Sunday, May 24, 2020
Time Management Dealing with Mobile Distractions
Time Management Dealing with Mobile Distractions After blogging about the four hour work week, I have been trying to increase my efficiency at work. One of the things that gets in my way of being efficient are the many urgent distractions and fire drills I have to put out throughout the day. Christina Inge is a Boston-based marketing consultant, speaker, and workshop leader, specializing in online marketing channels including search engine marketing, email, social media, and analytics. She blogs on all things digital marketing at Measurable Marketing Strategy and is here to help us battle all of those urgent social media distractions! Thanks Christina! How to Avoid Mobile Distractions With mobile and social communications an increasing part of our lives, including our workdays, staying focused on the right tasks is a growing challenge. Non-work distractions are pretty easy to tune out, but itâs those updates and emails that bring yet another urgent task to your attention that really need to be managed. After all, youâre working on five urgent tasks right now, and to get more done, more efficiently, you need to do less putting out fires. Social media and mobile devices have succeeded in making so many mundane tasks seem like 10 alarm fires that need to be put out now. That 7 am tweet asking you to be at the 3 pm meeting? The Facebook message with an RFP? (And if youâre not getting RFPs via Facebook, you soon will be). [Related Post: 5 Social Media Mistakes That Will Get You Fired] All of these things gain an importance far out of proportion to their true urgency when they come in via new channels. Itâs one of the basics of how the human brain works: novelty gets our attention more than something weâre habituated to, so social and mobile communication, being more novel than email, just grabs our attention away from information coming in on more traditional channels. The result is a nation of people trying to stay focused on big tasks while little tasks keep climbing in the digital window. Here are two strategies to help you avoid those mobile distractions so you can stay focused and get your work done. Make a Schedule Set aside a specific time in the day to check your Twitter and Facebook. Make sure you go on when others in your group are most active so you donât miss essential updates. But, donât keep these networks open on your computer all day, even if you have business connections who communicate with you on these channels. Once a project that originated on Twitter is underway, give everyone your business cell and email, and move the conversation over there. Use good tools like Seesmic to manage all your accounts from an efficient dashboard. If you monitor your brandâs social media presence, consider asking for several people to take monitoring in shifts, rather than trying to do it 24-7. Turn Off Notifications The single most important thing you can do to minimize mobile distractions is to change your phoneâs notification settings. Go into each app and make sure you donât get intrusively notified every time you get a tweet, an email, or a post to your wall. Dial down the level of urgency on notifications you must receiveâ"for instance, you need to get a notification every time you get an office email, but maybe your phone doesnât have to light up, vibrate, and buzz. Those urgent noises make you feel obliged to answer every message, so keep the alerts low-key. For less urgent messages, like tweets, eliminate notifications completely. Turn off all notices when youâre concentrating on a major project, like your slides for your next presentation. Close your email, turn off your phone, and get to work.
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