top of page

Don't kick the copier...

Updated: Sep 15, 2022


Image: @thidarat.suteeratat on Freepik


Have you ever felt the urge to kick the photocopier? Or worse? That time when you desperately needed to make sixty copies of a workshop handout five minutes before your session begins. Or when you needed a single copy of your passport or driving licence, it’s the only way you can prove your identity to the man behind the desk about not to approve your visa application? Remember the awful day when you were struggling to print your boarding passes for the long-overdue holiday; that incident meant you ended up paying way over the odds at the airport?


The copiers may change, the locations and contexts may differ but underneath is one clear unifying thread. The machines are out to get you. Perhaps it’s just a random failure and you are just the unlucky one who keeps getting caught. Or maybe it’s more serious, they’ve started issuing them with an urgency sensor which detects how critical your making a copy is and then adjusts the machine’s behaviour to match this by refusing to perform.


Given the number of photocopiers in the world and the fact that we are still a far from paperless society in spite of our digital aspirations, it’s a little surprising that the law books don’t actually contain a section on xeroxicide – the attempt or execution of terminal damage to the lives of these machines.


Help is at hand. Because whilst we may still have the odd close and not very enjoyable encounter with these devices the reality is that they are getting better all the time. Not only through adding a bewildering range of functionality so that you can do almost anything with them apart from cook your breakfast, but also because they are becoming more reliable. And that is, in large measure, down to something called a community of practice. One of the most valuable resources we have in the innovation management toolkit....



and you can find the podcast version here

165 views0 comments

Recent Posts

See All
bottom of page