Merlin’s weekly podcast with Dan Benjamin. We talk about creativity, independence, and making things you love.
Merlin’s weekly podcast with Dan Benjamin. We talk about creativity, independence, and making things you love.
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43Folders.com is Merlin Mann’s website about finding the time and attention to do your best creative work.
Bob Parsons' hardass time management
Merlin Mann | Nov 28 2005
"Not so polite" time saving tips — that work. Bob Parsons may not win any awards for congeniality, but I like the way he lays down the law on managing your time -- with a focus on not being a victim of your own phone. This is tough, in-your-face talk, but frankly I think it's time we get tougher with the people who demand our time. In my own opinion, you'll never get out from under until you learn to seize back control of your phone and your email inbox; that's the the two places where the world will never stop hollering for your attention; it's up to you to say "no," and hit delete. After all, if you don't respect how you parcel out your time and attention, why should you expect anyone else to? A few of Bob's observations:
Remember: when you call someone, you're demanding instant access to their undivided attention, no matter what they might be doing. If they loan that attention to you, treat it like the golden resource that it is. [ Thanks, Sean Conlan ] 27 Comments
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Two things from my past...Submitted by Gabe (not verified) on November 28, 2005 - 7:57pm.
Two things from my past are perhaps relevant here: (1) I spent a difficult few weeks working as a telemarketer. Our instructions were that, if we got blown off (e.g. "No thanks, I'm not interested," ), we should put the card with that number back in the stack, so someone would call them again in a couple weeks. If, on the other hand, someone said, "Don't call this number again," or "Take me off your list," or anything else involving concrete instructions for the future, we were told to rip the card up and throw it in the trash, to make sure they never got another call from us. Since then I always say, in a totally friendly voice, "Please take me off your list and don't call again. Thanks a lot and have a good day." (2) Remember that book, "Life's Little Instruction Book," that was next to the till in every bookstore in America in like 1992? One piece of advice in that book was, "Never allow the telephone to interrupt an important moment. It's there for your convenience, not your caller's." It totally changed my perspective, and now I answer the phone maybe 40% of the time. » POSTED IN:
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