Sharon Dale is our Productivity Ninja, based in the north of England. 

She will be hosting our How to Get Things Done public workshop in Halifax on 31st January

Book your place here (not in Halifax? Click here to see our other How To Get Things Done training)

In this post she explains how she reclaimed time in her busy schedule, by unsubscribing to a host of email newsletters and mailshots. 

 

 

Since New Year’s Day I have been doing some clearing out.

This is customary for me. Each year I feel the need to make some changes (read improvements) at this time of year.

This year I realised that there are lots of newsletters and marketing email’s which I have subscribed to over time but am no longer reading. What I noticed is that each time I go into my mailbox I automatically delete these and whilst this is not taking up a lot of time, sometimes it steals more attention than it should.

Inbox zero - graphic showing how an email inbox can be emptyI was reminded this week that there are 168 hours in a week, that is all and it is impossible to create more time. All we can do is make sure that we are giving our attention to the right things.

So I decided it was time to get rid of these attention grabbing, mainly marketing emails about old interests for good. I have gone against type and tried not to worry about recording anything and decided to use my admittedly poor memory and deal with any laggards later on.

Some of these emails are very simple to unsubscribe from, you click on a link at the end of the message and reach a page which generally thanks you for your interest and tells you that you have successfully unsubscribed.

Some ask if you are sure and you have to press a button or another link (do not back out now – press the button!), and yet others require you to remember a login and password that you set up some time ago and this turns into a multiple action project. These are the ones I will deal with, one at a time, probably as part of a post weekly review tidy.

I already feel better; for a few seconds work each time I am incrementally reducing my inbox clutter.

If you would like to learn more about managing your attention and getting things done, get along to my How to Get Things Done workshop in Halifax on Friday (31st Jan 2013)

 

Like this? Try these

 Need some help? Sign up to one of our email training workshops 

 Lost all your emails? what’s the worst that could happen? | thinkproductive.co.uk 

Rethink Your Email in 3 Steps | thinkproductive.co.uk 

Swizzle Turns All Your Email Newsletters Into a Weekly Digest 

 

 

We often work with teams, who want to find out how to get things done.

However, a productive team is not just about getting things done, it’s about improving HOW you do things.

In this post we look at a few ways teams can share ideas and experience, to become more effective, together.

 

The Think Productive Ninja demonstrating unorthodoxy to get things done

One of the traits of a productivity ninja is unorthodoxy.

This sometimes means ditching some of the foolish creations of the ego: never be afraid or embarrassed or too proud to ask for advice, even if that means you needing to show weakness.

And never resist an opportunity to learn something new from a trusted source.

Modelling the success of others is crucial.

Mentoring is a great way to do this: take advice from those who have travelled the road you’re setting out on, avoid making the mistakes they themselves made, and shortcut to success.

Along with mentors, think about your ‘partners-in-crime’. Who are the people travelling a similar road at the same time as you? Chances are, they all have mentors too and are learning equally important things.

Never be afraid to share your learning with others as you’ll be amazed at the priceless lessons you get back in return. Sometimes we resist such collaborative approaches because we believe, like some kind of superhero, that there is some added virtue in achieving things on our own or in being competitive.

Remember, the only thing that matters is whether you get there; no one cares how.

 

Like this? Try these

Find out more about our team productivity training or facilitation skills training workshops

Why teams need managers with zen-like calm | thinkproductive.co.uk 

Inside TPHQ! How the Think Productive team get things done | thinkproductive.co.uk 

5 Mentors Every Entrepreneur Should Have (youngentrepreneur.com)

 

 

Here are the links, video clips, infographics and images that we’ve been enjoying over the past 7 days!

 

5 Alternatives to Time-Wasting Meetings (Lifehack)

Six Critical Questions for Clarity (Grace Marshall)

Stay Motivated and Productive By Going Into Energy Saver Mode (Lifehack)

What goes on my calendar? GTD Times

How to Consistently Come Up with Great Ideas (Lifehack)

30sec Tip: Quote Smartly in Gmail (Lifehack)

What if money was no object? [video]

The machine that creates endless to-do lists (Wired)

Risk of Multitasking

Lists, productivity, infographic

What are the most popular lists? INFOGRAPHIC

Dilbert on productivity managment




I’ve just spent a month living in a beautiful little cabana hut on a deserted beach in Sri Lanka. I’ve been writing, re-writing, editing and generally getting immersed in the subject matter of productivity for my book, “How To Be A Productivity Ninja”. I could have written the book at home, but then I know what I’m like – I needed some seclusion, away from the internet, away from the email and interruptions, away from people (!) and alone with just my thoughts and my computer keyboard. That and the fact that I hate English winters.

To be honest, I was a slightly worried I’d be lonely or go mad, which I didn’t. But what my self-imposed seclusion did give me was a pretty big moment of clarity.

I HAD thought that I was writing a practical book full of top productivity tips. “ Here’s how I do it, here are some best practices, here are the ways you can turbo-charge your productivity”. I had a top publisher lined up and ready to release it, I was prepared to be a little more ‘businessy’ and ‘corporate’ in my tone of voice than our workshops are and I was excited about taking it to the business-market masses. A little bit of compromise traded for a little bit further reach.

It hasn’t turned out quite that way. I realised that “How To Be A Productivity Ninja” isn’t really a book about productivity at all. It’s really a book about screwing up, feeling overloaded and being trapped in the information age we live in – and of course, how we deal with all the things that our busy lives throw at us as a result of this. By being separated from the information culture I’m so used to, with no Facebook or iPad to distract me, I spent a month remembering what it’s like to just be human. I started to feel that the more important thing to do with this book was to be me, be human.

Productivity Ninjas are not superheroes. This I always knew. At Think Productive we’ve always been keen to avoid the ‘guru’ mentality and work with people as people, foibles and all, rather than selling the dream of becoming perfect productivity superheroes overnight. I think people respect us more for taking this approach and the empowering message as a result is that whilst none of us can be superman, we can all be a ninja.
So, as my book enters the final editting stage in the early part of 2012, here’s what it means for me, for Think Productive and for the book itself.

For Think Productive: We’re going to remain reassuringly human. In our work, we’re going to continue to acknowledge that mistakes are made, accidents happen and that life deals us curveballs – and that this doesn’t stop any of us from being better at what we’re trying to achieve. We’re going to continue to be passionate advocates for the practical change that people can really make.

For me personally: I’m making space. Anyone who knows me probably knows explicitly or has a hunch somewhere inside their minds that I’m one of those people who likes to spread themselves a bit too thin. I want to change the world and I want to do it now. Well, my time away left me feeling fired up to change the world even more. Despite working harder in December than I’ve worked in a long time, I also feel re-energised by the process. But my time away also left me feeling like I need to develop a sustainable lifestyle outside of Think Productive (which in 2011 included sitting on 3 charity boards, volunteering lots of time for free and being involved in a couple of other charity start-ups as well). So, I’m going to be cutting back on some of the work I do with people already changing the world, to make way for the energy and attention needed to start up some new projects of my own. They’re doing just fine.

For the book: It’s going to be 100% Ninja. I’m going to keep it 100% human, 0% superhero guru, 0% management-speak and jargon. I can’t promise the dream of productivity perfection because I’m a terrible liar. I hope the publishers like it. More importantly though, I think you’re going to like it more as a result of me not making the compromise. It may mean I sell a few less copies, but I’ll live with that.

On December 24th, at approximately midday, my draft was finished. 82,000 words completed. I can honestly say it’s been one of the hardest things I’ve ever done. 18 months of ideas, sporadic writing, talking, pitching, meetings, re-writes, procrastination.

The final part I wrote was a paragraph about celebrating imperfection, looking out for happy accidents and reminding the reader not to try to be a superhero but just to do their best, to work smarter AND work harder, and to remember their ultimate mission is to change the world. I realised, perhaps like a lot of writers, that I was really writing this whole thing for myself as much as for you – as my own personal instruction manual, my own love letter to the importance of being human and making the most of the short time that we have in this amazing world.

2012 has started with me buoyed up to make more changes, be even more of a ninja, up my game and stay as focussed as I am ambitious. But it’s also started with me realising more than ever the importance of remaining reassuringly human and avoiding beating myself up in search of perfection – and realising how determined I am to inspire others to do the same.

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Graham’s book, “How To Be A Productivity Ninja” will be released in 2012. As soon as we have an exact date, we’ll let you know.

 

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