Information junkie and ideas enthusiast. New father and new to London after a lifetime in Germany, Vice president at NTT DATA UK: I am an occasional blogger and more frequent tweeter (twinstan). All the views here are my own.
Sunday, 17 March 2013
How many things can you focus on?
In this context, I stumbled across the "bare-bones" of Alexander Graf's presentation on his highly readable blog, kassenzone.de. The presentation itself is interesting - an appeal for us to try to see the business model opportunities left and right around us and the danger of focusing on one thing - but I like the embedded YouTube video even more. Try it out here (I won't comment on it, because that ruins the impact, but go ahead and try it before you read on!).
It has become a cliche that focus on one thing and doing it well is everything and yet at the same time we observe the necessity to be constantly aware of what is going on all around us.
How to handle this?
....I don't honestly know, so suggestions are most welcome ;-).
....My amateur answer for myself thus far, however, is to try to compartmentalise my time, to focus during the week on the job in hand (whatever it might be) and then to very deliberately block time in my month (typically one Sunday afternoon, as this blog entry attests ;-)) to try to look around and reflect on what else is going on. I am finding that this time is enough to get a few impulses and the thoughts/ideas then gestate in the background during the rest of the month, without me really thinking about them.
How many things can you focus on?
Thursday, 14 March 2013
Getting the Inbox under control
In recent years I have found that the casts have gotten a little short on content - typically, the team have 1-2 key messages and get them covered in the first 5 minutes - but I guess this is as much a question of learning style (multiple reptitions). This week's cast (here) is a good one.
The messages are few and simple, but do make sense:
- plan to do your email at regular times only (and not all the time when you are at your desk)
- budget time in accordance with the priority that you give to mail
- work through all your mails in this time, even if that simply means creating an action for an email and filing the actual email away, or responding that you will respond once you have time
- switch off the auto-download of mails
I am constantly impressed by a smart colleague of mine that literally deletes all mails that she does not absolutely need (including her own sent mail) and saves key messages into her normal filing structure - she never needs long to find what she needs and in 6 years I have only once had to provide her with an email that she had overzealously deleted.
Too often keeping up with emails becomes a task in itself and it simply should not be. This is just good common sense.
In the interests of full disclosure - I have tried this several times over the last few years, but never managed to be this strict. Hopefully, practice will make perfect...
Tuesday, 12 March 2013
Thursday, 7 March 2013
Recent TED talk on managing life
Wednesday, 20 February 2013
Latest Google Glass video
Saturday, 16 February 2013
Most loved digital brands in UK...
Sunday, 10 February 2013
Integrated multi-channel experiences in retail and beyond long over due
Having done quite a bit of work in the online retail space over the past couple of years, I am always interested in reading about peoples' predictions for what is to come. But increasingly, it has to be said that the "future is already here".
Even a year ago, integrated multi-channel digital experiences that encompass the physical retail space were bandied around as visions for the future. But as a recent posting at eConsultancy.com reminds us, the imperative for action for many (if not all) fashion retailers is there today - the competition is already doing it (and, unsurprisingly those with a robust online customer experience focused strategy are finding it easier to innovate further).
The future is today! Retailers get moving, or die! Nothing new, but the clock really is ticking!
Here is the link: