Week 5
Week 5
Perpetually Impatient
By Christopher Muther
3. The Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life Project sums up a
recent study about people under the age of 35 and the dangers of their
hyperconnected lives with what sounds like a prescription drug warning:
“Negative effects include a need for instant gratification and loss of
patience.”
7. The results offer a glimpse into the future, he says. As Internet speeds
increase, people will be even less willing to wait for that cute puppy
video. Sitaraman, who spent years developing the study, worries
someday people will be too impatient to conduct studies on patience.
8. “The need for instant gratification is not new, but our expectation of
‘instant’ has become faster, and as a result, our patience is thinner,”
said Narayan Janakiraman, an assistant marketing professor at the
University of Texas, Arlington.
9. Janakiraman conducted a 2011 study called “The Psychology of
Decisions to Abandon Waits for Service.” Subjects were made to
wait for downloads and kept on hold as they waited for help from a
call center. As predicted, many test subjects who were forced to wait
abandoned the process.
10. “It’s why you have people at Disney World paying for a pass so they
don’t have to wait in line,” he added. “You have people who don’t mind
paying for things like same-day delivery.”
11. Cambridge grad student Valla Fatemi has yet to try same-day delivery,
but he relies on Amazon Prime, a $79-a- year membership that offers
shoppers benefits such as free two- day shipping. “The two-day shipping
is huge,” Fatemi said. “It’s gotten me in the mode of expecting things at
my door pretty quickly.”
12. Others seem to feel the same. Netflix has 33 million members who
stream videos, compared with only 8 million who get DVDs by mail.
Meanwhile, Cambridge start-up the Happy Cloud is building its business
by helping zealous video gamers download games in minutes rather
than hours.
14. That echoes the Pew study. Researchers found the rapid pace of
technology can lead to more nimble thinking, but that “trends are
leading to a future in which most people are shallow consumers of
information.”
15. “A lot of things that are really valuable take time,” Worthy
said. “But immediate gratification is the default response. It’s
difficult to overcome those urges and be patient and wait for
things to come over time.”
19. “It’s instant gratification that we’re giving them,” Fremont-Smith said.
“People have a need for immediacy that they don’t normally see when
they’re saving money.”
20. Whatever the negatives, Worthy of Texas A&M says there is still value
to be found in impatience. “From a business perspective, there’s
nothing wrong with companies selling more and faster,” he said.
“People have always been impatient, and sometimes that impatience
helps move things faster.
7. Social media. Not only can we find out in an instant what all
of our friends are up to or share the picture we snapped just
moments ago, we can meet new people in seconds as well.
Dating apps like Tinder, Grindr, Bumble, and Ok Cupid offer
the opportunity to connect with literally millions of people
within seconds, and to filter them by dozens of specifications
with a delay of only a minute or two.
10. This is astounding when you stop to think about it. A delay of
only two seconds is enough to make many of us give up on
discovering something new, learning something we need to
know, or even being entertained!
12. Think about that—when you add text to a page, you can
only expect visitors to read about 18% of it! Although this
certainly points to a tendency towards instant gratification
(i.e., visitors find what they need and get out as soon as
possible, or they give up because it takes too long), it may
also be a sign that internet users are getting better at
scanning pages and finding the information they are looking
for.
Writing
Prompt
Write an expository essay about how instant gratification has changed
today’s society. Your essay must be based on this prompt and topic,
and it must incorporate ideas and information found in the sources
provided.
Tiktok exploded in early 2020, but for what reasons? Well, during 2020, the pandemic hit, millions of
people were forced to stay in their homes less they catch Covid, but that left many people seeking
gratification. Many websites like Tiktok exploded because any user can just swipe the screen to view a
short filled with excitement and pleasure. Instant gratification doesnt only apply to the virtual world, it
can also be applied to real life, which resulted in changing the world in many ways, either for the better
or worse.
To start with arguably the biggest contributor to instant gratification is social media, a multi-billion dollar
industry. There are millions of creators and a study by Proffessor Ramesh K. Sitaraman, teaching
computer science at UMass Amherst found that people who watch videos will typically not move on
until after about 2 seconds, then the abandonment rate increases at about 40% every 10 seconds or a
little less than 5% a second . His study examined 6.7 million users so that means that theres
approximately 234,500 people have already clicked off the video after the 2 second mark if that same
6.7 million people watched the same video, and thats a small percent of the overall users of the entire
internet. Shipping companys like amazon offer same day delivery for a fee and millions chose streaming
services rather than dvd.
Instant gratification has become a central feature of our lives in the modern world. In an age
where Amazon has accustomed us to one-day delivery and Netflix and Hulu have gotten us
hooked on instant streaming, it seems unthinkable to wait. Technology has allowed people
instant access to more services, products, and experiences than any time in human history, and
this trend has only been accelerated by the rise of social media. While there are certainly
positive outcomes from our new constantly connected world, there are negative effects as well.
Increasingly, our society is becoming accustomed to getting what we want when we want it, and
our growing focus on immediacy can have a detrimental impact on our lives and our culture.
The trend of instant gratification is having a major effect on our personal lives. According to the
Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life Project, trends in technology are leading to a
future in which people have a need for instant gratification and loss of patience (paragraph 14,
passage 1). This is especially true for people under the age of 35, who have grown up with
technology and experienced the demand for immediate results since a young age. With the help
of apps like Grindr, people can socialize in an instant, and retailers such as Walmart and eBay
are offering same-day delivery services. This is all contributing to a culture of impatience in
which people are less willing to wait for anything. In fact, research from the University of
Amherst found that “video stream quality has a shocking impact on viewer behavior: if a video
takes more than two seconds to load, would-be viewers start melting away, and each additional
second of load time causes an additional 5.8% of people to give up and move on to something
else” (paragraph 9, passage 3). This is astounding when you stop to think about it; a delay of
only two seconds is enough to make many of us give up on discovering something new,
learning something we need to know, or even being entertained.
Aside from the impacts on our personal lives when we give in to instant gratification’s seduction,
there are society-wide impacts as well. We are undoubtedly becoming a society that is
accustomed to getting what we want when we want it, and there is a big reason for this trend:
technology and social media. Emma Taubenfeld of Pace University outlines some of the effects
of this interplay with salient examples, such as “DVRs eliminating the need to wait through
commercials, Disney parks offering fast passes that allow you to skip the wait, and Walmart and
eBay offering progressively faster shipping.” (passage 3, paragraph 6) Social media has also
had an immense impact in our society’s relationships with instant gratification. “With apps like
Tinder, Grindr, Bumble, and Ok Cupid, people can meet new people in a matter of seconds.”
(paragraph7, passage 3) The Nielsen Norman Group found that “most people stay on a web
page long enough to read only about a fifth of the text that it contains” (passage 3, paragraph
11) and with so little time spent on gathering information, it’s hard to verify the accuracy of what
we read.
In conclusion, although instant gratification has been a struggle for humans for a long time, it is
undoubtedly harder than it used to be to delay gratification. Technology and social media have
had a major effect on our society, making it much easier to get what we want right away. While
this is convenient, there are significant drawbacks to this trend of instant gratification, such as
the lack of patience and tendency to believe false information. We need to remember that
although Google might deliver an answer that’ll satisfy, understanding the truth of the matter can
take much longer. In order to combat the effects of this instant gratification, it’s important to take
a step back and remember that some things can’t be rushed.