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Main › Business & Services › Leadership & Supervision
 

Information Overload: Don't Let Them Overwhelm You

 
Author: Helen Wilkie

It's becoming more and more difficult to sift the nuggets of true knowledge from the mountains of data thrown at us from all directions. Of course, we do this to ourselves to a certain extent, because in this age of unlimited access to information through the Internet as well as all the traditional sources, most of us try to take in just too much. No wonder we feel overwhelmed.

But if you are an executive or manager, there's one way you can cut down on this data dump: stop the flow you get from your own people in the form of e-mail messages, memos, reports and presentations.

I'm not suggesting you refuse to accept any information from your people, but honestly, haven't you ever received a half-inch-thick written report when you only wanted the salient facts or the main figures?

Have you ever sat through a monthly financial presentation in which your people stood in front of a slide covered in figures, turned around and read them out, and then --- just in case you missed anything --- gave you a copy of the slide as a handout? The message of these presentations generally is, "Here's what the budget said we would do, here's what we actually did, so here's the shortfall or surplus."

Just think of all the time this took, both for the people who laboured mightily to put it together (sweating bullets as they did because they dread the presentation to much), and also for you to listen to it. And did it really help you? Or did it simply add more data to the dump?

Fixing this universal problem not only saves companies money, but it also has the potential to cut down on workplace stress at all levels. But it won't fix itself. If you don't speak up, you'll listen to these presentations and read those long-winded reports every month till the end of your career!

Author Bio:

Helen Wilkie

Helen Wilkie is a professional keynote speaker, workshop facilitator, author and coach, specializing in business communication and management skills. She worries about the high monetary cost of poor applied communication in today's workplace, and her programs all aim to correct the problem. Helen promises to help organizations save their money and people save their sanity by improving applied communication at work.

She offers a free monthly e-zine called "Communi-keys", and you can sign up for it at either of her websites.

You can search for this article using: Information Overload: Don't Let Them Overwhelm You, Business & Services, Leadership & Supervision
 
 
 

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