Welcome to the IdeaMatt blog!

My rebooted blog on tech, creative ideas, digital citizenship, and life as an experiment.

Entries from November 1, 2008 - November 30, 2008

Thursday
Nov202008

A Matt Update

Much going on here in Matt land, so a little update for you. These all focus on how I can help more people, more broadly. Suggestions and feedback welcome!


  • Matt brand: I'm finally getting some clarity on my bigger vision, and how it encompasses productivity. It's still emerging, but it's around providing guidance, tools, and methods for enhancing intellectual performance and happiness. (Related: Genius, Purpose, And Cool Job Descriptions - What Are *you* Built To Do?)
  • Life as an experiment: Absolutely central to my work is the idea of treating everything in life as an experiment. This is what's emerged since my big leap into consulting (see Commitment Time!). My plan is to own this idea :-) In addition to our book, our plans include discussion groups, podcasts, and more. (Related: Just for fun I've included the essential words [1] my colleague and I came up with that make up the approach.)
  • Blog: I'll continue to write weekly essays, while expanding the them to match my original "IdeaMatt" direction: Tools and ideas for the terminally curious [2]. I'll be migrating some of this to my new newsletter and others to products (see below), but still giving away lots of content I hope you'll find valuable. I'll also be examining how to tastefully monetize this work. I hope you'll help set the direction via an upcoming survey.
  • Consulting: I'm continuing to grow my practice, which is the current economic engine [3] that fuels this all. Stay tuned for new products and services (see next).
  • New services: In addition to my on-site 1:1, group, and workshops, I'll be rolling out new telecoaching offerings, including:

    • Workflow jumpstart (both individuals and group)
    • Project planning for individuals (pulling ideas and tools from my research, as referred to in Simple Project Planning For Individuals: A Round-up)
    • Daily planning & accountability series (inspired by A Daily Planning Experiment: Two Weeks Of Accountable Rigorous Action)
    • Productivity "Checkride" [4] (making sure your existing system is running true, including checking your I/O balance)
    • Idea System Assessment & Improvement (processes for capture, organization, re-finding and use of the information we deal with in our daily lives)
    • Facilitated book groups (a learning experience around great books and wide domains, with me as your guide - an excuse to keep your mind sharp! [5])

  • Products:

    • Workflow self-study program (a self-paced series based on the 100+ page booklet my workshop participants receive, with the option of group telecoaching)
    • Productivity assessment and diagnosis tool (a much-expanded version of my GTD Workflow Assessment/Tips Checklist, with targeted content to address trouble areas)
    • The Productivity Missing Manual (for anyone familiar with GTD, you'll be very comfortable with this collection of best ideas to solve the issues that come up implementing a system on your own)

  • Newsletter: Finally, I'm very excited to be rolling out my newsletter. I've avoided doing Yet Another Time Management Newsletter until I had something unique and valuable to say, but now it's clicked. Look for it soon.

Cheers!


References



  • [1] The words we came up with included:

    • alternatives
    • ambiguity/uncertainty
    • assumption
    • capture
    • collaboration
    • compassion
    • creativity
    • curiosity
    • data
    • detachment/objectivity
    • discovery
    • empiricism
    • equanimity
    • eureka
    • experiment
    • failure/mistakes
    • faith
    • flexibility
    • gratitude
    • happiness
    • insight
    • method
    • mindfulness
    • mindset
    • observation
    • perspective
    • playfulness/play
    • questions
    • risk/courage
    • serendipity/synchronicity
    • simplicity
    • transformation
    • zest

  • [2] I'm still working on a nice tagline. This particular one is inspired by Dorothy Parker's brilliant
    The cure for boredom is curiosity. There is no cure for curiosity.

  • [3] From Good to Great: Why Some Companies Make the Leap.. and Others Don't, there are three intersecting circles required for greatness, including 1) what you are deeply passionate about, 2) what you can be the best in the world at, and 3) what best drives your economic engine.
  • [4] From the Wikipedia Checkride entry:
    Throughout the check ride, the examinee should be evaluated on the use of the appropriate checklist. After informing the examinee that his/her use of checklist will be evaluated, watch the examinee's use of said checklist. It should be very obvious if the examinee is comfortable using the checklist. Obviously the check list can be used in several different ways. Whether the checklist is used during each step or reviewed to ensure all items are covered after an activity is complete is immaterial. Bottom line, the checklist should be consulted when appropriate. In soaring the use of common take off and landing check lists is common and certainly acceptable.

  • [5] I've been enjoying Jonah Lehrer's work, including the idea that our brains need rigorous workouts to stay in shape. See Aging Gracefully -- It's a Real Workout. He says several studies suggest that it's largely an ancillary benefit of "sustained cognitive engagement," or thinking intensely on a regular basis. Admit it - that's you ;-)

Wednesday
Nov122008

Custom workflows for knowledge workers 

Knowledge work tends to be unstructured. Specifying a detailed flow of work is sometimes possible, but is probably not the best way to improve a knowledge work process.


This passage comes from Thinking for a Living: How to Get Better Performances And Results from Knowledge Workers, a stimulating [1] read about my "peeps" (i.e., you) and what the highly overused term means. When I read it I thought: That can't be right! Heck, teaching structure (for self-management) is what I do for a living. But after a few seconds of thought I recalled exceptions from my consulting that I'd like to share.

Introduction


When I work with clients I look for opportunities to integrate the general methods I teach with their specific work. When I identify them, we jointly come up with customized systems that work for them. I love this kind of work because it requires creativity, and really streamlines their work. This allows them to think less about mechanics and more about the important stuff - getting insights into the customer's needs, hiring the best person, solving a tough engineering problem, or dreaming up the Next Big Thing for the business.

As Davenport points out, not all jobs are amenable to this kind of analysis, but there are usually parts that can be cleaned up, standardized, or simplified. I'll share three such systems with you in hopes that they'll provide ideas for streamlining your work. The first three are specific ones from clients, and the last is a collection of smaller, generally applicable ones.

(Side note: In The Myth of the Paperless Office, via "In praise of clutter" Economist, 00130613, 12/21/2002, Vol. 365, Issue 8304, there's a fascinating summary of why removing paper from flight controller workflow is so hard. I've excerpted the section below [2].)

Regarding terminology, I consider this kind of personal workflow streamlining (anyone have a better term?) different from automation. I'll give the definition a shot: Workflow streamlining is capturing the steps and states that you regularly encounter to do some aspect of your work. It's about thinking less about the process and making fewer mistakes. In contrast, automation is removing steps you have to take, i.e., compiling many steps into one. It's about thinking not at all about the process.

Finally, a little request: I'd like to reach more readers, so to make this easier I added a "ShareThis" widget at the bottom of my posts. If you think a post is useful, please share it. Thanks!

Questions I'd love to hear your answers to:

  • How globally do you think this kind of streamlining applies to professional work?
  • What are some examples of ways you've been able to streamline parts of your job?
  • As you go higher up the organization, do the opportunities for this necessarily decrease?



Education Coordinator


This client was responsible for handling training requests for a product company. Work would come in as requests that include the type of training and the event's desired date and location. Each request involved a regular sequence of steps, and active requests had corresponding states - New, Waiting for Venue, Waiting for Travel Arrangements, Waiting for Finish, Waiting for Evaluation, etc. After capturing the states and the overall sequence as a checklist [3], we decided each request would be handled as a project with a corresponding paper folder (the client's preference). A printed blank checklist affixed to the cover acted as a kind of "job card" [4], and kicked off a new request. For overall tracking and review we listed each request in the client's master list of projects, which she reviewed frequently during the day. When an event related to a particular project happened, my client would go to the corresponding folder, update her notes, and activate the next step, e.g., making a phone call, sending an email, or arranging travel. Neat!


Human Resources Director


In this case I worked with the HR Director at a mid-sized company that was growing rapidly. She was overloaded by a spate of new hires, so we put into place a simple workflow to streamline that part of her job. Like the previous case, we took advantage of states inherent to the process. In this case for each position to be filled we created six folders [5]:

  • Advertising
  • Completed Interviews
  • In Process - including Waiting For and Action Support
  • Interview Packets - grouped by applicant
  • Not Interviewing - including "maybes"
  • References - grouped by applicant
Controlling these was a checklist that used these folders: First, create and place ad, putting the associated materials into the first folder. Enter Waiting For and calendar reminders. As responses came in they'd go into Interview Packets folder, grouped by applicant. And so on. Again, the point is to identify what's common to the job (or that part of the job) and make a routine of the steps and structure involved. This lets you give the appropriate amount of attention to each aspect without having to reinvent the pieces each time. The plus is this requires less thinking about the process itself, which frees you up to focus on the creative side of the job, e.g., writing the ad and evaluating applicants.


Doctor at a small medical clinic


For variety, the final case is a doctor running a small clinic. She has a staff of four people (e.g., receptionist, office manager, nurse, bookkeeper), and eight treatment rooms. Much of our work was setting up communication flow and boundaries. An important one was the physician's Outbox (on her desk, right under her Inbox - always on top!), which had two uses. First, as she was emptying her inbox the doctor would rapidly decide each item's action [6] and if it could be delegated she would write a quick note directly on it (or on a sticky) and put it in the Outbox. The staff were instructed to empty this box regularly, which made for timely action. (Before, there were delays and lost work.) This enabled a crisper back-and-forth life cycle for a particular item. For example, it might arrive in the mail for the front desk and, while processing it, if the receptionist had questions she'd write a note on it and put it in the doctor's inbox (no need to interrupt her). When the doctor got to it she'd write her answer on it then put it into her Outbox, which a staff member would pick up that day and dispatch appropriately. Some of the items were of the "we'll talk about this during staff meeting" variety, which went with an entry in the doctor's agenda for that person.

This was very different from her previous approach, which was to either not handle the paper at all (activating a "nag" mode from the front desk), to fill it out then return it opportunistically (that is, when she thought of it), or to interrupt her staff when one of them walked by. As you can imagine, each of these had consequences that created waste. Even more satisfying was how my client was able to focus on the kinds of staff interactions that meant most to her (education and support, for example), rather than these mundane ones. Everything went smoother afterwards.

(Note: She and I talked a good deal about who should be receiving what information. Typically my clients are getting a lot of incoming that should be going to staff, or not coming in at all. This quickly becomes apparent when clearing paper and email backlogs. "Why am I getting this at all?" is a good question to ask.)


Smaller Workflows


Beyond these larger, more specific "checklist/state" flows, there are often opportunities to streamline frequent small jobs. They mostly come down to having a task-specific work station and a corresponding checklist. Liz Davenport puts it well in Order from Chaos: "When you sit down on your desk to work, you need to have all the tools you use at appropriate places." Following are a few to get you thinking.

  • Balancing your checking account: Although some think balancing accounts is a thing of the past, I've found the state of the art in financial software hasn't yet automated the process. So I was still stuck with a rather unpleasant 45 minutes [7] each month of processing receipts, verifying transactions and amounts, and entering categories for tax purposes. The first step in improving this was to breaking the process down into its atomic kinds of tasks: entering recepts and reconciling. My thought was to do the former each week, which would simplify the latter and make it purely making sure the statement matched. It worked great. My work station in this case was simply an "Unprocessed Receipts" folder in a dedicated shelf of my stacking trays. Every day I toss into it receipts from my wallet or online orders, and once a week my calendar reminds me to enter the current batch into the program and file or recycle them (I have a little checklist for this). When my account's monthly statement arrives it goes onto my actions list (it takes longer than a few minutes to do), with the statement itself going into my Action Support folder to get it off my desk until I need it. This eliminated my resistance to doing this, and made it easier and more pleasant overall. A win.
  • Sending snail mail: Whether you like paper correspondence or not, it's hard to do away with it. And in the case of writing personal notes, I like using paper. It's my way of staying in touch with clients (past, present, and future) and expressing gratitude. The work station in this case is an at-hand drawer of all needed supplies including pens, envelopes (including padded ones for my Super Spy Night Pens :-), note cards, business cards, stamps, postal scale, and pre-printed return labels. Make sure you have close by a copy of your postal rates.


An unexpected side effect of these I noticed is that I enjoyed each task more. I think it has to do with the comfort of the routine [8]. Each felt like a little ritual, and made the task a bit more sacred, if that makes sense. For example, when writing notes I'm not scrabbling around looking for stamps and a card. Instead I take a breath, relax for a minute, and jump in.


References



  • [1] A funny bit of synchronicity: While searching for Davenport's book I came across She Comes First: The Thinking Man's Guide to Pleasuring a Woman. It's now on order from my library :-) Not sure about the cover, though.
  • [2]
    Air-traffic control, for example, does not, at first glance, seem a likely candidate. The business of monitoring incoming aircraft and predicting their future course, which depends on measurement and mathematics, sounds as though it should be entirely electronic. Yet paper remains an essential part of the air-traffic control system in Britain.

    Each air-traffic controller works in a team of about five staff. Information about each incoming plane in that controller's sector is printed out on a piece of paper - a flight progress strip, about eight inches long and an inch deep. As the plane moves across the controller's sector, the strip is annotated - with, for instance, speed or altitude changes. On the basis of those annotations, different team members can do their job - working out, for instance, the implications of those changes for the next sector. In a busy sector, one team may have 50 strips on display.

    Many attempts have been made to get rid of the flight progress strips. The only way of doing away with them, it turns out, is to give air-traffic controllers smaller areas to cover. For larger areas - which means a more complex job - the paper strips are essential. "They are a jolly efficient means of annotating information," says Richard Wright of Britain's National Air Traffic Services. "The controllers can read them at a glance. If we replace them it will have to be with something better. They will be with us for some time yet."

  • [3] Checklists are useful, and one of the most-blogged about productivity topics. I break them down into two types: "Do" and "Bring." The former is a list of actions you repeat every time you do a task. See my checking account balancing example above. The latter type is useful for prepping for events of a type, e.g., leaving on a trip or packing equipment for a gig. For complex activities you'll often use a combination, such as in my 1:1 consults and workshops. Each step often initiates a back-and-forth sequence of actions and waiting tasks. For fun check out The Checklist: Reporting & Essays for a history of their use in medicine.
  • [4] Do you have a good name for these? I think the idea comes from manufacturing, esp. the lean world, but I couldn't find a solid reference. The closest I've read about is the turtle sheets Len Merson uses for each task in The Instant Productivity Toolkit. Also: I'm not sure why, but this reminds me of the Noguchi filing system. Probably due to its having a folder with the title and date on the front... The original page is gone, so more is found here, here, and here.
  • [5] As is typical with the state of the art, we had to suffer with the typical triad of paper, email, and disk folders. They key, though, is uniforming naming.
  • [6] An executive behavior common to all highly productive people: Decide, let it go, don't think about it, and recover/adapt as needed.
  • [7] Yea, I timed it :-)
  • [8] I'm interested in trying Ikebana, the Japanese art of flower arrangement. To reduce stress and be more present, a daily ritual like this will be welcome.

Wednesday
Nov052008

Induced personality disorder, or: I tried it, but I'm not proud of it

(Update: The title should more accurately read "Induced personality disorder, or: I tried it, but I'm not proud of it I didn't like it.")

As part of my continuing development of the power of treating everything in life as a personal experiment [1], I applied recently the idea to marketing my consulting business. In spite of Richard Koch's admonition in The 80/20 Principle to be "unconventional and eccentric in your use of time," I decided (with tracking [2], of course) to try conventional (and reasonable) approaches including:

  • Visualizing my ideal client,
  • Creating a clear value proposition,
  • Focusing on a specific industry (indeed specific companies in it),
  • Tapping my network to get leads,
  • Making warm calls (I now prefer "cool (as in not warm) calls"), and generally
  • Studying marketing workbooks that promote these ideas.


NB: 1) These ideas are sound, and I respect experts who teach them, 2) I'm very far from being knowledgeable and principled in applying them, 3) I executed as well as I could, but with limited discipline, 4) I applied the ideas for as long as I deemed useful [3]. So a huge YMMV. The problem?

It didn't work.

I realize I'm an odd duck (my umbrella description is ultimately "philosopher;" check out other Cool Job Descriptions), but I got poor results from this "push" [4] approach ("I have something valuable, so I'll find prospective clients who agree"). It felt awful, and lead to an insidious change in personality and a rather mercenary perspective of others. Specifically, what I lost sight of was:

  • People shouldn't be a means to an end: I was treating my business connections (and friends in some cases) as mostly a source of potential value to me. I forgot to ask "How can I help her?" [5]. This can also poison relationships: "Shoot! Here comes Matt. He always wants something and he's going to bug me about not responding. I'll avoid him.") That feels very bad. Related: "palm down" networking; see How To Help People. Question: What are the exceptions to this?
  • Give freely, but avoid "Free for all": I was accepting every opportunity to talk or meet with someone, but not all (few, actually) of these connections led to business. Put another way, never give everyone equal attention [6]. Question: What do you think of "targeted giving?" That is, should generosity be carefully parceled out? Certainly not in the cases of noticing immediate need that we can offer help with (e.g., someone with hands full having trouble opening a door).
  • Stay open to opportunities: A major problem (and contradiction) related to this is filtering out possibly useful relationships. For example, a stranger reached out to me after finding my post What GTD And Weight Watchers Have In Common, and wanted to talk about weight issues he has. My attitude (now corrected) was "If you're not a prospective client, I don't have time for you." In this type of case, as a result of a recent shift in how I see this blog's purpose, inquiries from readers are again now welcome and accepted. Question: Is doing the right thing (giving attention) for the "wrong" reason (forming relationships that lead to business) OK?


What can we learn from this [7]? A few take-aways that come to mind:

  • Don't be afraid to try new ideas that (temporarily) change your personality,
  • Ask if it's changing you into a person you like (hint: watch for shame), and
  • Ask if it goes in the direction of feeling right.



Questions for you



  • Have you tried any personality shifts like this?
  • What did you learn? What are your general take-aways?
  • How do you go about setting up personal experiments, evaluating them, and learning from the results?



References