Computerworld - CIOs frequently invite me to give presentations to their management teams or to facilitate retreats. I'm always amazed by how many of the managers in those sessions feel compelled to answer their cell phones or monitor their "crack-berries" during those few short hours.
I could tell you that this is the cost of competing in the blistering marketplace of the 24/7 economy, that it's the inevitable result of globalization or that the participants in those meetings are just important people. But I don't believe that pathological connectedness is caused by any of these things.
I suspect that managers' rationalization for this sort of behavior falls into four categories:
Neediness. The staff needs constant access to the boss in order to remain at peak productivity. They need immediate decisions. The boss needs a constant flow of status information. Without access, work stops.
Responsiveness. If the boss doesn't respond to the staff quickly enough, he will be viewed as aloof, uncaring or disengaged. Remaining in constant touch symbolizes the value that the boss places on the staff.
Connectedness. Supervisor and staff form an intimate community. If the boss disconnects from the collective, he will be lost.
Relationships. The boss is at the center of a network of relationships and must constantly monitor and manage the expectations of all the stakeholders. New technology has raised the expectations of the speed of communication, so he must respond to everyone immediately in order to maintain productive relationships.
While each of these has some validity, I suspect that they are more excuses than explanations. This sort of behavior is really a symptom of a deeper problem: connection addiction.
Dictionary.com offers one definition of addiction as "the condition of being habitually or compulsively occupied with or involved in something." Here, connectivity is the pathological something.
This connection fixation can arise for a number of reasons:
Ego. What could be a better ego stroke than having a constant line of people waiting outside your electronic door? It's very satisfying to be needed.
Mistrust of staff. Many managers fear that if they are out of touch, their staff will be either unable or unwilling to continue working. On one hand, they may assume that their people are incapable of working without constant supervision. On the other, they may assume that their people are inherently devious. Some may even believe both.
Sense of importance. That feeling of being the indispensable man is a great high. It's great to be "in the loop," constantly "in the know."
Confusion about the real role of a manager.


- Excel 2010 Cheat Sheet
- Register for this Computerworld Insider Cheat Sheet and gain access to hundreds of premium content articles, guides, product reviews and more.
- The CFO Guide to Budgeting Software
- A mid-sized business needs the same financial performance control and measurement capabilities as a large corporation, but in a solution that's affordable, easy...
- Transition from Spreadsheet Budgets to Packaged Application
- This white paper details the problems that go with spreadsheet-based budgeting as well as the advantages of packaged applications. It also proposes a...
- Better Cash Flow Management: Recession-Proof Your Business
- Cash is the lifeblood of most small to mid-sized organizations. So why rely on error-prone spreadsheets for forecasting cash flow and risk making...
- Centage/IOMA Budgeting Survey: Benchmarks and Issues
- How are other financial professionals dealing with the issues you face? This report offers you an inside peak into what the minds at...
- Is Your Database Ready For Your Company's Future?
- This brochure is targeted to executives and will cover all the business benefits of DB2. All Management and Careers White Papers
- Live Webcast
A Geek's Guide to Presenting to Business People - Live Webcast: Wednesday, June 20th at 1:00 PM EDT
Join this live webinar with Paul Glen, author of Leading Geeks, to learn how to... - Operational Analytics - Changing the Competitive Dynamics of the Business
- Date/Time: June 5, 2012, 11:00 a.m., EDT, 4:00 p.m. BST / 3:00 p.m. UTC
Please join us for this webcast, as Dr. Barry... - A Geek's Guide to Presenting to Business People
- Live Webcast: Wednesday, June 20th at 1:00 PM EDT
Join this live webinar with Paul Glen, author of Leading Geeks, to learn how to... - Shifting Application Dynamics Impact Performance Management
- Curtis Franklin, Contributing Editor at InformationWeek, interviews Alain Cohen, OPNET's President and CTO, regarding trends in application performance management (APM), how organizations are...
- Integrated IT Operations Management in the Cloud
- Join award-winning technology editor Stan Gibson and Andrew White, CMO at BMC, to learn how asset management and service management are converging and...
- Distributed Database Security with Real-time Monitoring
- View this demo and learn how IBM InfoSphere Guardium database activity monitoring can help protect your sensitive data in distributed DBMS environments with... All Management and Careers Webcasts
How does your salary compare with your peers? Find out using our Smart Salary Tool.