Quality Over Quantity

February 26th, 2009
Link Noted on August 31, 2010
ยป Arcade Fire video for We Used to Wait off their new album... all in HTML5.

Amazing. If you haven't seen this yet, please do yourself a favor and check it out. Should work in any HTML5 compliant browser, but I'd recommend Google Chrome for the best experience.

3270176074_4d1699780f_o1I love this:

QUALITY vs quantity, UX process.
Check email ONLY:

  • 10AM
  • 1PM
  • 4PM

Send any time
Set email to check every 3 hours.
NO email on evenings.
NO email on weekends.
EMERGENCY? = Use phone.

FOCUS 1-3 Activities max/day
LOG 1-3 Succinct status bullets every day on team wiki

MINIMIZE chat
MAXIMIZE single-tasking

OUT by 5:30PM
~No excuses~

I’ve been trying to live by many of these principles at work for the last few months. The highlights:

  • Turn off email notifications and minimize the number of times I check email each day.
  • I purchased the large size, hard cover Moleskine daily diary. Each day I list 3 work to-dos (max of 5, no excuses!), in order of priority at the top of each page. At the bottom of each page, I list personal to-dos. I used the address book in the back of the diary to log work projects.
  • Maximize single tasking as much as possible.

I have to say, I feel much more productive using this system. Way more, in fact. Checking off all your to-dos each day (well, most days) is a very satisfying exercise and positive reinforcement. This process has really changed the way I work and think about tasks/projects.

I highly recommend single tasking over multi-tasking to produce quality, high focused work. (Multi-tasking is a myth, except for real low-level activities, btw.) I also highly recommend the Moleskine diaries.

And you may be thinking, you only get a small handful of things done each day? And I say, you are confusing ‘doing’ and ‘done’. You may DO more things each day, but how much do you actually get DONE? You’d be surprised. Actually finishing three things each day is quite an accomplishment. And those three things pile up very quickly as each day passes.

[hat tip: Smarterware, Gina Trapani's new blog]


Related posts:

  1. Backpack It
  2. Arcade Fire HTML5 Music Video
  3. On Meetings
  4. In a recent study for The Archives of Internal Medicine, scientists followed 153 men and women for two weeks, keeping track of their quality and duration of sleep. Then, during a five-day period, they quarantined the subjects and exposed them to cold viruses. Those who slept an average of fewer than seven hours a night, it turned out, were three times as likely to get sick as those who averaged at least eight hours.
  5. One last time… recalling emails doesn't work!

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This entry was posted on Thursday, February 26th, 2009 at 8:56 pm and is filed under General. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.

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