Posts Tagged ‘productivity’

Unclutter for Productivity

Monday, November 17th, 2008

This is one of those things that we all know, yet often overlook. I’m guilty of it myself and often allow my desk, filing cabinets and PC to become overloaded and overflowing with tons of disorganized crap.

Friday afternoon I got into a bit of a cleaning mood though, so wen through all of the papers and notes on my desk, filing cabinets and the table I keep in my office.

It took hours to sort through it all, decide what to keep and what not to, and then to organize what I was keeping in a useful manner.

Then I tackled my PC. I download tons of garbage. From Music to videos, PDF files, presentations, documents and software.

Usually I download stuff, try or review it, and unless it blows me away I tend to forget about it. Which leads to a massive build-up of junk on my hard drive.

In all I removed over 30 GB’s of junk from my PC Friday evening. Then I ran a registry cleaner because that crap always leaves little useless entries in the Windows registry–and then I defragmented my hard drive (which took about an hour).

So, Yay! I’ve got all kinds of free space in my office and on my PC again, but that’s not the point of this post.

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A Quick Note on Productivity

Tuesday, July 22nd, 2008

My nemesis in business is wasted time. With so much information, blogs, news, videos, social networks and etc. to get distracted with it’s easy to lose track of the clock and fall behind with what I want or need to accomplish through the day.

That’s why I always look for easy tools and ways to make myself and my daily routine more efficient.

A few of the tools I use, and these are all absolutely free, help me to improve productivity without the expense of ignoring any of that information or my online friends that can be so distracting.

Mozilla Thunderbird with Lightning, ReminderFox and XNote Add-ons

As far as email clients go I’ve used at-least 2 dozen different titles over the years on Windows, Mac and Linux machines… Thunderbird is equal or better to all of them hands down. My only advice is to make sure you empty your trashbox and compact folders (both operations performed from the File menu) often to improve speed and stability.

The email program itself isn’t the big deal, but rather the Add-ons are.

XNote lets you create post-it type sticky notes on individual emails, which is great for me. I often read a message and think “I need to look into such-and-such on this”, or maybe it’s an offer that I want to make a future counter-offer to and I have an instant idea of what that will be, making a note on the message ensures I won’t return to it later and draw a blank for myself (the mind does go first after all). So this add-on is an awesome tool.

The Lightning add-on is essentially a full-fledged daily planner and calendar program that runs within Thunderbird. I’ve tried a lot of different planners and calendar systems, from physical books to PC and web based. All of them worked, but none were quite as convenient as I’d have liked for access.

However, with Thunderbird and Lightning that problem is solved because email is my business lifeblood, so my email program is always open, which means my planner is always open too now.

And finally the ReminderFox add-on is basically an alert reminder that sits in the status bar of Thunderbird. It’s sort of redundant with the Lightning add-on, however because it pops up alerts I like to use it for special and important things as a way of ensuring I don’t miss or forget about them. I call it my nagging assistant and believe everybody should have one :)

The Flock Browser

Here’s a tool that improves my work productivity in a round-about way. Flock is a web browser designed for the online social butterfly. It ties in to numerous social networks directly, placing lots of cool stuff like my latest Facebook messages, invites and such into the sidebar of my browser.

Now, some of the social network tie-ins do help me directly to be more productive. I can bookmark pages a little more quickly and things like that, but the real way that Flock helps me to be more efficient is by letting me connect, converse and play online with friends across various networks in a faster and easier manner.

That may seem like an oxymoron, how does easier non-work activity make someone more efficient at work?

The answer is that I’m going to keep up to date with my friends and contacts no matter what, so if I can do that in a way that uses less of my time it leaves more of my time for work. I just have to stay focused enough to capitalize on that and not use the additional time for more play.

Flock is built from the same technology as FireFox, and a majority of the plugins and add-ons for FireFox will work on Flock too.


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