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dvorak on productivity

2008 January 22

Some­times I love John Dvorak. Other times, not so much. Recently, he has railed on about “lost pro­ductiv­ity” and how, basic­ally, its BS — at least when used within the con­text of sales pitches. To wit:

This is the mod­ern ver­sion of a snake-oil cure. Close rel­at­ives include the “lost pro­ductiv­ity” indexes as well as “sales lost to pir­acy.” If sales were indeed lost to pir­acy, then why hasn’t this become a line item on the books and there­fore tax deduct­ible? Ser­i­ously, if all this intel­lec­tual prop­erty theft is theft in any con­ceiv­able way, then take the IRS deduc­tion based on the press announce­ments and see how far you get.

Ah, John, John, John. Mis­take num­ber one, unless of course I’m mis­read­ing. The reason why its not tax­able is because the sales were never made. Hence, noth­ing to deduct. This is not the case of someone tak­ing some­thing that you already have, but rather someone depriving you of sales because they have wrongly taken your IP. How could you ser­i­ously allude that IP theft isn’t theft in any con­ceiv­able way? Per­haps if someone ripped off all of your columns and diver­ted traffic from the sites that pay you to ones that don’t, you might start to recon­sider that statement.

Then there’s this argument:

My grumblings date back to the early days of the Xerox machine. One rationale for selling the expens­ive pho­to­copier was a bogus cal­cu­la­tion about how much pro­ductiv­ity was lost by sec­ret­ar­ies who had to grab extra paper and put car­bon paper between the pages to make cop­ies. There were real num­bers and costs attached to this prac­tice, and the com­pany could show that the Xerox machine would pay for itself by elim­in­at­ing this pro­ductiv­ity drain. And I sup­pose this num­ber would be accur­ate and true if the sec­ret­ary had actu­ally been work­ing 8 non­stop hours rather than chat­ting and doing her nails half the time. No mat­ter what the experts like to think, the office envir­on­ment is not like the assembly line, where you can make genu­ine tweaks to productivity.

Gotta say I must dis­agree. Car­bon paper being no less pro­duct­ive than pho­to­copi­ers? If the premise is cor­rect, then pre­sum­ably it would con­tinue to apply to today’s pho­to­copi­ers, would it not? Is he truly assert­ing that using car­bon paper would be as effi­cient (and there­fore as pro­duct­ive) as high-speed pho­to­copi­ers that would allow an office to gen­er­ate 100 cop­ies of a doc­u­ment in an hour or two for its cli­ents? Could there not be a bit of pro­ductiv­ity gained by using pho­to­copi­ers instead of car­bon paper? What about com­puters? Surely he’s not sug­gest­ing that, for example, bank­ing was no less pro­duct­ive in the days of manual ledgers?

Don’t get me wrong — I am still prob­ably one of Mr. Dvorak’s biggest fans. But some­times, very rarely, from time to time, I read one of his columns, like this one, and I scratch my head and wonder…

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related:

  1. robert god­dard, the fraud

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