I woke up this morning and did what I do most mornings, reached for my iPhone sitting next to my bed to start catching up on what I missed while I was sleeping. Let's see, a few Twitter DM's (handily sent to SMS) to answer, a few Facebook comments (SMS again) and mail, a couple of txt messages that didn't wake me up, notifications from Gowalla and FourSquare, a txt from Ribbit of a voice mail I missed last night...stumble into the kitchen for a Monster drink and then sit down at the MacBook to give Twitter a better look, check in on Facebook and flip through Netnewswire for interesting info to read and post to Twitter, work on a blog post idea, a quick check of email (ugh, a couple of hundred piled up since yesterday) and the day's started. After some breakfast I have to take my daughters to Barnes and Noble (I can't convince them to switch to a Kindle, my preferred always connected reading device) so throw iPhone in 1 pocket, Blackberry in the other...OK, yes I'm an extreme case but lets face it, more and more, we're connected to our networks all the time. In a recent IDC survey 40.3% of respondents reported using a smart phone at least 2 times per workday to connect to the Internet (source IDC Nov 2009, n=4710, US based). Two years ago in another US based survey of the ~32% of respondents that used the Internet on a mobile device they spent an average of 45 hours per week online, 38 stationary and 7 hours per week on the mobile (n=3176) (and I'm sure that number has gone up since 2008). According to Neilsen Online in 2008 roughly 72.5% of the total US population used the Internet (or 220,141,969 people) increasing to 74.1% in 2009 (227,719,000 people). That would make mobile users 70,445,430 people in 2008 and 91,770, 757 people in 2009. With the expansion of wifi, especially of free wifi, which is now getting very available even at 30K feet as more and more airlines add support, and the ability to connect extends almost everywhere.
As the general population becomes more mobile, as we become more and more connected through the social web and as the lines between business and personal get blurrier are we moving to a place where we are in fact, always connected. "Always" is relative of course, I mean, people do still disconnect at times, even the most connected of us run away for a short periods. It seems to me though, that the disconnected time gets less and less. Now I know that I'm affected but what I call the "edges" effect...people who live on the edges of the US in general, seem to be early adopters of technology (and no, I have no scientific or survey data to support this theory, just a lot of years observing that behavior). I remember during the Internet bubble using Webvan. I loved Webvan, you ordered groceries online and they showed up at your house; you could even save the shopping list and just reorder it each week (or whatever period you wanted)...fantastic really. Kozmo.com was another great one, you ordered just about anything from them and they'd deliver...videos, sandwiches, whatever you wanted. Order and their army of moped enabled delivery people mobilized to procure and deliver! I remember trying to explain these to friends and relatives in other parts of the country and mostly all I got were blank stares...I think my mom believed it was some sort of plot to get her to eat old produce or something. Lesson learned, what sounds good in San Francisco may not sound that way to the middle of the US. I've learned to use that as a sort of litmus of start up ideas, "what would they say about the idea in Cleveland, Kansas City or some other middle of the country city", just to see if its something that has a prayer of getting to any sort of widespread adoption.
Anyway, I'm rambling, back to the topic of hyper-connectivity. Individually we are more and more connected, both to the Internet and through the internet / social web to each other. That connectivity moves easily over to the business world. Businesses are interconnected to supply chain, partners, employees, customers and even competitors. This interdependence or ecosystem, has very different modes of interaction than independent people, businesses, etc. Independent organizations focus internally, interdependent organizations must focus externally. This is one of the fundamental changes that are creeping into businesses today and part of the foundation of the transition to a social business. Hyper-connectivity opens us up to more, different and better ways of interacting and collaborating. It also can strain old paradigms and stress old modes of interaction (maybe that falls in the "progress has its price" bucket). For me, adjusting to hyper-connectivity has not really required any effort but I suppose some of us will find the price too high.


