You can teach old dogs new tricks.
When the plow was invented in Mesopotamia about 6000 years ago, the lives of farmers changed forever. Rather than being subsistence workers, they became part of a complex economic and social system. Those farmers aren’t unique: the world is always changing, and the pace of change keeps increasing.
Throughout history, technology has changed people and the societies around them. In addition to the plow, there’s the printing press, the steam engine, the shipping container and electricity to name just a few. If this topic interests you, check out Richard Currier’s book Unbound, Jared Diamond’s Guns Germs and Steel or Marc Levinson’s The Box.
In my profession, qualitative research, I’ve reinvented myself several times. Since becoming an independent researcher in 1996, I’ve gone through multiple evolutions.
-
In the late 90s I leaned into creative and projective techniques.
-
In 2010 I learned to conduct qualitative online.
-
In 2014 I upped my biometrics game, then added more biometric tools in 2021.
