Search
Recommended Products
Related Links


 

 

Informative Articles

"FATTY RUBBISH AND FILTH IN FLOUR"
"FATTY RUBBISH AND FILTH IN FLOUR" http://www.newmediaexplorer.org/chris/2003/07/25/fatty_rubbish_and_filth_in_flour.htm Doug Kaufmann is author of the book The Germ that Causes Cancer :...

Health Care Costs Are Rising At Epidemic Proportions - Here's How To Protect Yourself
Health care costs are now approaching 15% of our national economy and the economic repercussions have been felt by most American families as employers are unwilling to absorb the bulk of the health care cost burden. In 2004, employer...

Health - Importance Of Oral Hygiene
Oral Hygiene is Extremely Important Oral Hygiene is extremely important. If you are working in an office environment or talking to people socially then you want to make sure that your breath and oral hygiene are the best that they can...

How to Meet Women, Anytime, Anywhere (Part 2 of 2)
Last week, I was answering a question about how to meet women, anytime, anywhere, and I had so much to say on the subject, I had to continue it on to this week's issue. So once again the question being discussed is, "what are some good and easy...

What dreams will come!
As the pioneers of aviation took to the air (not skies), in their human powered mechanical contraptions, what must have been said and thought? Complicated pulleys and chain systems enclosing a lunatic, perhaps! Or overly optimistic cyclists with...

 
Google
5 Ways to Keep on Track

Information overload is the new peril in daily project completion. It's easy to find yourself diverted, distracted, or simply bogged down with the tide of information that can arrive on your computer screen in the course of a working day. The internet, while bringing a revolution in accessible information like never seen before, is a tide that brings with it debris as well as treasure. It is taking longer for the intrepid explorer to search out what they need simply due to the sheer volume of web sites now in existence.

Whether you're engaged in researching, or writing, or group work projects, the chances are that you will be trudging through web site after web site gathering what you specifically need to complete the task at hand.

Here are my 5 favourite strategies for keeping on track and getting the job done without diversions or breakdowns on the hard shoulder of the information superhighway:

1. Questions, questions

Ask yourself constantly does this directly serve the purpose of what I am working on right now.

This is a yes/no question. Grey answers will lead to grey results in what you're trying to get done.

If your answer is yes, then all well and good and on you go...

If it's no - then leave it be. Literally, let it go and move on...

2. Trust Yourself

This is an extension of the above - if you answered no to your "purpose" question - then you have to trust yourself that if this new information is really of value for a future project, you will remember it.

Sometimes I literally say to myself "OK if this is really important, I'll remember it sometime in the future where it fits in with what I'm doing then."

That really does clear some mental space and saves a lot of time that might otherwise be spent vacillating, or taking a trip to diversion land.

3. Trust Yourself

No, that's not an accidental


repetition. This time it's about trusting what you know. Let yourself reveal your knowledge on any given subject with the minimal reading. Research reading has to be specific and focused and question number one is, once again, very useful here. Make starting easy by working with what interests you first.

4. Set your Antennae

Keeping your specific task set in your mind is like tuning your radio to a set frequency. If you want to listen to some classical music and you keep your tuner set to scan you are only going to receive some occasional short and sporadic bursts of what you want to hear.

The same is true with your work, it's amazing how much more specific and useful information actually gets through when you are single minded in your approach to research and project progression.

It is literally like you can tune in to what you need and skip the distracting commercials and that is a powerful thing.

5. Get Creative

Visual creative planning is the single best thing I ever learned for project planning and completion for training courses, workshops, articles and books. My favoured system is Tony Buzan's Mind Mapping. If you've never tried Mind Mapping a quick Google search will reveal enough to get you started.

These are my personal 5 key tips for staying on track and having an enjoyable time while I'm there. If you have some of your own, I recommend you jot them down and have them near your workplace for some support and inspiration during times of information flooding!

About The Author

Ananga Sivyer is a contributing editor for LifeScape magazine and the author of the highly acclaimed self-help workbook: "The Art & Science of Emotional Freedom".

For articles and ebook reviews visit her resource site at: http://www.self-improvement-ebooks.net