The Conundrum of Peak Productivity & Technology Skills
We live in a pandemic where technology skills are essential to work in a remote world, yet many digital immigrants (Gen X and boomers) lack skills.
Digital immigrants are individuals born between 1946 and 1980 and did not grow up with technology. In contrast, those born after 1980 are considered digital natives and grew up with technology.
Some Gen X and boomers may be challenged using LinkedIn, social media, Google Suite, Microsoft Office Suite, apps, applicant tracking systems for job hunting, understanding keywords, hashtags, and more.
The gap between “employment and cultural opportunities will be shaped by … [one’s] ability to understand and manage these emerging technologies” (Hasselbring et., al, 2000, p.2), and they must rise to garner digital wisdom, otherwise known as digital literacy. Being digitally competent with digital literacy creates digital learners (Creighton, 2018).
From my experience, digital learners seem to be lifelong learners who have a positive attitude towards technology and keep growing their skills.
Others have negative attitudes about technology, don’t want to learn, or have such high anxiety about technology that they have their own version of, what I will call, a meltdown.
In teaching LinkedIn workshops for the past nine years, I have had digital immigrant adults break down in tears or get frustrated that they could not manage to get their Zoom screen and LinkedIn profile up on the screen simultaneously.
I have had clients not know how to edit their resumes because they did not know how to use Word. Other clients have never used Google and don’t realize it’s easier to collaborate in a Google doc than sending drafts 1, 2, 3, etc., attachments back and forth in emails. The beautiful thing about Google docs is that it autosaves, and there is only one version.
In addition, I have clients who don’t understand that LinkedIn is a database and keywords are essential to be discoverable, not to mention the need to match keywords in a resume from job descriptions before applying online.
Over 500 connections on LinkedIn are needed, so networking while you maintain a career as employed, self-employed, or unemployed (and not retired) is the way to build those connections.
Here is where we reach the conundrum. I read an article this past week titled The Most Productive Age in Human Life is Between 60-70 Years of Age, and ages 60-70 are in the boomer generation.
My question is that if many boomers don’t have technology skills, how are they being productive? What are they using to streamline their productivity?
The second most productive age, according to the article above, is 70 to 80, and the third is 50 to 60.
Individuals born between 1922 and 1945 are classified in the traditionalist generation. What are they using to streamline their productivity?
Here’s the real kicker – the article notes a study done by the New England Journal of Medicine, and when fact-checking, Snopes said that this was FALSE! That means that you can’t believe everything you read. Just because it’s on the Internet does not make it reliable.
The article’s title caught my eye because I am part of that boomer generation. While I was elated that I was apparently in the prime of my productivity, I was also skeptical about the digital immigrant research that I have done for my doctoral dissertation coupled with my own personal experience.
Aside from not believing fake news, the lesson to be learned is that everyone should become lifelong learners and keep taking workshops to improve their technology skills. Never stop learning! KNowledge is power.
Join me every month for a three-hour LinkedIn workshop and shorter workshops on LinkedIn and on other topics at other times. You will find the list of upcoming events and link below under Next Steps.
See what kinds of other technology workshops are available at your local libraries, through SCORE, and at universities so you can be called a digital learner. It’s never too late to learn!
Missed the previous article, “Create, Practice, and Publish Your Way to Career Success on WinTheView.”
NEXT STEPS
- Subscribe to my newsletter on LinkedIn for bright ideas to manage your career.
- Join as a member at https://greatcareersphl.org/membership of the #1 business networking association on the Philadelphia Business Journal’s Book of Lists two years in a row!
- Register on the events page for these upcoming online events noted below.
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- 2/18 Fri – Interviewing Techniques
- 2/18 Fri – No Such Thing as Failure; Ask for Feedback (on Clubhouse)
- 2/19 Sat – LinkedIn Part 3 of 3
- 2/21 Mon – Career Success Group
- 2/21 Mon – Beating the Applicant Tracking System
- 2/22 Tues – 15 Laws of Growth to Accomplish Your Career Goals
- 2/22 Tues – Business Executives Networking Group (BENG)
- 2/23 Wed – PowerThinking: Rejuvenating Your Amazing Mind Resilience Building Call
- 2/23 Wed – Business Executives Networking Group (BENG)
- 2/24 Thurs – Career Success Group
- 2/25 Fri – Interviewing Techniques
- 2/25 Fri – Driving Justice, Equality, Diversity, and Inclusion: The JEDI Journey Panel
- 2/25 Fri – Getting Noticed in a Crowded Job Market – The Recruiter Confidential (on Clubhouse)
- 2/28 Mon – Handling Tough Interview Questions
References
Creighton, T. B. (2018). Digital natives, digital immigrants, digital learners: An international empirical integrative review of literature. Educational Leadership Review, 19(1), 132-140.
Hasselbring, T. S., Smith, L., Williams Glaser, C., Barron, L., Risko, V. J., Snyder, C., Rakestraw, J., and Campbell, M. (2000). Literature review: Technology to support teacher development. National Partnership for Excellence and Accountability in Teaching.
BIO
Lynne Williams is the Executive Director of the Philadelphia Area Great Careers Group, a 501(c)3 nonprofit of over 7000 members providing career education and networking. Contact Lynne by phone at 484-393-2951, email at director@greatcareersphl.org, on social media @GreatCareersPHL and #GreatCareersPHL, and connect on LinkedIn at www.linkedin.com/in/lynnewilliams Visit the website!
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