Last week I had a pre-training meeting with a manager from a MNC having its office in a premium co-working space in Bengaluru. The reception was automated wherein visitors had to key in the details through a tab. I was told by the receptionist that the concerned manager has neither put a request for a visitor nor his name is in the approved client list. As a result, the access gate could not be opened. I spoke with the manager over phone who later came down and escorted me to his first-floor office.
Two days later he sent me a calendar invite for the training program which was scheduled at 9.00 AM in the boardroom at the ground floor. I reached the venue at 8.30 AM. This time I could overcome the first hurdle and get past through the access point. However, the boardroom door could not open. I was told by the security officer that manager of the co-working space Geeta was yet to come. At 8.50 AM Geeta turned up and said, “This is a fully automated and a state-of-the-art co-working space and the lights with LCD projector in the board room shall get activated only at 9.30 AM for which OTP from the registered mobile needs to be shared.” “What do I do till then?” Geeta replied, “as a special case, I shall arrange to get the board room open, without lights though; you can be comfortable there or else you can occupy any of the workstations outside.”
My purpose of reaching before time was to check the connectivity issues with TV, LCD projector etc. For 45 minutes, I literally did nothing. A few participants tried to figure out chairs in the dark room. In fact, one of them had the audacity to ask, “by the way, is it a Value-Selling program or one on meditation?” Others loitered around for a while. With the OTP and the fully automated housekeeping program meeting their desired objectives, the boardroom came to life at 9.30 AM.
At 1.15 PM as the training program was in full swing, there was a power outage for a minute. Geeta was kind enough to say, “this is as per our protocol and you may face a similar outage at 4.30 PM just for a minute; but no need to worry.”
In his book Sane Society published in 1995, Erick Fromm has said that with the increasing use of technology, human beings are prone to suffer from alienation. A feeling of helplessness may creep into people without any scope of a free will. Alienation happens due to Commodification and Abstractification. The former is a feeling of being used as a commodity and the latter is about equating life with numbers.
There are numbers which are put around every activity to determine whether you are efficient or not. If you are meeting your KRAs/KPIs you are in the system; else you are not. Even if you come by 8.30AM, the system does not care till it gets its OTP at a designated time of 9.30 AM.
All these years; preparing for a training program at a conference hall was a simple task. The door could be opened without access control; the lights could be switched on manually and the banquet manager deputed the housekeeping people for AC and other amenities.
Erich Fromm examines man’s escape into overconformity and the danger of robotism in a contemporary industrial society. Modern humanity has been alienated from the world of their own creation. Sane Society was published in 1995 and his predictions were prophetic.
All these years my main concern prior to any training program was about an alignment between the trainer’s preparation and the participants’ expectations. Now I am more worried whether I would be able to get into the conference hall before time and what happens if I were to forget my mobile or the battery gets discharged and unable to receive and share the OTP?
Adlai Stevenson (the former US Ambassador to the UN from 1961-65) has succinctly put it, ‘We are not in the danger of becoming slaves any more, but of becoming robots.’ (Sane Society-1955). With iOT, AI, and ChatGPT bundled into a smartphone, I am wondering who is the REAL robot after all!!

Rajan, You depicted the harsh reality, which is giving more scorch day by day.
What’s the real use of Technology?, is the question for the mankind in this millennium.
What you say Pramod is quite relevant. With the onslaught of technology and unbridled consumerism and rising inequality it is difficult to reverse the trend.
Dear Rajan Sir, you have wonderfully articulated the plight of technology as a pill stuck in the throat, unable to swallow or spit it out. When common sense is treated as bumpkin knowledge while such setups glorified as complex eliteness, we are left wondering whether to laugh or cry.
Appreciate your feedback Sharmila; to keep oneself sane is going to be a herculean task. Likewise you may find comments from Aalhad my son and my response echoing your thoughts.
Thank you for sharing your nearly-Kafkaesque anecdote, which is also a cautionary tale for the times we live in. I concur with your quote from ‘Sane society’. It appears as if greater connectivity among devices has led to a greater disconnect among humans.
A friend of mine went to a restaurant in Bangalore where the only way to order food was through their app. His phone’s app-store didn’t support the app as it was not available in the US market (where the phone was purchased). Consequently, he was unable to order food as the restaurant did not carry a paper menu.
I am of the opinion that every “smart” device needs a “dumb” backup. It would be almost dystopian if the light bulbs in my home couldn’t turn on because an app on my phone was updating (when a conventional switch would’ve sufficed).
Well said, Aalhad. I have experienced a similar incident in a restaurant in Bangalore where I had to walk out and get elsewhere.