Information technology has permanently changed the way that work gets done. But it’s just beginning to help individual workers.

gates_art_160_20080514134836.jpg
When Bill Gates speaks, business leaders listen

That’s the message Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates imparted to about 115 business leaders at his company’s annual CEO summit this morning. Gates said that IT – and in particular the PC and desktop software – was responsible for the productivity boom in the late 1990s. Since then, the cost of computer equipment, Internet connectivity and just about every other technology – with the notable exception of business software – has gone down. This should open up a wealth of new opportunities for businesses. In particular, it means that if businesses want access to information “it shouldn’t be a budget busting thing to make sure it’s available,” Gates said.

Gates said that the primary beneficiary of these new projects will be the average worker. The dirty little secret of most business software is that it’s designed to help managers track information, not to help individual employees do their jobs. Gates said that the next wave of productivity will come from technology aimed at making information available to workers and helping them communicate.

This being a Microsoft event, Gates trumpeted Microsoft products that he thinks will help achieve his vision. The audience received a lengthy demonstration of Microsoft’s SharePoint collaboration software. Gates also demonstrated a new touch-sensitive computer screen that he says is a more natural way to navigate through information. (Business may want to wait before investing in it, though: The screen didn’t respond to Gates’s touch for about 15 second, enough time for him to ask if something was wrong with the system a couple of times.)

Incidentally, while Gates has become a pretty good public speaker – albeit still not a natural – his PowerPoint slides are still pretty boring.

Business Technology : Bill Gates: Tech Hasn’t Empowered Workers Enough Yet