Ian M Rountree

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Archives for April 2010

Doing Work For Yourself

April 30, 2010 by Ian 2 Comments

My week’s been a struggle. Between a project at work that’s been stealing my soul for the last seven weeks and is finally over tomorrow, a sick household, and so many commitments I have no idea how to juggle, it’s been a rough few days. Case and point, I’m still at the office as I type this, working on the last leg of this seven-week-long saga project. I’ve barely been keeping up with what I’ve promised I’d do for others, much less the important work of maintaining my own projects.

Which gets me thinking about motivation.

Why are you doing the work you’re doing? Who’s it for? What’s the benefit?

For me, it’s simple; I’m committed to the success of my workplace as an environment, as a company, as a community. I’m committed to my own success within this environment. This commitment could be seen as keenerism, or being a work-a-holic, but to be clear, this is the first time since I started with Modern Earth I’ve stayed late for anything.

Why break the mold? Because I said I would. It’s the end of the month, the end of the project. It needs to get done. Not the least of the many reasons I’m here; I said I would. There’s a difference in workflow for people who consciously try to maintain their integrity. Focus works differently, priorities do too.

It would be easy to say I’m doing this for someone else, that all of my focus is on the company, or the project. I beg to differ. Even with all of my effort going toward the project, toward the company’s success, I could still cut out. Take the work home, get things done slowly, in dashes, over the weekend. However, because I know I work better in the office than outside of it, here I am.

I decided to stay late because I know myself and my limits, and committed to my own successful completion of the work I’ve been assigned. I put myself in this situation because it’s the most beneficial for all parties involved.

It’s a small detail, but an important one.

What are you doing, what choices are you making, to back up your motivation with tangible results?

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: modern earth, motivation, tgif, work, working late

Experiment Time: Walking With Purpose

April 26, 2010 by Ian 2 Comments

Thanks to Julien Smith’s post about social engineering today, I’m giving you an assignment. No need to participate unless you’ve never had this happen to you.

Instructions:

1) Put on your most formal dark-coloured shirt (bonus points for black button-down with a collar). Wear light coloured pants if you have them, bonus points for kakhis.

2) Go shopping. Preferrably at a mall, rather than just any old store.

3) Walk with purpose. No matter what you’re doing, whether you’re meandering from item to item, or searching for something you actually need, maintain the expression you’d have if you were measuring a piece of wood about to be cut.

4) Count the number of times you get asked for something; advice, item locations, staff questions, “Do you work here?”

Total your points and report back, in comments or tweet the hashtag “#walkingwithpurpose” – I’ll be watching.

We’ll see who wins in a week.

BONUS ROUND! – Double your points by actually responding with appropriate answers when you’re asked questions. Triple them if you can be right AND tell the enquirer that you don’t work there in the same statement.

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: hashtag, julien smith, social engineering, walkingwithpurpose

Learning the Task Snowball Method

April 24, 2010 by Ian 2 Comments

Today I didn’t just hit Inbox Zero, I also hit Google reader Zero. it was a monumental achievement – I haven’t hit Reader Zero in months.

How?

I used the Task Snowball method, derived from the Debt Snowball method I just learned on the Get rich Slowly blot (though the post was from 2006).

Basically, Task Snowballing goes as follows:

  1. List all your tasks from least effort to most. It helps to make a physical record, on paper.
  2. Devote a set period of time to the tasks.
  3. Cross ofthe tasks in sequence as quickly as possible.

This may also fall into the Get To Done mode of thinking, or Cult of Done problem solving theory.  Either way, I have no email, no Reader items, no new Waves, and now, a new blog post under my belt, and it’s only 9:41 am. I have two hours later today to tackle some of the others.

The significance? go look for my last blog post. Then wait for my next. I bet the time is shorter from now to the next, than it has been between this and the last. Snowballing in action.

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: cool stuff, nevermind the buzzwords, sociology, task snowball

The Widening Niche Conundrum

April 17, 2010 by Ian 6 Comments

So you want to blog. everyone tells you; find a niche.

You find a niche and dig in. You gain subscribers, the pageviews go up. Suddenly, your niche is a handhold.

But you have to keep working on it. Expanding. More pageviews, more retweets, more Diggs and Facebook shares. Soon, you’ve dug yourself a hold.

Then it catches on, and the real trouble begins. Other people start helping you widen the hole, and soon there’s a fissure that’s visible from other areas. You can make linkages to more niches, absorb some ambiguity and expand further.

Before you know it, your niche has become a canyon. Even if you’re leading the way, once your niche has widened beyond your ability to dig any further, you’re still one more person walking through a canyon of content.

How are you going to strategize for that?

Filed Under: Blog

Advertising for Meaningful Work

April 12, 2010 by Ian 2 Comments

If you were advertising a job that only Seth Godin could do, how would you position the job so that he would be interested?

Would you say “Wanted, stellar marketer,branding magician and author – must have excellent reputation.”

Does that sound appealing? It’s the way a lot of job ads are written.

Or would you ask for a “Big-picture humanist excited about advancing causes in a way that benefits everyone concerned.”

One of these approaches confronts the person you want to hire. The other confronts the job you’re trying to do. Which one is better?

The more of this work I do, the more I come to realize that the best marketers are pig-picture thinkers- and that the ones with the most potential for meaningful work are also humanists at heart.

It’s hard to differentiate between a simply genius creative, and a true human artist. How you ask helps a lot.

Filed Under: Blog

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