• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Bev's Tips for a Better Work Life

Tips for a more rewarding and resilient career

For almost 20 years, Bev has been coaching
professionals to thrive at work, navigate
transitions and grow as leaders.
  • Home
  • Bev’s Books
  • Blog
  • Podcast
  • Services
    • What is Coaching?
    • Coaching Structure
  • Bios
    • Beverly Jones
    • Merry Foresta
    • Randy Rieland
    • Rosa Maríaa Barreiro
  • Clients
  • Media
  • Contact us

email

Tidy up that data overload

Posted by Beverly Jones on December 29, 2015

Too much information

can be overwhelming.

Learn to clean it up!

In my last post I talked about how clutter can drag us down and distract us from our most important priorities. We can gain so much when we can beat back that tumultuous tide of too much disorganized stuff!

Information can overload us. (image by vectorstory via Fotolia)

And there’s a particularly burdensome type of clutter in today’s workplace: the vast, unending flow of information that may seem urgent but can leave us feeling exhausted and more confused than ever.

That was a problem for “Sophie,” a busy manager working long hours in a competitive environment. She had just received a modest promotion, which meant that her small team of analysts would grow from three direct reports up to five. She’d wanted this broader responsibility, but now she wasn’t feeling happy about her expanded role. Sophie told me that she was already operating at her full capacity. So how could she possibly handle the additional work that would come along with her bigger job?

When, in the course of coaching, we looked at how Sophie was spending her workdays, it seemed that she was constantly struggling to sort through more information than she could possibly absorb. She wanted to understand each of her analyst’s projects, so she tried to stay current with what they were doing and all the material they were processing. She would listen carefully during her frequent meetings, just taking small breaks to check her phone messages. And throughout each day, no matter what she was working on, she’d turn repeatedly from her current projects in an attempt to carefully read and promptly deal with countless emails.

Sophie was suffering from information overload. She was so overwhelmed by all the details she was trying to digest that she had lost the ability to set reasonable priorities and concentrate on her most important goals. When she looked at her work patterns, she realized that it was time to make more realistic choices about how much she could do. She needed to let some things go, and to better manage the deluge of information that faced her every day.

Sophie was not alone. According to leading cognitive psychologist Daniel J. Levitin, in today’s world we’re often confronted by more information than our brains can handle. And the more cognitive load we struggle with, the more likely it is that we’ll make errors, lose our keys and have trouble with even small decisions.

Levitin tackles the problem of too much data in his wide-ranging book, “The Organized Mind – Thinking Straight in the Age of Information Overload.” He says that our old habits may cause us to be bogged down in mental clutter, so sometimes some areas need must be cleaned up and reorganized.

Here are some of Levin’s suggestions for managing the hyper flow of data:

  • Stop trying to multitask. Our brains evolved to do one thing at a time, Levitin says, and the idea that we can do several things at once is just a “diabolical illusion.” When we try to keep up with email while we’re working on a key project, there’s a cost. Our attempt to constantly change gears squanders our most valuable cognitive resource: attention. And at the same time our over-stimulated brain increases the production of stress hormones like cortisol. To do your best work, set aside blocks of time to concentrate on your top priorities, one at a time.
  • Know what’s good enough. Every day we’re confronted by countless small decisions, and handling them can wear us out. But for most questions, like what to do for lunch, we don’t need to make the best We just need to decide and move on. Levitin suggests that you stop wasting time choosing what to do about things that aren’t your top priority. Instead, become comfortable with the strategy of “satisficing,” which means that you quickly select a good enough option, even if it may not be the best possible one.
  • Get stuff out of your head. Like many productivity experts, Levitin argues that a fundamental principle of organizing is to shift the burden of managing information from our brains, out to the external world. Often this simply means that if you need to remember something you should write it down. One benefit is that writing things conserves the mental energy you might waste in worrying about forgetting them. And for many of us, handwritten notes seem to work best. Levitin says that he was surprised while researching to see how many people at the top of their professions always carry around a notepad or index cards for taking physical notes, instead of using electronic devices.
  • Take breaks. Research suggests that people who take a 15-minute break every couple of hours are much more efficient, in the long run, than their colleagues who never leave their desks. By briefly walking, or listening to music, or even napping, you can increase your productivity and creativity.
  • Delegate.  Most employees enjoy their work more and perform better if they have at least some autonomy. This is good news for managers, like Sophie, who struggle with information overload, because it underscores the value of pushing down more authority and empowering direct reports to exercise more judgment.

If the daily barrage of data leaves you more besieged than enlightened, it may be time for a cleanup. Recognize that some of those bytes are just clutter, and try new ways to manage all that information.

For more tips for a flourishing career, check out my new book, Think Like an Entrepreneur, Act Like a CEO.

Filed Under: career resilience, email, productivity, self improvement Tagged With: data management, information overload

4 strategies for handling 9 types of annoying email

Posted by Beverly Jones on March 8, 2014

Want to get a better grip on

email that wears you down?

 emailIt’s not just that you’re getting too much email.  A bigger deal is the way it can ruin your mood, contribute to a toxic environment and change the structure of your work life.

 From so many coaching clients, I hear growing frustration about how other people’s poor email etiquette can drain your energy. Would your days be better without email abuses like these? [Read more…] about 4 strategies for handling 9 types of annoying email

Filed Under: business etiquette, email, workplace issues Tagged With: business etiquette, difficult colleagues, toxic workplace

Primary Sidebar

Learn About The Book!

Bev’s book can help you build career resilience
Think Like an Entrepreneur
Act Like a CEO

50 Indispensable Tips to Help You Stay Afloat, Bounce Back, and Get Ahead at Work

Beverly E. Jones

President
Clearways Consulting LLC

Sign up for “Bev’s Tips”


Explore Past Ezines

Links to occasional colleagues

ECCA
Kerry Hannon
Ohio University's Voinovich School
Congressional Management Foundation
WOUB
ShadowComm Web Solutions

Watch for Bev’s new podcast, “Jazzed About Work,” coming soon from WOUB Digitable. Featured will be lively discussions about building engaging, resilient careers.

Bev at Ohio University,
where she is a visiting
executive with the
Voinovich School of
Leadership & Public Affairs


Bev's garden at Buckeye Farm

Bev in the Media

Bev’s career coaching is featured on NPR

Bev’s job search tips, in AARP.org

Entrepreneur.com suggests you stop complaining about your job and do something about it by reading Bev’s book and working toward your dream goal

Bob Garlick chats with Bev about career success in this Business Book Talk interview

The Palm Beach Post suggests that you share gifts of knowledge, motivation & self-improvement, including with Bev’s book

The Voinovich School of Leadership and Public Affairs writes about Bev’s history as an Ohio University “campus feminist

Bev on key communication habits, in stilettosontheglassceiling.com

Science Magazine reviews Bev’s book and explores how becoming adept at "leading up" helps you to enhance your career and contribute more within your organization.

John David's Huffington Post article talks about how Bev’s book evolved from her blog

In her Journal Record book review, Terri Schichenmeyer says Bev offers soothingly civil, workable ideas that can make your life and your career better

AARP features a book chapter on dealing with colleagues who make your life miserable

Congressional Management Foundation says thinking like an Entrepreneur can help Capitol Hill staff

AMA Playbook shares Bev’s tips on building your leadership brand

The News-Sentinel offers a nice book review

The Journal Gazette agrees that an entrepreneurial attitude can help in any job

Kerry Hannon’s Forbes article quotes Bev

Bev discusses career tips for Boomers on WOUB

Bev writes about how to avoid getting distracted by political talk at the office, on bizjournals.com

Money quotes Bev about how to fall in love with your job again

Forbes describes how to find a second act with purpose

The Journal Gazette says an entrepreneurial attitude can help with any job

Rich Eisenberg interviews Bev about fresh career starts at any age, in Forbes.com

Bev speaks about Ohio women supporting women

Bev and thought leader Dave Goldberg discuss ways to build durable careers in changing times, in this VoiceAmerica Business podcast

Bev speaks to Ohio University alumnae in Columbus, Ohio

Bev writes in Forbes about how some high achieving women aren't moving confidently into leadership

Listen to "The Leadership Coaching Revolution," with Bev as a panelist on "Big Beacon Radio," on VoiceAmerica Business

Hear Bev's podcast about writing her book, on WOUB Digital

See Bev's YouTube channel, with career tips from the Buckeye Farm garden

More Links

See Bev's book on Facebook

Leadership & Management Books

Career Press

C-Suite Book Club

More About Bev

Beverly Jones is a master of reinvention. She started out as a writer, next led university programs for women, and then trail-blazed her career as a Washington lawyer and Fortune 500 energy executive. Throughout her varied work life she has mentored other professionals to grow and thrive.

Since 2002, Bev has flourished as an executive coach and leadership consultant, helping professionals of all ages to advance their careers, shift directions, and become more productive. Based in the nation's capital, she works with clients across the country, including accomplished leaders at major federal agencies, NGOs, universities and companies of all sizes. Bev is a popular speaker and facilitator, and she creates workshops and other events around the needs of her clients.

When she's not working, Bev is often found in Rappahannock County, Virginia, in the garden of the farmhouse she shares with her husband, former Washington Post ombudsman Andy Alexander, and their two dogs.

See more career tips from Bev in Kerry Hannon's prize-winning book, "Love Your Job"



Read about Bev’s coaching in Barbara Bradley Hagerty’s best selling book, "Life Reimagined"

http://www.barbarabradleyhagerty.com

Footer

Contact Us

coach@clearwaysconsulting.com

Beverly Jones
54 Pophams Ford Road
Sperryville, VA 22740

Beverly Jones
2925, 43rd Street, NW
Washington, DC 20016

Newsletter

Submit
Your Email Address to Receive Bev's Newsletter:

Bev is associated with Executive Coaching & Consulting Associates.

©2019 Clearways Consulting, LLC. All Rights Reserved.
Website by ShadowComm LLC