Skip to main content

Seven Productivity and Learning Tips to Manage Information Better

Hundreds of thousands of new books, analyst reports, scientific papers published every year. Millions of websites at our googletips. The flow of data, information and knowledge is growing exponentially, stretching the capacity of our brains. Let me offer 7 Strategies that can help manage this flow of information better.

Copyright (c) 2007 SharpBrains

Hundreds of thousands of new books, analyst reports, scientific papers published every year. Millions of websites at our googletips. The flow of data, information and knowledge is growing exponentially, stretching the capacity of our not-so-evolved brains. We can complain all day that we cannot process ALL this flow. Now, let me ask, should we even try?

Probably not. Why engage in a losing proposition. Instead, let me offer a few strategies that can help manage this flow of information better. From "process" to "manage".

1. Prioritize: strategic consulting firms such as McKinsey and BCG train their staff in the so-called 80/20 rule: 80% of effects are caused by the top 20% of causes. In a company, 80% sales may come from 20% of the accounts. Implication: focus on that top 20%; don't spend too much time on the 80% that only account for 20%.

2. Leverage a scientific mindset. Scientists shift through tons of data in efficient, goal-oriented ways. How do they do it? By first stating a hypothesis and then looking for data. For example, an untrained person could spend weeks "boiling the ocean", trying to read as much as possible, in a very fragmentary way, about how physical exercise affects our brain. A good scientist would determine clear objectives for data gathering, such as "doing exercise like XYZ can help generate neurons even in adults" and "exercise XYZ produces a larger effect than exercise ABC", and then test those sentences with real-world or lab data, allowing for a faster learning curve.

3. Link the new information to previous one. One cannot process, or remember, millions of fragmented, random facts. Preparing concept maps, either in paper or using software tools, is a great method to build expert knowledge and pattern-recognition over time, the opposite of being lost in a sea of random tidbits.

4. Define clear objectives for this week. Maybe 3-5. Please write them in a notebook, and check often. Why is this useful? Because by stating those clear goals you are building you own lens through which to filter information, and focus on the information you really care about. You set up your own agenda, and not be at the mercy of someone else's brain. You don't need to know, you really don't need to know (unless you work in Entertainment Weekly), what is going on with celebrity XYZ this week.

5. Review those goals at the end of the week/ month/ quarter. Did you achieve them? What could you have done differently?. The goal here is to ensure a learning loop. You can "evolve your brain" in your lifetime by making sure you learn a bit every day, every week, and accumulate knowledge and abilities over time.

6. Stress and anxiety are enemies of good information processing. They can narrow your focus of attention too much and make you miss the big picture. Why is this so? Well, imagine you are a gazelle about to be attacked by a tiger. You only care about running as fast as possible to escape. It is not the time for complex thinking, for learning new skills. In fact, most of the blood flow that usually goes to the brain gets diverted and gets sent to your main body muscles, to run faster. The same happens with humans, when we see a real or imaginary "tigers": one can not think clearly.

7. Another enemy: excessive TV watching. Watching TV five hours a day has an effect on your brain: it trains one's brain to become a visual, usually unreflective, passive recipient of information. You may have heard the expression "Cells that fire together wire together". Our minds and brains contain billions of neurons and connections. Any thing we do in life is going to activate a specific networks of neurons. Visualize a million neurons firing at the same time when you watch a TV program. Now, the more TV you watch, the more those neurons will fire together, and therefore the more they will wire together (meaning that the connections between them become, physically, stronger), which then creates automatic-like reactions. A person who watches TV for too many hours is training his or her brain to become more passive. Exactly the opposite of what one needs to apply the other tips described here.

I hope this is helpful and equips you well for the challenge.

Article Tags: Information Better

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

The Power of Appreciation

Is there anything more mysterious in theworld than the formula to having a successful romantic relationship? Asa divorced woman, I now marvel at those who are able to createpassionate, loving, long-term relationships. From my studies with booksand the school of hard knocks, I believe that one of the most importantingredients in relationships, of all kinds, is appreciation. What is Appreciation? Appreciation is likea much-needed rainfall to a farmer's crops that have been withering ina drought. Just as the crops start to shrivel and die without water,human relationships also start to feel brittle without a steadyapplication of the nourishing, even life-giving, impacts ofappreciation. The dictionary defines appreciation as "a favorablecritical estimate," "sensitive awareness" and "an expression ofadmiration, approval or gratitude." When you appreciate someone, youare tuned into a positive quality of another human being and expressyour gratitude for it. ...

Best time to Visit Great Wall of China

Great Wall of China is the greatest tourist attraction in the World. And the longest wall in the world, it is an awe-inspiring feat of ancient defensive architecture. Travelers from the eight directions all flock to the Great Wall to walk on the only man-made structure visible from space. To look out from one of the guard towers out at the barren mountains and the Wall snaking off into the distance is a view not to be forgotten. Standing on the Wall, you can get a good feel for what the Wall was all about. The Great Wall offers a timeless charm to tourists, but scenery varies with seasons. Visit it in different time you will get a quite different scene. Most of the popular sections of the great wallare located around Beijing, so the following is written with Beijing's climate in mind, although temperatures are likely to be colder and rainfall more as the Great Wall is on the mountains. Tips: The Great Wall at Simatai has been closed for major renovation from June 2010. The renovat...

Achieve Seamless Scalability With Construction ERP for Subcontractor Management

The subcontractor management in the construction ERP software is just a useful tool used to watch and pursuit the relationships between organizations and all the third party contractors. This ERP software module monitor all the initial building agreements, as it is tightly integrated with the accounts and inventory collectibles. Many companies in this project-based construction and real estate industry believes in working with the strategies of outsourcing and subcontracting to have effective pricing policies and delivery edges. Why is it so necessary? For reliable bid preparation and subsequent project execution, subcontractor database handling is quite needed. The stored database in this offered module should also manage in such manner so that vendors and outsourcing agencies performance could be tracked. Also, the database must have relevant information that efficiently operates processes of a construction company to earn the better profit margins. Specifically, this part of constru...