset in today's job market.

 

Follow Shelly Palmer on Twitter: www.twitter.com/@shellypalmer

I had to take a one-day trip to Boca Raton, FL this week to attend a family event. During my trip, I met several people (of a certain age) who feigned interest in my profession. I was drawn into conve...
I had to take a one-day trip to Boca Raton, FL this week to attend a family event. During my trip, I met several people (of a certain age) who feigned interest in my profession. I was drawn into conve...
 
 
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12:18 AM on 01/06/2012
I am not pridefully ignorant.

I am very knowledgeably and carefully connected - I have been in computer security for over 20 years.
04:32 PM on 01/04/2012
I don't think so. There is no reason to follow the mob just because everybody else is doing it.

What value can a technology provide you? What are the costs (including time)? The risks?

Only when the value exceeds the costs and expected losses (via the risks) should you adopt a technology. And that will vary with people and their individual situation.

I am a techie (Ph.D. in Engineering) and have worked in computer security for the past 20+ years.

Neither Facebook or Twitter meet my adoption threshold (their value to me is low, the time cost is probably high, and the risk of Facebook is considerable). I do use LinkedIn.

TV does not meet my adoption threshold (value is low, time cost is high) - so I do not watch it.

Do what makes sense. Not what is popular. They are frequently not the same.
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11:49 AM on 01/04/2012
After reading your profile I kind of find it hilarious that your complaining about people not adapting technology when you make a decent living from a syndicated radio program on terrestrial radio and have a stint as a tech expert on a broadcast television station in the number one media market in America.

Maybe you should follow your own advice and adopt the future by turning your radio program into a podcast and calling out Fox next time your on for hoarding spectrum via broadcast television. Sure it might cost you some money in the short term but at least you'd live what you preach IMO.
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TaiJi2
02:55 PM on 01/03/2012
"About five seconds into my response, I just changed the subject."

What's that about COMMUNICATION, again?

"I have about ten other examples of this kind of insanity, but I'm sure you get the point."

No, I don't get the point - because you didn't even attempt to make one; instead you just tossed out a single example without any context besides the veiled agism toward "several people (of a certain age) who feigned interest in [your] profession." Sounds about like the average depth reasoning of the Twitterati. I actually suspect that their interest in your profession died in its infancy just about the time you began 'professing'.

Do you mean the insanity of giving up on a conversation inside of 5 seconds because your digital life has given you the attention span of a flea? You state that you are "not prepared to argue with the pridefully ignorant", but fail to connect that judgement to an "attorney, who has a remarkably successful practice." It sounds instead like you met someone whose success is not dependent on the internet and who has the communication skills to support that position.

Or do you mean, instead, the insanity of declaring that there are only two approaches to technology in life and that the only one that has a future is the one that has, in fact, crippled your brain, resulting in the conclusion that a remarkable successful lawyer will suffer "complete unemployability and communicative irrelevance"?
02:25 PM on 01/03/2012
The idea that FB and Twitter equate to being connected is a very narrow one.

There is a reason why the number of FB users in America is shrinking.

Little substance, lots of ads.
Yesterdays trend.
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ochaye
11:58 AM on 01/03/2012
What a decidedly simple and unconvincing piece of dribble. The argument you advance is .. " get connected because you need to be" ...
Really? Why?