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Trimming the attention sails at Like It Matters

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Saved by 16 people (3 private), first by anonymouse user on 2007-04-20


Public Sticky notes

You are what you pay attention to.

Highlighted by benkraal

So, I’m off my duff and doing the following:

* Deleted all my newsreader feeds and really evaluating each feed as it goes back in. Things I’m unsure about go in a ‘trial’ folder and I’ll zap them if they don’t interest me within a week.

* I’m checking email Dr. Pepper style, at 10,2 and 4. Batching should help, and also making it a sprint to process my inbox within 10 to 15 minutes. ‘Reply to’ stuff goes in that folder. Stuff I note and might want later goes to ‘Archive’. Stuff I never need again gets deleted. You can delete a ton of your email. Really. Process voice mails at the same time. (I’ll also do an RSS feed run at these times. I’ll reward myself with a flickr/twitter/mefi review if I’m a good boy.)

* No email review in the morning as I start my machine.

* Unsubbed from all email discussion lists.

* Turned off all email notifications from social networking sites.

* All sound-based notification off. Dock bouncing, outta here. Only growl for notifications.

* Reinforcing my habit of making a micro to do list of 3 to 5 things. Index card or sticky note for the day. Setting crazy short deadlines for each activity. Doing only one thing at a time.

* Keeping my desktop clear of cruft and using Merlin’s distraction free environment hacks.

* Resetting workflow hours — mornings are mine, as that’s when I jam. Afternoons are for brief meetings and team interaction.

* I’ll keep IM ‘office hours’ for a few hours after lunch each day.

* 30 minute meeting increments by default. I’ll need a good reason why our meeting needs to go longer than half an hour. My hunch is, with prep on all sides, no meeting should really go longer. If meetings can be shorter, let’s make them shorter. Or, better, let’s accomplish our to do’s and not have the meeting at all.

* No impromptu meetings unless it’s really an emergency. And it rarely is.

* Stop trying to accomodate a global work schedule. Again, unless it’s really mandatory or unavoidable, I work during my work hours, not those in other parts of the world.

* No answering emails on the weekends, unless absolutely necessary. One review per day on Sat/Sun.

* Anything that can be converted into a feed, do it. Shunt the email directly to archive.

* Dump new contacts immediately into Address Book so I never waste time looking up contact info.

* Make ‘no’ the default answer for new project/app review/etc. requests. New things should earn their way into the attention field.

Highlighted by naronald

Deleted all my newsreader feeds and really evaluating each feed as it goes back in. Things I’m unsure about go in a ‘trial’ folder and I’ll zap them if they don’t interest me within a week.

Highlighted by guiabasica

’m checking email Dr. Pepper style, at 10,2 and 4. Batching should help, and also making it a sprint to process my inbox within 10 to 15 minutes. ‘Reply to’ stuff goes in that folder. Stuff I note and might want later goes to ‘Archive’. Stuff I never need again gets deleted. You can delete a ton of your email. Really. Process voice mails at the same time. (I’ll also do an RSS feed run at these times. I’ll reward myself with a flickr/twitter/mefi review if I’m a good boy.)

Highlighted by guiabasica

Reinforcing my habit of making a micro to do list of 3 to 5 things. Index card or sticky note for the day. Setting crazy short deadlines for each activity. Doing only one thing at a time.

Highlighted by benkraal

Reinforcing my habit of making a micro to do list of 3 to 5 things. Index card or sticky note for the day. Setting crazy short deadlines for each activity. Doing only one thing at a time.

Highlighted by guiabasica

30 minute meeting increments by default. I’ll need a good reason why our meeting needs to go longer than half an hour. My hunch is, with prep on all sides, no meeting should really go longer.

Highlighted by guiabasica

No impromptu meetings unless it’s really an emergency. And it rarely is.

Highlighted by guiabasica

* Stop trying to accomodate a global work schedule. Again, unless it’s really mandatory or unavoidable, I work during my work hours, not those in other parts of the world.

Highlighted by guiabasica

* Make ‘no’ the default answer for new project/app review/etc. requests. New things should earn their way into the attention field.

Highlighted by guiabasica