Experience is a hard teacher because she gives the test first, the lesson afterward. ~ Vernon Law
If you are like me, you have learned to hate email. I remember when email was the “new thing.” Getting email gave you that warm and fuzzy feeling. It made you feel important. Remember the movie You’ve Got Mail?
Email has now become a drug, and we are addicted. As a major form of communication in the Commercial Real Estate industry, many CRE practitioners feel like they must check their smart phone every five minutes. Show of hands: who checks their phone before they even get out of bed? Guilty here.
Beyond that, email has become the Great Interrupter of the day. How often are you plugging away on a task – making great progress – and that beep and corresponding box at the bottom of your screen pops up. You are derailed and may not be able to regain your focus. This is why I hate email – always distracting.
It is possible to control this fire hose of hundreds of emails that scream for our attention every day. And it is completely possible to shave a minimum of 30 minutes a day that otherwise is spent managing emails. For me, a self-proclaimed efficiency nerd, 30 minutes a day is huge!
Now, you can go the scorched Earth route espoused by Tim Ferriss in his best-seller The 4-Hour Work Week. His method has more to do with ignoring email and training everyone to know that you only respond to it once a week. That just doesn’t fit the CRE industry. Instead, I use a method that I learned and tweaked from the book Getting Things Done by David Allen.
What would you do with 30 extra minutes a day? What other ways do you manage the daily email onslaught? Join the conversation and leave your comments below.
Today I read a post from Chris Brogan that has consumed my thinking ever since. If you don’t know Chris Brogan, he is a thought leader in the space where business, technology, and social media intersect. You can find him here.
So today I was reading his post where he introduces the idea of the 3 Book Diet. What is the 3 Book Diet? Simply put, this is a commitment to read only 3 books for an entire year. Just 3. Read them twice or three times each, but you are limited to 3 books for a year.
My wife read three books last week!
I already have goals for 2013 that are shaping up. Once of them is to read 30 books next year. 30. Not 3 – 30. But what would I retain out of those 30 books? What could I apply before moving on to the next one? Wisdom is knowledge…applied. My goal of 30 books…is it to actually change my life? Or to be able to say that I read 30 books in a year? Maybe reading just 3 books, and reading them again, would have a more profound impact on my life. Reading with time to digest the ideas could be pretty fantastic. Slow. Chill. Life-changing?
So I’m going to take his challenge to read just 3 books from Nov. 1, 2012 through Halloween of 2013. Note: I will be reading the Bible outside of these 3 books.
So the question is, what 3 books?! This is the question that has preoccupied my mind all day. When I’m preoccupied, my wife always thinks there is something wrong. She has asked me a couple of times tonight if I’m okay. I am okay. I am intrigued! I want to choose the right books.
Chris makes a good suggestion that the books should be spread over the different aspects of your life. You can read all the rules of the 3 Book Diet here.
So here are the books that I am considering right now. I would love to hear which 3 you would choose.
So, I am absolutely dying to hear what your 3 books would be. Join the conversation and let me know what yours would be below!