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An interview with

Erik Brynjolfsson and
Andrew McAfee
MIT Center for Digital Business

The Second Machine Age: An
Industrial Revolution Powered by
Digital Technologies

Transform to the power of digital
Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee

The Second Machine
Age is the time when
machines are now able
to take over a lot of
cognitive tasks that
humans can do.
Erik
Andrew
Brynjolfsson McAfee
Director of the
MIT Center for
Digital Business

Principal Research
Scientist at MIT
Center for Digital
Business

Technology in
Top Gear
Capgemini Consulting: What is the
core premise of the “The Second
Machine Age”?
Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew
McAfee: There have been two big
turning points in human history. The
first was the industrial revolution, where
machines replaced muscle power. The
Second Machine Age is the time when
machines are now able to take over a lot
of cognitive tasks that humans can do.
It started roughly around the time IBM’s
Deep Blue computer in 1997 beat Gary
Kasparov in a chess match. That year
also witnessed median incomes peak
in the United States, and a subsequent
rise in productivity. The Second Machine
Age will be a bigger transformation and
have greater impact than even the first
industrial revolution.

Capgemini Consulting: What are
the defining characteristics of this
Second Machine Age?
Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew
McAfee: We see three defining trends
in the Second Machine Age.
The first is an exponential improvement in
computational power,communications
technologies, data storage and even
software. Some technologies are even
improving faster than Moore’s law
(Moore’s law is the observation that,
over the history of computing hardware,
the number of transistors on integrated
circuits doubles approximately every
two years).
The second characteristic of this age is
the digital nature of core technologies.
Digital technologies have unusual
economics compared to the economics
of atoms – they can be copied at
virtually zero cost, transmitted almost
instantaneously and resultant copies
are perfect, identical copies of the
original. The idea that you can perfectly
replicate goods for free, obviously
leads to some very unusual economics
compared to the “textbook” perception.
An increasing number of industries have
software at their core and, therefore, are
characterized by these economics of
digitization.

The third characteristic is the
combinatorial nature of innovation.
Digital innovations can be combined
and recombined to create even more
value. And that’s a very encouraging
thing; a larger base of inventions means
an even larger set of raw materials for
the next wave of innovations. This is
very unlike traditional inputs that yield
diminishing returns.

New Digital
Technologies, the
Industry and the
Neglect of Operations
Capgemini Consulting: From
an industry perspective, what
are the key technologies that
organizations should keep a close
eye on?
Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew
McAfee: We believe companies should
pay close attention to two areas when
it comes to technology development
– machine intelligence and the global
network of people and machines.
Machine intelligence is the idea that
by including different combinations of
digital technologies, we can now allow
machines to do cognitive tasks that
they could never have done before.
Take language and voice recognition.
For the very first time in history, we
can talk to our machines and have
them understand what we are saying
and carry out our instructions. People
have been working on language,
motor control and problem solving for
decades. However, very little progress
had been made until just the past 5 or
10 years, which is when things started
picking up very rapidly. And part of that
is due to the exponential improvement
in technologies, in particular the power
of Big Data.
Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee

The Second Machine Age
will have greater impact
than even the first
industrial revolution.
Similarly, robotics has greatly improved in
recent times and robots today are good
with both gross and fine motor control.
Take the example of Baxter – a twoarmed robot that operates at an hourly
rate of just $4! Or consider Google’s
self-driven car. A few years ago, it
would have been impossible to imagine
that machines could even accomplish
something like this. But today, we have
crossed that threshold. And finally,
machines have become remarkably
good at solving unstructured problems.
An example of that is what IBM’s Watson
did with the TV show “Jeopardy”. The
supercomputer defeated two of the
show’s greatest champions. Watson is
now being applied at call centers, for
legal advice, investment advice, medical
diagnosis, and many other kinds of
unstructured problems.

We believe
organizations should
focus on leveraging
technologies around
machine intelligence,
big data and connected
networks.
The other key area that we believe holds
great potential for both organizations
and the society at large is the
networking of all people on the globe.
For the first time in history, we are
networking together billions of brains,
all the humans on the planet, to solve

problems. In the past, only a relatively
small share of humanity was engaged in
problem solving. In the coming decades,
almost all of humanity can be partners
in this problem-solving enterprise. And
that will multiply the opportunities for
invention and innovation and creativity,
disproportionately, and will also lead to a
big acceleration in the rate of inventions.
Organizations need to tap into this
massive source of brainpower.
To summarize, we believe organizations
should focus on leveraging technologies
around machine intelligence, big data
and connected networks.
Capgemini Consulting: From
our research, we found very
few companies are exploiting
new digital technologies in their
operations. What is your take on
this?
Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew
McAfee: Indeed, we think that is the
most important challenge before us
– despite technology rushing ahead,
our organizations, societies and
governments are not adapting rapidly.
One of the key issues is that CXOs
don’t fully appreciate and understand
the power of these new technologies.
Many don’t even realize that they are in
the midst of this tidal wave of change.
There are some who realize it though.
However, they don’t know what to do
next. And finally, for those that initiate
change, the big challenge is in making
that change. So, for all those reasons,
we’re faced with lagging organizations
and institutions.

Jobs, Skills and
Wealth in the Second
Machine Age
Capgemini Consulting: Looking
forward, what is your view on the
impact of digital technology on
the economy?
Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew
McAfee: If you look at society as
a whole, there is a secret about
economics that people used to prefer

to ignore. However, we cannot brush
it under the carpet anymore. When a
technology increases wealth, there is
no guarantee that this abundance will
be shared evenly (or even that people
will secure any share of it). It’s possible
that some people would be made worse
off, not just in relative terms, but even
in absolute terms. And, unfortunately,
since about the late 1990s, that’s what’s
happened, not just in the United States,
but in almost every OECD country:
in France, in Japan, even in Sweden.
Inequality has grown significantly and
the median worker has not kept up,
and in many cases has fallen behind.
While there are many causes, three of
the most important ones are the way
technology creates winners and losers,
between high skill vs. low skill workers,
between capital and labor, and between
superstars and everyone else. Increased
inequality is not an inevitable outcome
of technology, but a combination of
technology and the state of our current
institutions. The challenge ahead of us
is to rethink our institutions so that we
get more people participating. We’re
optimistic that this can be done, but it’s
not going to happen automatically.

CXOs don’t fully
appreciate and
understand the power of
these new technologies.
Many don’t even realize
that they are in the
midst of this tidal wave
of change.
Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee

We cannot stop
technology from
destroying jobs.
The solution is to
harness technology to
simultaneously create
new and different jobs.

Capgemini Consulting: In “Race
Against the Machine”, you argued
that digital technologies were
destroying a sizeable chunk of
jobs. Do you still share this view?
Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew
McAfee: As we’ve said, and shown,
in our first book, digital technologies
are going to automate and eliminate
millions of jobs, even as digital creates
other jobs. And this trend will continue.
In fact, technology has always been
destroying jobs and has always been
creating jobs. The solution is not to try
to stop technology from destroying jobs.
The solution is to harness technology to
simultaneously create new and different
jobs. In the year 1800, over 90% of
Americans worked in agriculture,
on farms; by 1900, it was 42%; and
today, it’s less than 2%. All those jobs
in agriculture have been eliminated,
but those people didn’t become
unemployed. Instead, they found work
in new industries, from automobile
production to software creation.
Unfortunately, in the past 15 years, the
job destruction has continued, but we
have not created new jobs and new
industries equally fast.

We need to invent
ways of racing with the
machine, not against it.

The education industry
has been one of the
slowest ones to
incorporate technology.
Capgemini Consulting: How can
individual and organizational skills
be upgraded to compete in the
Second Machine Age?
Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew
McAfee: We have to transform our skills
as we always did in the past, but we have
to do it even faster. We have to start with
education. You can think of humans
as being engaged in a race between
education and technology for much
of the past two centuries. Sadly, the
education industry has been one of the
slowest ones to incorporate technology.
We are optimists, so we actually see that
as good news – it means we have a lot
of potential for improvement. The future
looks bright because we are nowhere
close to harnessing the true potential of
technology in education.
Capgemini Consulting: What is the
best way to resolve the growing
concern over loss of jobs and the
economic divide?
Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew
McAfee: We need to fix this. We
need to invent ways of racing with the
machine, not against it. Earlier we talked

about the example of Chess and how
Deep Blue defeated Gary Kasparov in
the World Chess Championship. The
World Chess Champion today is not
a machine. And it’s not a human. The
best chess player is a team of humans
and computers working together. A
team of humans and computers can
defeat any computer or any human
working alone. And that underscores
the point that humans and computers
have complementary and distinct skills
and capabilities that, when they work
together, can be more powerful than
they are individually.
Capgemini Consulting: What are
some areas where technology can
be used to improve education?
Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew
McAfee: In this context, Massive Open
Online Courses (MOOCs) have a major
role to play. MOOCs can do two big
things. First, they can replicate the best
teachers, methods, course materials to
thousands or even millions of people,
just as we saw in media, entertainment,
software and other industries. Second,
and more importantly, the digitization of
education creates opportunities to apply
Big Data analytics to better measure
student patterns and behavior online.
Key insights obtained from such analysis
can be used to enhance the quality of
education. (For more information on how
MOOCs are transforming education,
please refer to our interview with Anant
Agarwal, President of edX – a not-forprofit organization founded by Harvard
and the MIT.)
Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee

We are going to see the
rise of many new types
of organizations; one
example is what we call
‘micro-multi-nationals’.

Visualizing the Digital
Future
Capgemini Consulting: Does
growing machine intelligence
and the fact that everybody is
networked lead to a new type of
digital organization?
Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew
McAfee: Yes, we are going to see the
rise of many new types of organizations.
One example is what we call ‘micro-multinationals’. Today, half a dozen people
can market and distribute their products
and services to the entire world through
the Internet instantaneously. That is
something we’ve never seen before in
history. And they will network together
with other micro-multi-nationals, with
medium-sized companies and with big
companies to coordinate production.
You can have what we call ‘scale
without mass’ –basically companies
that reach globally, but have relatively
few employees. Facebook or Instagram
are examples of such companies.
But that is only one part of future
organizational evolution. For instance,
the digitization of the economy that we
talked about earlier is leading to much
lower marginal costs, and that inherently
creates enormous economies of scale.
There are also tremendous network
effects, which also would create

demand-side economies of scale.
Those tend to favor big companies like
Google and Apple and other companies
that have global reach. There will be
many different types of winners in the
Second Machine Age.
Capgemini Consulting: What is
the key takeaway that you want
organizations and individuals
to bear in mind as they prepare
themselves for the Second
Machine Age?
Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew
McAfee: The pace of technology
development is going to continue to
accelerate exponentially. More cognitive
tasks will be automated and done by
machines. The last ten years were pretty
rough. The next ten years will be even
more disruptive.
If organizations and individuals just go
on autopilot and don’t pay attention,
we could easily end up with a society
with a tremendous concentration of
wealth and income. Then, it will not be
the 1%, but the 1% of the 1%, the onehundredth of one percent, that ends up
with superstar incomes; but the majority
of people will not participate in that
global abundance, A ‘digital elite’ will
thrive in the Second Machine Age. The
rest would be left behind unless they
are quick to learn new technologies and
work “with” the machines.
The continuing advances in technology
are in some ways easy to predict.
But the way our organizations and
individuals respond – that is a choice,
not a predetermined outcome. As
we say in our book, technology is not
destiny; we shape our destiny. We can
make the choices based on our values.
We need to make the right ones.

The last ten years were
pretty rough. The next
ten years will be even
more disruptive.
Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee

References
1	

http://www.amazon.com/The-Second-Machine-Age-Technologies/dp/0393239357
Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee

Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee
MIT Center for Digital Business

Erik Brynjolfsson is the Director of the MIT Center for Digital Business and Andrew McAfee
is a Principal Research Scientist at the Center. Erik and Andrew are widely-acknowledged
thought leaders on technology evolution and co-authors of the 2011 book, “Race Against
the Machine: How the Digital Revolution is Accelerating Innovation, Driving Productivity,
and Irreversibly Transforming Employment and the Economy”. They have now written a
new book, “The Second Machine Age: Work, Progress, and Prosperity in a Time of Brilliant
Technologies”, which is scheduled for release in early 20141. We spoke with Erik and
Andrew to understand their thinking on digital technologies, how they are likely to evolve,
and what this means for individuals, society and organizations.

About Capgemini
Capgemini Consulting is the global strategy and transformation
consulting organization of the Capgemini Group, specializing
in advising and supporting enterprises in significant
transformation, from innovative strategy to execution and with
an unstinting focus on results. With the new digital economy
creating significant disruptions and opportunities, our global
team of over 3,600 talented individuals work with leading
companies and governments to master Digital Transformation,
drawing on our understanding of the digital economy and
our leadership in business transformation and organizational
change.

With around 120,000 people in 40 countries, Capgemini is one
of the world’s foremost providers of consulting, technology
and outsourcing services. The Group reported 2011 global
revenues of EUR 9.7 billion. Together with its clients, Capgemini
creates and delivers business and technology solutions that
fit their needs and drive the results they want. A deeply
multicultural organization, Capgemini has developed its own
way of working, the Collaborative Business ExperienceTM, and
draws on Rightshore®, its worldwide delivery model.
Learn more about us
at www.capgemini.com.

Find out more at:
http://www.capgemini-consulting.com/
Rightshore® is a trademark belonging to Capgemini

Contacts

Didier Bonnet, didier.bonnet@capgemini.com

Jerome Buvat, jerome.buvat@capgemini.com

Capgemini Consulting is the strategy and transformation consulting brand of Capgemini Group. The information contained in this document is proprietary.
© 2013 Capgemini. All rights reserved.

More Related Content

The Second Machine Age: An Industrial Revolution Powered by Digital Technologies

  • 1. An interview with Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee MIT Center for Digital Business The Second Machine Age: An Industrial Revolution Powered by Digital Technologies Transform to the power of digital
  • 2. Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee The Second Machine Age is the time when machines are now able to take over a lot of cognitive tasks that humans can do. Erik Andrew Brynjolfsson McAfee Director of the MIT Center for Digital Business Principal Research Scientist at MIT Center for Digital Business Technology in Top Gear Capgemini Consulting: What is the core premise of the “The Second Machine Age”? Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee: There have been two big turning points in human history. The first was the industrial revolution, where machines replaced muscle power. The Second Machine Age is the time when machines are now able to take over a lot of cognitive tasks that humans can do. It started roughly around the time IBM’s Deep Blue computer in 1997 beat Gary Kasparov in a chess match. That year also witnessed median incomes peak in the United States, and a subsequent rise in productivity. The Second Machine Age will be a bigger transformation and have greater impact than even the first industrial revolution. Capgemini Consulting: What are the defining characteristics of this Second Machine Age? Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee: We see three defining trends in the Second Machine Age. The first is an exponential improvement in computational power,communications technologies, data storage and even software. Some technologies are even improving faster than Moore’s law (Moore’s law is the observation that, over the history of computing hardware, the number of transistors on integrated circuits doubles approximately every two years). The second characteristic of this age is the digital nature of core technologies. Digital technologies have unusual economics compared to the economics of atoms – they can be copied at virtually zero cost, transmitted almost instantaneously and resultant copies are perfect, identical copies of the original. The idea that you can perfectly replicate goods for free, obviously leads to some very unusual economics compared to the “textbook” perception. An increasing number of industries have software at their core and, therefore, are characterized by these economics of digitization. The third characteristic is the combinatorial nature of innovation. Digital innovations can be combined and recombined to create even more value. And that’s a very encouraging thing; a larger base of inventions means an even larger set of raw materials for the next wave of innovations. This is very unlike traditional inputs that yield diminishing returns. New Digital Technologies, the Industry and the Neglect of Operations Capgemini Consulting: From an industry perspective, what are the key technologies that organizations should keep a close eye on? Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee: We believe companies should pay close attention to two areas when it comes to technology development – machine intelligence and the global network of people and machines. Machine intelligence is the idea that by including different combinations of digital technologies, we can now allow machines to do cognitive tasks that they could never have done before. Take language and voice recognition. For the very first time in history, we can talk to our machines and have them understand what we are saying and carry out our instructions. People have been working on language, motor control and problem solving for decades. However, very little progress had been made until just the past 5 or 10 years, which is when things started picking up very rapidly. And part of that is due to the exponential improvement in technologies, in particular the power of Big Data.
  • 3. Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee The Second Machine Age will have greater impact than even the first industrial revolution. Similarly, robotics has greatly improved in recent times and robots today are good with both gross and fine motor control. Take the example of Baxter – a twoarmed robot that operates at an hourly rate of just $4! Or consider Google’s self-driven car. A few years ago, it would have been impossible to imagine that machines could even accomplish something like this. But today, we have crossed that threshold. And finally, machines have become remarkably good at solving unstructured problems. An example of that is what IBM’s Watson did with the TV show “Jeopardy”. The supercomputer defeated two of the show’s greatest champions. Watson is now being applied at call centers, for legal advice, investment advice, medical diagnosis, and many other kinds of unstructured problems. We believe organizations should focus on leveraging technologies around machine intelligence, big data and connected networks. The other key area that we believe holds great potential for both organizations and the society at large is the networking of all people on the globe. For the first time in history, we are networking together billions of brains, all the humans on the planet, to solve problems. In the past, only a relatively small share of humanity was engaged in problem solving. In the coming decades, almost all of humanity can be partners in this problem-solving enterprise. And that will multiply the opportunities for invention and innovation and creativity, disproportionately, and will also lead to a big acceleration in the rate of inventions. Organizations need to tap into this massive source of brainpower. To summarize, we believe organizations should focus on leveraging technologies around machine intelligence, big data and connected networks. Capgemini Consulting: From our research, we found very few companies are exploiting new digital technologies in their operations. What is your take on this? Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee: Indeed, we think that is the most important challenge before us – despite technology rushing ahead, our organizations, societies and governments are not adapting rapidly. One of the key issues is that CXOs don’t fully appreciate and understand the power of these new technologies. Many don’t even realize that they are in the midst of this tidal wave of change. There are some who realize it though. However, they don’t know what to do next. And finally, for those that initiate change, the big challenge is in making that change. So, for all those reasons, we’re faced with lagging organizations and institutions. Jobs, Skills and Wealth in the Second Machine Age Capgemini Consulting: Looking forward, what is your view on the impact of digital technology on the economy? Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee: If you look at society as a whole, there is a secret about economics that people used to prefer to ignore. However, we cannot brush it under the carpet anymore. When a technology increases wealth, there is no guarantee that this abundance will be shared evenly (or even that people will secure any share of it). It’s possible that some people would be made worse off, not just in relative terms, but even in absolute terms. And, unfortunately, since about the late 1990s, that’s what’s happened, not just in the United States, but in almost every OECD country: in France, in Japan, even in Sweden. Inequality has grown significantly and the median worker has not kept up, and in many cases has fallen behind. While there are many causes, three of the most important ones are the way technology creates winners and losers, between high skill vs. low skill workers, between capital and labor, and between superstars and everyone else. Increased inequality is not an inevitable outcome of technology, but a combination of technology and the state of our current institutions. The challenge ahead of us is to rethink our institutions so that we get more people participating. We’re optimistic that this can be done, but it’s not going to happen automatically. CXOs don’t fully appreciate and understand the power of these new technologies. Many don’t even realize that they are in the midst of this tidal wave of change.
  • 4. Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee We cannot stop technology from destroying jobs. The solution is to harness technology to simultaneously create new and different jobs. Capgemini Consulting: In “Race Against the Machine”, you argued that digital technologies were destroying a sizeable chunk of jobs. Do you still share this view? Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee: As we’ve said, and shown, in our first book, digital technologies are going to automate and eliminate millions of jobs, even as digital creates other jobs. And this trend will continue. In fact, technology has always been destroying jobs and has always been creating jobs. The solution is not to try to stop technology from destroying jobs. The solution is to harness technology to simultaneously create new and different jobs. In the year 1800, over 90% of Americans worked in agriculture, on farms; by 1900, it was 42%; and today, it’s less than 2%. All those jobs in agriculture have been eliminated, but those people didn’t become unemployed. Instead, they found work in new industries, from automobile production to software creation. Unfortunately, in the past 15 years, the job destruction has continued, but we have not created new jobs and new industries equally fast. We need to invent ways of racing with the machine, not against it. The education industry has been one of the slowest ones to incorporate technology. Capgemini Consulting: How can individual and organizational skills be upgraded to compete in the Second Machine Age? Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee: We have to transform our skills as we always did in the past, but we have to do it even faster. We have to start with education. You can think of humans as being engaged in a race between education and technology for much of the past two centuries. Sadly, the education industry has been one of the slowest ones to incorporate technology. We are optimists, so we actually see that as good news – it means we have a lot of potential for improvement. The future looks bright because we are nowhere close to harnessing the true potential of technology in education. Capgemini Consulting: What is the best way to resolve the growing concern over loss of jobs and the economic divide? Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee: We need to fix this. We need to invent ways of racing with the machine, not against it. Earlier we talked about the example of Chess and how Deep Blue defeated Gary Kasparov in the World Chess Championship. The World Chess Champion today is not a machine. And it’s not a human. The best chess player is a team of humans and computers working together. A team of humans and computers can defeat any computer or any human working alone. And that underscores the point that humans and computers have complementary and distinct skills and capabilities that, when they work together, can be more powerful than they are individually. Capgemini Consulting: What are some areas where technology can be used to improve education? Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee: In this context, Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs) have a major role to play. MOOCs can do two big things. First, they can replicate the best teachers, methods, course materials to thousands or even millions of people, just as we saw in media, entertainment, software and other industries. Second, and more importantly, the digitization of education creates opportunities to apply Big Data analytics to better measure student patterns and behavior online. Key insights obtained from such analysis can be used to enhance the quality of education. (For more information on how MOOCs are transforming education, please refer to our interview with Anant Agarwal, President of edX – a not-forprofit organization founded by Harvard and the MIT.)
  • 5. Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee We are going to see the rise of many new types of organizations; one example is what we call ‘micro-multi-nationals’. Visualizing the Digital Future Capgemini Consulting: Does growing machine intelligence and the fact that everybody is networked lead to a new type of digital organization? Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee: Yes, we are going to see the rise of many new types of organizations. One example is what we call ‘micro-multinationals’. Today, half a dozen people can market and distribute their products and services to the entire world through the Internet instantaneously. That is something we’ve never seen before in history. And they will network together with other micro-multi-nationals, with medium-sized companies and with big companies to coordinate production. You can have what we call ‘scale without mass’ –basically companies that reach globally, but have relatively few employees. Facebook or Instagram are examples of such companies. But that is only one part of future organizational evolution. For instance, the digitization of the economy that we talked about earlier is leading to much lower marginal costs, and that inherently creates enormous economies of scale. There are also tremendous network effects, which also would create demand-side economies of scale. Those tend to favor big companies like Google and Apple and other companies that have global reach. There will be many different types of winners in the Second Machine Age. Capgemini Consulting: What is the key takeaway that you want organizations and individuals to bear in mind as they prepare themselves for the Second Machine Age? Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee: The pace of technology development is going to continue to accelerate exponentially. More cognitive tasks will be automated and done by machines. The last ten years were pretty rough. The next ten years will be even more disruptive. If organizations and individuals just go on autopilot and don’t pay attention, we could easily end up with a society with a tremendous concentration of wealth and income. Then, it will not be the 1%, but the 1% of the 1%, the onehundredth of one percent, that ends up with superstar incomes; but the majority of people will not participate in that global abundance, A ‘digital elite’ will thrive in the Second Machine Age. The rest would be left behind unless they are quick to learn new technologies and work “with” the machines. The continuing advances in technology are in some ways easy to predict. But the way our organizations and individuals respond – that is a choice, not a predetermined outcome. As we say in our book, technology is not destiny; we shape our destiny. We can make the choices based on our values. We need to make the right ones. The last ten years were pretty rough. The next ten years will be even more disruptive.
  • 6. Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee References 1 http://www.amazon.com/The-Second-Machine-Age-Technologies/dp/0393239357
  • 7. Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee MIT Center for Digital Business Erik Brynjolfsson is the Director of the MIT Center for Digital Business and Andrew McAfee is a Principal Research Scientist at the Center. Erik and Andrew are widely-acknowledged thought leaders on technology evolution and co-authors of the 2011 book, “Race Against the Machine: How the Digital Revolution is Accelerating Innovation, Driving Productivity, and Irreversibly Transforming Employment and the Economy”. They have now written a new book, “The Second Machine Age: Work, Progress, and Prosperity in a Time of Brilliant Technologies”, which is scheduled for release in early 20141. We spoke with Erik and Andrew to understand their thinking on digital technologies, how they are likely to evolve, and what this means for individuals, society and organizations. About Capgemini Capgemini Consulting is the global strategy and transformation consulting organization of the Capgemini Group, specializing in advising and supporting enterprises in significant transformation, from innovative strategy to execution and with an unstinting focus on results. With the new digital economy creating significant disruptions and opportunities, our global team of over 3,600 talented individuals work with leading companies and governments to master Digital Transformation, drawing on our understanding of the digital economy and our leadership in business transformation and organizational change. With around 120,000 people in 40 countries, Capgemini is one of the world’s foremost providers of consulting, technology and outsourcing services. The Group reported 2011 global revenues of EUR 9.7 billion. Together with its clients, Capgemini creates and delivers business and technology solutions that fit their needs and drive the results they want. A deeply multicultural organization, Capgemini has developed its own way of working, the Collaborative Business ExperienceTM, and draws on Rightshore®, its worldwide delivery model. Learn more about us at www.capgemini.com. Find out more at: http://www.capgemini-consulting.com/ Rightshore® is a trademark belonging to Capgemini Contacts Didier Bonnet, didier.bonnet@capgemini.com Jerome Buvat, jerome.buvat@capgemini.com Capgemini Consulting is the strategy and transformation consulting brand of Capgemini Group. The information contained in this document is proprietary. © 2013 Capgemini. All rights reserved.