41 items | 37 visits
Tips and tool for making you more efficient.
Updated on 2009-04-02
Created on 2008-04-01
Category: Others
URL:
Are you addicted to e-mail? Study finds the odds are good you checked your e-mail within the last 15 minutes. Here are five warning signs.
Email is proving a dangerous distraction and is just as addictive as gambling, writes Suw Charman-Anderson.
The information overload problem has reached a critical point. Workers drowning in their inboxes and jumping from task to task have now cost the nation $650 billion in lost productivity. A research group attempting to understand and combat the problem has recently been formed. We can either wait for answers for them, or we can start finding solutions ourselves. Let's do what social media addicts do best: let's crowdsource this thing!
Information overload is no longer a joke. For those who suffered with this affliction, it never was, but now that there are real numbers attached to the problem, it has finally prompted companies to take action.
These days, it seems everyone has an opinion about how to deal with information overload, especially when it comes to email management. There are numerous methodologies, best practices, tips, and tutorials available, but are any of them really effective? We'll explore that question as we delve into the top five email management methodologies.
SAN FRANCISCO — The onslaught of cellphone calls and e-mail and instant messages is fracturing attention spans and hurting productivity. It is a common complaint. But now the very companies that helped create the flood are trying to mop it up.
When Citibank's Michael Hendriks got his BlackBerry, he hoped it would let him escape the tyranny of the inbox. However, like the millions of others who have taken to mobile email, he discovered that smartphones are no silver bullet for productivity.
E-MAIL has become the bane of some people’s professional lives. Michael Arrington, the founder of TechCrunch, a blog covering new Internet companies, last month stared balefully at his inbox, with 2,433 unread e-mail messages, not counting 721 messages awaiting his attention in Facebook.
Years ago when Seinfeld was a new television show, Jerry Seinfeld was still a touring comic. At the time, I was hanging around clubs doing open mic nights and trying to learn the ropes. One night I was in the club where Seinfeld was working, and before he went on stage, I saw my chance. I had to ask Seinfeld if he had any tips for a young comic. What he told me was something that would benefit me a lifetime...
In a small business, poor management of time will prevent the business from reaching its full potential. Many demands are made on you because you are totally responsible for operating the business. The workday can be long, tiring and frustrating due to poor planning and people controlling your time and work. Time is wasted doing things that should be done in a few moments or not at all. All of us have the same amount of time; the challenge is using this resource effectively. What follows are suggestions on using your time more effectively so your business will achieve optimum performance.
"With all the time you spend watching TV," he tells me, "you could have written a novel by now." It's hard to disagree with the sentiment -- writing a novel is undoubtedly a better use of time than watching TV -- but what about the hidden assumption? Such comments imply that time is "fungible" -- that time spent watching TV can just as easily be spent writing a novel. And sadly, that's just not the case.
Conclusion of our two-part series on improving the quality of your to-do list. Yesterday’s post covered some basics and whys, the concept of the “next action,” and the importance of physicality.
41 items | 37 visits
Tips and tool for making you more efficient.
Updated on 2009-04-02
Created on 2008-04-01
Category: Others
URL: