In a world full of buzzwords like "Digital Transformation", "Industry 4.0" and "Disruption" we sometimes forget the most important thing: At the end of every technology is a human being. A person who wants to do his job. A person who wants to go home to his family. A person who wants to be understood – not overwhelmed by a system.
This article is a plea. For digitalization that does not replace people, but empowers them. For technology that connects instead of isolated. For software that feels like it was made for people – because it is.
The question we rarely ask ourselves
When companies talk about digitalization, I always hear the same words: efficiency. Productivity. Cost reduction. ROI.
It's important. Everything's right. But is that really all?
Let me ask another question: **Why do we actually digitize? **
The quick answer: "To remain competitive." The honest answer is more complicated.
We digitize because we believe that technology can make our lives better. That she gives us time for what is really important. That she solves problems that frustrate us. That she creates possibilities that were unthinkable beforehand.
But how often do we really achieve this?
The uncomfortable truth
Hand on the heart: How many software systems do you use daily, which really make you enjoy? They feel like they're done for you?
I guess a few.
Instead, we fight with systems that nobody understands. With processes that no one needs. With surfaces nobody finds beautiful. With training that no one can keep.
We digitized. But did we improve?
The answer is too often: no. We have replaced analogue problems with digital. We exchanged paper stacks by email fluffing. We have replaced personal conversations with ticket systems.
This is not the digitalization we dream about. That's not the technology we deserve.
When technology builds bridges
But it's different. There are software that really helps people. The bridges are building walls. It connects instead of separates.
Let me tell three examples.
The app that makes parents sleep quieter
A young mother is up at night, for the fourth time this week. The baby sleeps peacefully – but the baby monitor has triggered false alarm again. She's tired, frustrated, at the end of her powers.
Today there is an app on your phone. She realizes if the baby really cries or if it was just a noise from outside. She only wakes the mother if it is really necessary. She shows live video, she allows two-way communication, she gives security.
"The first night with the app I slept 6 hours a bit", writes a user. *"Since birth for the first time. I cried before relief." *
This is technology that makes a difference. Not because they are especially clev
About the author
Groenewold IT Solutions
Softwareentwicklung & Digitalisierung
Praxiserprobte Einblicke aus Projekten rund um individuelle Softwareentwicklung, Integration, Modernisierung und Betrieb – mit Fokus auf messbare Ergebnisse und nachhaltige Architektur.
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