Google has been a revelation, all the answers you need at your fingertips, or so it would seem.
What is the consequence of this instant question gratification?
Do we ask better questions, or just more superficial ones?
Does the volume of questions we ask, to which there are instant answers, substitute for the value of the fewer but deeper questions we used to ask?
My clients and those in my networks hear me rambling on about what I regard as the key to success. That single characteristic I have seen in all successful people I have known, and watched from a distance. Yes, they are all smart, and yes, they are all motivated to success, but underlaying those two factors is a third characteristic:
Curiosity.
I have never seen someone who is smart, and successful, who is not also curious. I have also seen many who have both of those characteristics, but are not successful. Generally, they strike me as not being also curious.
I use Google and Wikipedia every day to answer questions that emerge as I service clients and write this blog, but neither offers the catalyst to a post. That catalyst is curiosity, sated by the deep but selective ‘backgrounding’ I do of books, podcasts, blogs, journals, and absorbing informed commentary.
They are where the catalysts are hidden, uncovered by curiosity.
Social media, Google and Wikipedia specifically have sated our curiosity at a superficial level. No longer do we have to search for answers to questions, they are dished out for us, making life easy, but reflecting the superficiality of the answers to the superficial questions we ask.
Are our lives better because of this ability to get immediate answers to questions?
Undoubtedly yes, but are the questions as useful, offering the deep insights found as we used to dig around for answers, often finding that the initial question was inadequate, superficial, or simply the wrong question.
I like books, my car is a mobile library from which I can consume from a menu of offers in the idle moments between the busy times out of my home office. The one I pick at any time is most likely the one that relates to a question on my mind at that time, or that throws light on a topic of current interest.
Thanks Google and Wikipedia, you have made my life easier, both because I can find the answers to superficial questions, and because most of my competitors stop there, at the superficial.
You need books to go deep.
google and the like can very easily encourage laziness – curiosity takes effort!
I have found that curiosity is a habit.
When I wrote the first post for this blog way back in march 2009, I wondered where the second would come from.
it was a struggle, that has become easier as time goes on, as I see ideas, situations, and am asked questions that can become posts everywhere I look.
Curiosity can become a habit!!