[fr]
Deux règles très simples pour survivre à l'ère des médias sociaux.
[en]
- You do not have to read everything.
- If you feel bad about missing stuff, apply rule one. This goes for e-mails, too.
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[fr]
Deux règles très simples pour survivre à l'ère des médias sociaux.
[en]
Tagged as: e-mail, guilt, information management, information overload, Social Media and the Web
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Bookmarked a link: Study Hacks » Blog Archive » Fixed-Schedule Productivity: How I Accomplish a Large Amount of Work in a Small Number of Work Hours
@cdeniaud un article similaire que j'ai écrit cet été http://bit.ly/1FzhMD (à propos de "social media expert")
RT @cdeniaud: Social Media Expert ? http://bit.ly/3Lck2 (en français)
Stephanie Booth lives in Lausanne, Switzerland with her cat Bagha.
She is an independent new media strategist (or whatever the hot name for all this web 2.0 stuff is these days).
Read all the exciting details about her life and Climb to the Stars.
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social media survival kit: http://bit.ly/1g3ci3
This comment was originally posted on Twitter
Worth applying
RT @Blogowski @stephtara: Social Media Survival Kit, in two easy rules: http://bit.ly/12rJxk #CTTS
This comment was originally posted on Twitter
social media survival kit: http://bit.ly/1g3ci3 (via @Suw)
This comment was originally posted on Twitter
Social Media Survival Kit, in two easy rules: http://bit.ly/12rJxk #CTTS (via @stephtara @Blogowski)
This comment was originally posted on Twitter
This is funny and true! RT @WebWorkerDaily: social media survival kit: http://bit.ly/1g3ci3 (via @Suw)
This comment was originally posted on Twitter
Simple in principle; difficult in practice
But once you’ve learnt them, it will simplify your life immensely!
Minimising your presence will achieve the same thing, but loses the benefits of serendipity, and puts you in the echo chamber, so I keep a fairly extensive range of inputs, and occasionally call “bankrupt” on them , deleting entries en masse (which I had to do after a lengthy holiday, mainly spent offline!)
I actually never call “bankrupt” on anything, and scatter myself all over the place. But there are some spaces I don’t check (obscure social networks I’ve signed up to) and some that I’m more reactive to than others. I figure if people want to reach me, the different channels through which to do it are easy enough to find, and my experience is that people don’t hesitate to try a second channel if the first doesn’t work.
But these tips were more about “how do I process all the information out there” than “how do people get in touch with me”. I’ve seen too many people paralyzed by Twitter or their newsreader because they think they have to read everything or “catch up” when they’ve been away.
“I’ve seen too many people paralyzed by Twitter or their newsreader because they think they have to read everything or “catch up”” – that way lies madness, to be sure!