Productivity Bulletin: 12/12/2014

Photo: Sean MacEntee, Flickr

  • Reject every opinion that isn’t at least 90 out of 100:

    As you evaluate an option, think about the single most important criterion for that decision, and then simply give each option a score between 0 and 100. If you rate it lower than 90 percent, then automatically change the rating to 0 and simply reject it. This way you avoid getting caught up in indecision, or worse, getting stuck with the 60s or 70s.

    This is an interesting quote, but is it applicable?  If we can surround ourselves with 90% certainty all the time, we would all be pretty successful.  I appreciate the intent, but this is leaning towards “interesting sound byte” vs. sound advice.  Thoughts?
    http://chrisguillebeau.com/reject-every-option-that-isnt-awesome/

  • Behaviors that people think are negative but are actually good:

    The same is true for life. Be okay with knowing it is the journey that is important, and sometimes in being lost and going down paths we never would have thought to choose we find out things about ourselves that are amazing. We discover unknown talents in ourselves, and meet friends or allies who otherwise would have remained a mystery. Being lost now doesn’t mean you will be lost forever. It simply means you are taking your time in finding your way, and also allowing the world around you to give input into the path which is best for you. Often it is that input we never would have dreamed to ask for that sets us on our true path.

    http://www.lifehack.org/articles/lifestyle/7-behaviors-most-people-think-are-negative-that-are-actually-healthy.html

  • The French are not as lazy as frequently reported:

    But in reality, France’s 35-hour week has become largely symbolic, as employees across the country pull longer hours and work more intensely, with productivity per hour about 13 percent higher than the eurozone average. And a welter of loopholes lets many French employers outmaneuver the law. All told, French workers put in an average of 39.5 hours a week, just under the eurozone average of 40.9 hours a week, according to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.

    http://www.nytimes.com/2014/11/27/business/international/france-has-second-thoughts-on-its-35-hour-workweek.html

  • Centralize your information:
    We might not be suffering from information overload, it could be that data is just in too many places (does this sound familiar?)
    http://www.simpleproductivityblog.com/information-many-places-simplify/Here is an example of how to do it:
    http://lifehacker.com/5989980/ive-been-using-evernote-all-wrong-heres-why-its-actually-amazing
  • Some exercises to do at your desk to counter-act the effects of sitting and typing all day:
    http://www.refinery29.com/desk-job-health-fixes#slide-1
  • Brainstorm better ideas in 1/2 the time:
    Research shows that 75% of our ideas happen in the first 50% of the time allotted. It seems crazy, but our brains actually respond better to pressure when it comes to ideation. Two other issues start happening with more time:
    1. Ideas get recycled in slightly different packages, because the group is clinging to a certain mindset. How many times have you stalled on an idea without looking at it in a totally new way?
    2. Defensiveness begins to take route. There’s no doubt that the collaborative aspect of innovation is critical, however, with more time to hash things out, the propensity to get entrenched in each of our own biases is heightened.
    3. Cut the actual sessions where a team comes together to innovate in half. However, provide a pre-work, individual assignment first that spurs thinking.
    4. Create ways that supports to all types of thinking and behaving to communicate their ideas. Not everyone is going to leap into a brainstorming free-for-all. Try less verbal concepts like “brain-writing
    http://www.inc.com/mark-miller/amazingly-simple-tactics-for-producing-better-ideas-faster.html

 

Productivity Bulletin: 11/28/2014

Photo: Tim Parkinson, Flickr

Happy Black Friday readers – go buy something and help the economy, but when you are done – here is something educational. 

  • Increase employee satisfaction by recognizing hard work

    The obvious first two incentives are monetary and paid time off. These are also some of the most expensive for the company and usually are reserved for the highest achievers on a managerial or sales force, or are distributed evenly across a company that is showing stellar lateral performance. While this kind of incentive is great at riling up a storm on the sales floor or in the bullpen: if a company uses this too much, it could suffer huge financial loss after a while…

    http://www.business2community.com/sales-management/increase-employee-satisfaction-recognizing-hard-work-01068379

  • Productive people never have “free time”

    Productive people are never “free.” They don’t have 15 minutes on their lunch break to “have a quick call.” They don’t “kill time”—a terrible phrase. You can always put a window of time to good use if you work for it. Productive people schedule their priorities—not always their time, but always their priorities. When they don’t have something to do, they find something to do.

    http://lifehacker.com/productive-people-are-never-free-1661375021

  • Kick @$$ at work:
    This isn’t the best example in the article, but it is something to consider and reflect upon (seriously, read this article):

    Remember names: At one job interview, the interviewer introduced himself and then announced that he was going to ‘ask me a bunch of tough technical questions.’ He did and I aced it. I was thrilled with my performance. He then announced that he had one more question for me. My smug self thought, ‘Throw it at me! I just killed all the other ones. Here is what it was:
    What is my name?
    I didn’t have a clue what his name was and felt like a complete idiot.

    http://www.1500days.com/how-to-kick-ass-at-work/