Friday Five: Thursday’s the new Friday edition

Happy Friday, readers. Yes, it’s only Thursday, but I’m taking the day off tomorrow (don’t hate!), so this is an early Friday Five.

Off we go to the wonderful world of contextless links.

  1. CNN asks, How can we cope with information overload?, and notes that some entrepreneurs are trying to help by creating new apps and tools to help us filter out the data junk and get exactly what we want (via @steverubel).
  2. Speaking of information overload, I uploaded a new slidedeck about social media, from a presentation I gave to some folks at the university where I work.
  3. If you don’t yet receive Karine Joly’s Higher Ed Experts e-newsletter, you’re missing out on some good stuff. It’s the highlight of my Tuesday morning. Join HEE and sign up for it. You won’t be sorry.
  4. The future of journalism is…Radiohead? (via @mediabistro).
  5. Searching for Comedy in Higher Education, a wonderful blog post by Tracy Mueller.

Enjoy your weekend.

Friday Five: productivity tips

I confess: I read a lot about becoming more productive, but I’ve been a slacker at implementing a lot of the things I read. I also confess that whenever I go to a seminar or training session on getting productive (such as the one I attended yesterday in a very crowded hotel conference room), I always feel better — for a while. Then the new wears off and I find myself backsliding to old habits that squander away time.

I’ve tried Day Timers, TimeDesign and Covey systems. I’ve used hybrid systems. I’ve tried going completely electronic. I’ve resorted back to paper. I’ve put together a hybrid of paper and paperless. But to quote Bono, I still haven’t found what I’m looking for in terms of managing projects and information.

It’s frustrating.

But productivity, efficiency, getting things done, whatever you want to call it, isn’t about just having a clean desk at the end of the day, or having all your files neatly arranged. These days, so much of it is about managing the crapflood of data that comes at you electronically, by paper and phone call, and via the drop-in. So here are some techniques I use to try to manage the flow of information. As the fall semester nears, I’m thinking now is a good time to be thinking about how to be more productive. I can always use help, so I’d love to also hear from you guys about how you manage projects and your time, and improve your productivity effectiveness.

  1. Use the out-of-office function on Outlook. Even if you’re not on the road or on vacation, much of your day is probably spent out of the office anyway, in meetings. So why not post a message that says something like “I’ll be out of the office much of the day today with limited access to email.” That way you’re lowering the expectation that you’ll immediately fire back a response, and people won’t be upset at you because you don’t. And if you happen to respond quickly, it will be a pleasant surprise. Bonus tip for managing email: Download and read The Low-Information Diet: How to Eliminate E-Mail Overload & Triple Productivity in 24 Hours.
  2. Use a tickler file. The guy from Fred Pryor talked about using a tickler file during yesterday’s seminar. This is an idea I picked up from reading David Allen‘s book Getting Things Done (highly recommended, but you can also get the gist of Allen’s thinking from the complete set of all his free articles; all it will cost you is your email address). The GTD tickler file is a series of 43 folders, 31 for each day of the month and 12 for each month of the year. The Pryor guy added two more: one for “next year” and one for “completed lists,” where you can file your to-do lists. I may add those two to my system, but so far the tickler file system has helped me to toss projects into a “future” folder to keep them from haunting my every waking moment. It helps me sleep at night. It’ll help you, too.
  3. Ignore your snail mail. Until yesterday, I felt a twinge of guilt about letting my mail lay in my inbox for days. But the guy at the Pryor seminar affirmed my habit. “It’s only mail. It could have arrived tomorrow.” Really, now. How urgent can it be if it arrives in snail mail? If it’s from FedEx or UPS, that’s a different story.
  4. Make use of couch potato time. I routinely take reading materials and unopened mail from work home with me to skim and sort through while watching sports on television or while enjoying a beverage by the pool. If I don’t get to it, I don’t get to it.
  5. Your turn. I’ve left the fifth tip open for you, the reader. What productivity or time-management tip can you share to help us on our way to a productive fall in higher education?