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Daily Archives: June 23, 2012

Two Lists you should Look at Every Morning – Peter Bregman

Nimesoma hii Article ya Peter Bregman ikanivutia nikaona ni vyema nika share na readers wa MF.

Peter Bregman is the CEO of Bregman Partners, Inc., a global management consulting firm which advises CEOs and their leadership teams. He speaks, writes, and consults about how to lead and how to live.

He is the author, most recently, of 18 Minutes: Find Your Focus, Master Distraction, and Get the Right Things Done, winner of the Gold Medal from the Axiom Business Book awards, named the best business book of  the year on NPR, and selected by Publisher’s Weekly and the New York Post as a top 10 business book of the year. He is also the author of Point B: A Short Guide to Leading a Big Change and co-author of five other books. Featured on PBS, ABC and CNN, Peter is a regular contributor to Harvard Business Review, Fast Company, Forbes, National Public Radio (NPR), Psychology Today, and CNN.

 

Two Lists You Should Look at Every Morning by Peter Bregman    
I was late for my meeting with the CEO of a technology company and I was emailing him from my iPhone as I walked onto the elevator in his company’s office building.

I stayed focused on the screen as I rode to the sixth floor. I was still typing with my thumbs when the elevator doors opened and I walked out without looking up. Then I heard a voice behind me, “Wrong floor.” I looked back at the man who was holding the door open for me to get back in; it was the CEO, a big smile on his face. He had been in the elevator with me the whole time. “Busted,” he said.
The world is moving fast and it’s only getting faster. So much technology. So much information. So much to understand, to think about, to react to.

A friend of mine recently took a new job as the head of learning and development at a mid-sized investment bank. When she came to work her first day on the job she turned on her computer, logged in with the password they had given her, and found 385 messages already waiting for her.
So we try to speed up to match the pace of the action around us. We stay up until 3 am trying to answer all our emails. We twitter, we facebook, and we link-in. We scan news websites wanting to make sure we stay up to date on the latest updates. And we salivate each time we hear the beep or vibration of a new text message.

But that’s a mistake. The speed with which information hurtles towards us is unavoidable (and it’s getting worse). But trying to catch it all is counterproductive.

The faster the waves come, the more deliberately we need to navigate. Otherwise we’ll get tossed around like so many particles of sand, scattered to oblivion. Never before has it been so important to be grounded and intentional and to know what’s important.
Never before has it been so important to say “No.” No, I’m not going to read that article. No, I’m not going to read that email. No, I’m not going to take that phone call. No, I’m not going to sit through that meeting.
It’s hard to do because maybe, just maybe, that next piece of information will be the key to our success.

But our success actually hinges on the opposite: on our willingness to risk missing some information. Because trying to focus on it all is a risk in itself. We’ll exhaust ourselves. We’ll get confused, nervous, and irritable. And we’ll miss the CEO standing next to us in the elevator.
A study of car accidents by the Virginia Tech Transportation Institute put cameras in cars to see what happens right before an accident. They found that in 80% of crashes the driver was distracted during the three seconds preceding the incident. In other words, they lost focus — dialed their cell phones, changed the station on the radio, took a bite of a sandwich, maybe checked a text — and didn’t notice that something changed in the world around them. Then they crashed.
The world is changing fast and if we don’t stay focused on the road ahead, resisting the distractions that, while tempting, are, well, distracting, then we increase the chances of a crash.

Now is a good time to pause, prioritize, and focus. Make two lists:
List 1: Your Focus List (the road ahead)

What are you trying to achieve? What makes you happy? What’s important to you? Design your time around those things. Because time is your one limited resource and no matter how hard you try you can’t work 25/8.
List 2: Your Ignore List (the distractions)
To succeed in using your time wisely, you have to ask the equally important but often avoided complementary questions: what are you willing not to achieve? What doesn’t make you happy? What’s not important to you? What gets in the way?
Some people already have the first list. Very few have the second. But given how easily we get distracted and how many distractions we have these days, the second is more important than ever. The leaders who will continue to thrive in the future know the answers to these questions and each time there’s a demand on their attention they ask whether it will further their focus or dilute it.
Which means you shouldn’t create these lists once and then put them in a drawer. These two lists are your map for each day. Review them each morning, along with your calendar, and ask: what’s the plan for today? Where will I spend my time? How will it further my focus? How might I get distracted? Then find the courage to follow through, make choices, and maybe disappoint a few people.
After the CEO busted me in the elevator, he told me about the meeting he had just come from. It was a gathering of all the finalists, of which he was one, for the title of Entrepreneur of the Year. This was an important meeting for him — as it was for everyone who aspired to the title (the judges were all in attendance) — and before he entered he had made two explicit decisions:

1. To focus on the meeting itself and 2. Not to check his BlackBerry.
What amazed him was that he was the only one not glued to a mobile device.

Were all the other CEOs not interested in the title? Were their businesses so dependent on them that they couldn’t be away for one hour? Is either of those a smart thing to communicate to the judges?
There was only one thing that was most important in that hour and there was only one CEO whose behavior reflected that importance, who knew where to focus and what to ignore. Whether or not he eventually wins the title, he’s already winning the game.
PETER BREGMAN

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Every iPhone accessory you own is now obsolete‏

iPhone 5

A still from leaked footage shows  the difference beteen iPhone 5 port and the current design.

 

ALL those expensive iPhone accessories you own, the stuff that plugs into  the bottom of the device – speakers, docks, chargers etc. They’re about to  become obsolete.  

Tech blog TechCrunch reports that Apple plans to change the  design and size of the connector for the iPhone 5. The old 30-pin connector, which has been the standard since the third  generation iPod, is to be replaced by a 19-pin mini connector. “TechCrunch has independently verified that Apple is working on adding a  19-pin port to the new iPhone.

 

It is a move that will surely send shocks through  the iPhone accessory ecosystem. “The new port is similar in size to the Thunderbolt port available on many  MacBook devices but (TechCrunch) has been told by three independent  manufacturers that the pin-out will be different.

 

“It’s clear Apple is more concerned with space savings inside each  device.” Leaked video footageclaiming to be of the iPhone 5 shows a  smaller connector. TechCrunch’s prediction that the news will send shockwaves is spot on.

 

Bose DockBose dockExpensive sound docks like this model from Bose were  purpose-built to use with an iPhone.

 

Tech blogger Robert Scoble said the change would give Apple a tighter control  on iPhone accessories.

“It will be nearly impossible to make unlicensed devices,” he wrote on his  blog. “Unfortunately these design goals mean making obsolete the something like  10 power chargers in my home. Sigh.” Awesome Robo’s Sirio

 

Brozzi wrote: “People are stunned by this possibility,  myself included. I mean, why fix something that’s not broken?”

 

Writing on Forbes.com, Dave Thier said: “Apple is great at getting us to buy  new products, and this may be one its biggest coups yet.

 

The environment will  suffer, like usual, but expect accessory manufacturers to make a mint after an  uncomfortable transition.

 

Mashable reports the iPhone’s dock connector “is about to go on a  diet”.

 

 

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