Tom on the pace of change

This was one of those “I’m gonna blog this even though I’m so in agreement with it it’s actually boring for everyone else” moments. But Tom’s post on the pace of change (plasticbag.org) really resonated:

My sense of these media organisations that use this argument of incredibly rapid technology change is that they’re screaming that they’re being pursued by a snail and yet they cannot get away! ‘The snail! The snail!’, they cry. ‘How can we possibly escape!?. The problem being that the snail’s been moving closer for the last twenty years one way or another and they just weren’t paying attention. Because if we’re honest, if you don’t want or need to be first and you don’t need to own the platform, it can’t be hard to see roughly where this environment is going. Media will be, must be, transportable in bits and delivered to TV screens and various other players. And there will be enormous archives available that need to be explorable and searchable. And people will create content online and distribute it between themselves and find new ways to express themselves. Changes in the mechanics of those distributions and explorations will happen all the time, but really the major swift is not such a surprise, surely? I mean, how can it be!? Most of it has been happening in an unevenly distributed way for years anyway. And it’s not like it’s enormously hard to see what you’ve got to do to prepare for this - find a way to digitise the content, get as much information as possible about the content, work out how to throw it around the world, look for business models and watch the bubble-up communities for ideas. That’s it. Come on, guys! There’s hard work to be done, but it’s not in observing the trends or trying to work out what to do, it’s in just getting on with the work of sorting out rights and data and digitisation and keeping in touch with ideas from the ground. This should be the minimum a media organisation should do, not some terrifying new world of fear!

The operative words here are “hard work.” If you’ve got the money and the people willing to do the job, this stuff can be conceptually easy, even if it’s a lot of work. Just look at the BBC.


One Response to “Tom on the pace of change”

  • Pigsaw Blog Says:

    Of the BBC, snails and polar ice caps
    There’s a really fun game being played on the web right now. It’s called “let’s see how much we can agree with Tom Coates but still find a little something to take exception to, so that we can join in the debate without looking like yes-men.” And …