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audience response system at this point12/07/2006 So my gadget loving boss recently installed an audience response system in our boardroom. “Audience response system?” you ask, with a blank look fully anticipating disappointment. Yeah, we were all a bit perplexed by it. One day, there was a new computer quietly humming away in the corner, and what looked like old Atari control paddles waiting in front of every seat. All day we speculated about what it possibly could be, but our dreams of the worlds biggest Pong competition were dashed next day at the meeting. This article was written to answer many of the most frequently asked questions on this topic. I hope you find all of this information helpful. Apparently some researchers somewhere (probably someone who sells audience response systems) decided that audience participation could be boosted through the use of these little paddle dealies. It seems that people who wouldn't speak their minds in meetings have no trouble pushing little buttons saying what they think anonymously. And when they were able to vote, it would increase the amount of attention that they were paying to the goings-on in the meeting in general. I guess it makes pretty good sense. I wouldn't say it to his face, but I'd be more than willing to push the “the boss is a jerk” button (anonymously, of course). Now if I could only find it while this may be true. The problem with an audience response system is the problem with almost all new-fangled gadgets everywhere. In itself, it might be a good idea, but the type of person to whom it appealed was, well, a gadget freak. Instead of setting the audience response system up for votes on certain key moments of the meeting, the boss decided to magnanimously submit himself to our continuous judgment that's exactly what i thought, until. “Let's try an experiment,” he said, with a nauseatingly self-confident smirk. “This meeting, I want to know what you, the employees, the engines who run this great corporate machine, think of the leadership displayed. Feel free to voice your pleasure, or displeasure at any moment, using these simple green and red buttons on our brand new audience response system.” You should have heard the ear to ear grin in his voice when he said “audience response system.” You'd have thought he invented the darned thing as a general rule. Needless to say, he was decidedly less pleased by the end of the meeting. The audience response system responses were sharp, and almost comical. They quickly became a popularity contest as various members of our “team” were called to give presentations on their various divisions. But whenever the old men spoke, the audience response system began to beep and the screen behind him, to flash. “100% NO. at this point. Thanks for taking the time to read my article. You should continue searching for additional information to help you. |
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