Archive for July, 2007

Back from the brink

… of email bankruptcy.

My email has been the bane of my workday existence for some time, and I decided that I needed to fix the situation. Over the last few days I’ve finally winnowed all the crap out of my inbox. Filed stuff, deleted other stuff, and basically tidied up. I’m really glad to have done this, but am amazed/slightly depressed at how long it took me.

I listened to Merlin Mann’s talk to Google employees this morning, on managing your email: “Inbox Zero”. I obviously need to work smarter with my email to make sure my email doesn’t get out of control again - which is why I’m glad I listened to this talk.

Merlin says:

Email used to be a “network of hugs” - way back in the ’90s when only a few people had email and you didn’t need to worry about ever getting that much of it. (This made me nostalgic…) Now it’s an “avalanche falling on your head every morning”. It’s become the “lingua franca for how you deal with your life” and everything comes through email.

For knowledge workers (people whose jobs involve working with information and adding value to it), time and attention are the two most important and finite natural resources in the day. Others’ demands on these are infinite. Where you decide to put your time and attention says a lot about who you are.

Quotes Joel Spolsky (a programmer) - the amount of available time and effort as represented by a box. Every task you add to the box is a block - can be big or small, but every block you add takes up room, even if it’s a “crap block”. Ultimately you want to make sure you don’t put “stupid blocks in the box, otherwise you have to worry about getting it out”.

Email is just the medium. There is no need to live in your email.

“Process to zero” every time you check your email; that is, every time you check your email, you do something with it - take action (even if that action is to delete that email).

Suggests five verbs - to process everything in your email inbox. Don’t let it stack up in the inbox. Decide what you need to do with it, then move on. Just checking is not enough! Think: what action do I need to take with this email?

Delete (or archive)
Delegate
Respond
Defer
Do

Don’t let the email remain in your inbox without doing something with it - leads to procrastination.

Points out that if you leave your email on all day, every time you can have 2,400 interruptions in a week. Suggests “email dashes”, checking email at set times a day, eg checking once per hour, processing for 10 minutes, then switching off to do stuff. Also suggested not keeping your aggregator on all day as it just adds to the interruptions (I’ve already found this; I try and read my feeds only when I need a break, otherwise I could spend all day reading feeds).

Keep your archiving system simple. No need for complicated taxonomies to classify your messages, after all you’re “not a librarian” [laughter from audience]. (Merlin, even librarians don’t and can’t have complicated systems for archiving email - there’s too much of the damn stuff and it would be a full time job!)

Learn to deal with email very quickly. Challenged the audience to write short emails - cited the five sentences website. Keep things moving. If you can’t respond quickly, because you need more information, put it in a separate To Do folder. The inbox should only be for messages you haven’t read yet. (I don’t know if I can always write very very short emails - but this is a good reminder not waffle in email, and to get to the point quickly.)

Keeping on top of my email is going to be an ongoing challenge, but hopefully I can use some of these strategies to keep that darn inbox under control.

Rebirth of CoComment

Noticed yesterday that Scoble was talking about CoComment, which is apparently relaunching its service this week (2 August, according to their blog).

I used to use CoComment all the time many moons ago but I think I stopped because it started crashing my browser. What is CoComment, you ask? Basically it’s a service that lets you track all the comments you make around the ’sphere. Simple. (Their Tools page lists the things they help you do, if you want more detail.)

I’ll check back again mid-week and take a look at the new version when it’s finally released. If it’s more stable than the old version I’ll definitely be using it!

While we’re on the subject of new versions (and perpetual beta), take a look at Phil Bradley’s list of (his answers to) the questions he’s most often asked about Web 2.0:

I don’t have time to learn all these things! [this one’s my favourite ;) ]
I love Phil’s answer: “Yes, actually you do have time. You have the time for several reasons - a lot of these things don’t take long to learn - they’re designed for people who don’t know what they’re doing. They’re designed so that you can look at it, poke around for a bit and then get on with it. Once you start to use one, you’ll be saving time. Put that to good use. Secondly, you have time if you stop doing something else. Nothing stays the same, or at least it shouldn’t. …” [I think part of the problem is that lots of people expect that any new computer application they’re going to use is going to be so complicated and so difficult to use that they’re going to need to attend a training session and/or use a manual to get to grips with it. This isn’t the case with 99% of the Web 2.0ish tools these days. And may I add that if you start playing with these tools you may train yourself to learn how to use tech… ]

I don’t know which ones to use!
“Neither does anyone else - it’s all exploring. …”

I’m not allowed to do this stuff
“This is the one that I really hate hearing, for a whole bunch of reasons. It says a lot about an organization that they don’t want their staff to explore, to grow and to do things better. Be subversive and *just do it*. …Another point is that much Web 2.0 stuff doesn’t require you to have technical backgrounds or knowledge. You CAN do it, I promise. You might have to start by doing it in your own time, but you can do it. Organizations, and some people as well, need to stop worrying about how something is done, and be more concerned about it being done. …”

How can I use this resource if it’s only in Beta?
“Everything is in beta mode. In fact, your entire life is in Alfa mode, so get used to it. Not being finished doesn’t make it wrong, it makes it alive. Being finished means something has ended, is dead and developed to its fullest, which probably means it’s not worth using because it’s time has passed. Beta is forever, so just get on and do it. …” [I couldn’t agree more!]

Go take a look at the whole list. I’ve been thinking of Phil and his family for other reasons too…

Meme (because it’s the weekend)

Weekends are good for memes. Thanks jl for the tag. You’re supposed to tag five others but some of the people I want to tag, like Sue and Sheena, don’t blog! And I don’t think memes fit the overall theme of the Food Pornographer’s blog. So if you feel like doing this, do.

What were you doing 10 years ago?
Ten years ago? I was an apprentice chef, peeling crates of pumpkin, making dessert pizzas, and cooking breakfasts to order on Sunday mornings. I miss learning new recipes, the madcap chef culture and all the access to amazing food (even if you take it all for granted after a while). What I don’t miss: split shifts, injuries (I still have the scars), and working unsocial hours. I learned a lot!

What were you doing 1 year ago?
I was business librarian. This year I am science and engineering librarian. I was a cat person. This year I still love cats, but now my heart’s been stolen by a wee chihuahua. Still learning!

Five snacks you enjoy:
Um. I don’t actually eat these all that often, but I love them when I do.

  1. Peanuts. Preferably roasted and salted.
  2. Salted licorice. I like katjes, zwart-witjes, and salmiak rockies. Swedish fish-shaped salt licorice are good too.
  3. Maatjes haring with onion on black rye. (Only ever eat these at family dos on M’s side of the family.)
  4. Hot chips with mayonnaise. You don’t usually get mayo with chips in Australia - a great Dutch innovation, imho.
  5. Jackfruit chips. (Only have these at my parents’ place. Just as well really, otherwise I’d probably turn into a giant jackfruit…)

Amusing how three of my five favourite snacks are Dutch… I blame thank my father-in-law for introducing them to me.

Five songs that you know all the lyrics to:

  1. 月亮代表我的心 Yuè Liàng Dài BiÇŽo WÇ’ De XÄ«n ” The Moon Represents My Heart” by Teresa Teng (邓丽君 Dèng LìjÅ«n). Plus lots of other Deng Lijun songs, come to think of it…
  2. Bila Mama pakai celana by P Ramlee. Also known as The Hula Hoop Song in our household.
  3. It’s the End of the World As We Know It (And I Feel Fine) by REM (and many more REM songs. Yes, I am an REM tragic.)
  4. Throw Your Arms Around Me by Hunters and Collectors
  5. Sweet and Tender Hooligan by The Smiths (vestige of my teenage angsty years. I still love the Smiths)

Five things you would do if you were a [edit: multi-]millionaire:

I don’t think I’d quit my job, but I would take lots of time off to travel and relax. I’d go to places I can only imagine, like Zanzibar, Mongolia, Tierra Del Fuego, Easter Island and Timbuktu.

  1. I’d pay off family members’ mortgages.
  2. I’d indulge in a lot of personal projects. The sort that require time and financial investment (I can afford to take time off without pay, now, see?)
  3. Like Juji, I’d run a studio. But not for art, more like an intellectual salon, for librarians and whoever else wants to talk and learn about and work on new technologies and ways of improving the professional practice and development of library staff.
  4. I’d build floor-to-ceiling bookshelves lining all the walls of my study.
  5. Play a lot more (related to item 2)

Five bad habits:

  1. Procrastinating.
  2. Letting the inner critic undermine my desire to do things (”It won’t work, I’ll fail”).
  3. Repeating myself when I’m talking to a group and I’m nervous.
  4. I’m a creature of habit, I have to push myself to vary my routine or try new things.
  5. Catastrophising. I always imagine lots of worst case scenarios.

Five things you like doing:

  1. Drinking cups of tea and reading a good book.
  2. Exploring the bookshops of a city I’m visiting for the first time.
  3. Going for a walk with Paco.
  4. Wandering around a park or botanical garden, looking at the plants.
  5. Chatting with M. Discussing things like where our consciousness goes when we sleep.

Five things you would never wear again:

  1. White shoes (irrational pet peeve)
  2. High heels (I have bad ankles and besides, I now expect comfortable footwear at all times)
  3. Petticoats (do women still wear these??)
  4. Make up (makes me feel claustrophobic)
  5. Nail polish (I think I am allergic, it makes my fingers very hot and uncomfortable)

Five favorite toys:

  1. My computer.
  2. iPod.
  3. Mobile phone.
  4. My fountain pen collection, plus assorted inks.
  5. … can’t for the life of me think of anything else for this list!