Corporate Life
Let's face it, no one likes change. But hey, this huge world around us is in a constant state of flux, and as the theme of this blog suggests, you need to do something about it eventually, or you'll be faced with an ever increasing mound of chaos.![caveman ice age caveman](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg5kEaEvJeucVO6Yo4VcKgFBdcCT5DfUL1zDMPnDaWZohno9oZVfUAr556RDQKf5TYNrZxwUKrTZrKFaYOtbDU_6aHNPlvn7Zi6Nyad3xhBbFVijwyyMOt3se-hvC-Vp-LgpkB5LKfu5EM/s400/caveman.jpg)
Today, those external forces that require us to make change come at us much more frequently, and from so many more angles. As I had written about before, technology brings issues and challenges to us faster, but it also allows us to react more quickly to them. As an example, I went looking for something today that might have taken weeks to find out or confirm through our competitive analysis team, but instead uncovered the answer in a matter of minutes with a quick Google search. Rather than wait for someone to present me the data, or get in queue for an answer that might never have come, I chose to act instead. Was it my job to become a competitive analyst? Probably not. But to exceed the ever-increasing goals set out for each of us, we need to find new ways to adapt and react. We all have to do more with less, and do jobs that were previously outside our scope of work. If we were all to let our past behaviour dictate our future actions, we will surely fail.
End result? We all have to move at a pace of change that we previously thought was not possible, or risk being left behind in the cold.