Author: Michael P. Regan
Associated Press - September 2003
Corporate Big Shots Get High-Tech Tutors
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NEW YORK (AP)--She often meets her powerful clients on nights
and on weekends, when no one is around. Some of them insist
she call only on their cell phones, fearing the loose lips
of secretaries.
Yet there is nothing unsavory about Jennifer Shaheen's line
of work.
Shaheen, 32, is a computer tutor to corporate big shots,
giving pointers in the fine arts of opening E-mail attachments,
navigating Excel spreadsheets and performing other PC chores
the executives' minions probably can do in their sleep.
"You'd be surprised by what they don't know," Shaheen
says. "And they're not comfortable asking the IT person
in their company because then they show weakness to their
staff."
Now that the computer revolution is over--and it's clear
the computers won--some senior executives are in the embarrassing
position of being perched atop the corporate ladder without
knowing their apps from their elbows.
"It used to be a badge of honor to say, 'Everyone
knows how to use the computer, but I don't know how to turn
it on.' Now they say, 'I need help,'" says Gerald Cullen,
a Gainesville, Fla., consultant who offers confidential,
$50-an-hour technology training to executives.
Much of the ineptitude is blamed on doting secretaries
who handle e-mail and other computer chores for their bosses,
computer trainers say. And executives often are too embarrassed
and intimidated to attend computer classes with clerks and
secretaries.
"These secretaries were typing with 15 fingers and
the poor executives were looking for the 'X' key and the
'Y' key," recalls Hossein Bidgoli, a California State
University-Bakersfield professor who also teaches computers
to executives.
IBM Corp. has even poked fun at this type of technophobia
with a TV commercial featuring the "executivus obsoletus"--a
dark-suited manager who worries he's becoming extinct by
not keeping up with technology. He's shown on exhibit in
a museum with dinosaurs and woolly mammoths.
Ian Colley, a spokesman for IBM's consulting arm, says
top executives often make ease-of-use a priority in products
they seek for themselves.
When a company has many units involved in different types
of business, all functioning on a variety of computer platforms,
top executives can be overwhelmed. They want what Colley
calls a simple "corporate dashboard"--showing
at a glance how their business is operating in real time.
But some need more remedial help.
Shaheen says one client literally didn't know how to turn
on his laptop. So when training her clients, she starts
with the basics, physically opening and closing a filing
cabinet to explain how computer files are organized within
Windows.
Though not all clients require that sort of training, it's
exactly this type of non-techie approach that attracts executives
to personal technology coaches.
Michael Gallin, a partner in the New York construction
company John Gallin & Son, Inc., is one of Shaheen's
few clients willing to publicly admit to needing her services.
He says he was only taking advantage of about 10 percent
of programs like Excel, Microsoft Outlook and Timberline
project management software.
"There are people here who know the system, but they're
busy," Gallin says. "They run over and solve the
problem, rather than show you how to do it. They hit eight
buttons before you know what they did."
Shaheen calls her soft-touch approach "technology
therapy," and the logo for her small company, e-businesscreations,
features a caricature of a computer resting on a therapist's
couch. For $750 a month, an executive gets two hours of
training, two one-hour phone calls and E-mail support.
It's unclear if there is enough business to expand the
practice greatly beyond the clients she already has--about
a dozen executives who range from small entrepreneurs to
heads of large public companies.
Pat Galagan of the American Society for Training and Development
says she hasn't heard of a great demand for this type of
coaching, though there does appear to be a growing demand
for personal coaching in other business areas.
But others see a potential.
"I don't think they (executives) want to broadcast
their lack of techno-savvy across their business,"
said Lane Kramer, president of the CEO Institute, a Texas-based
networking group of 225 presidents and CEOs. "So they're
going to be discreet and low-key about bringing someone
in."
Shaheen has a message for all the busy bosses struggling
to understand the perpetual stream of software updates and
patches, viruses and worms, hackers and identity thieves:
You are not alone.
"When they find out they're not the only ones, it's
like this weight has been lifted off their shoulders and
they say, 'Really? I'm not the only one who doesn't know
what the two mouse buttons are for?'"
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