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Home > Jobing Community Blogs > Blog Post: Information Saturation: ...
Blog Post: Information Saturation: How to Deal
posted Wednesday, February 11, 2009 11:52 AM
Ever sit down to work on a report, but spend an hour responding to emails instead? Or completed a full day's list of to-do's without really tackling anything important?
In a time when "Google" is officially a verb, the news never stops, and people are sleeping with their Blackberries under their pillow, it's no wonder people are feeling endlessly distracted, interrupted, overwhelmed, busy (but not necessarily productive), and stressed from information saturation.
Despite people's best efforts, there really are limits to human attention. Take for example, the common instance of not remembering someone's name after they introduce themselves. Without focused attention, it is virtually impossible to absorb new information. Practice single-tasking. Multi-tasking may seem like the only way to get everything done, but research has shown that in doing more than one thing at a time, people are actually less efficient, less productive and more prone to error. Not to mention, multi-tasking raises stress levels and leads to burnout, fast. Challenge the urge to multi-task everything. Decide which people and tasks require your full attention, and give it. Leave the multi-tasking to mindless tasks. Build stronger filters. To absorb a news story on any cable news network, you have to filter out the streaming headlines, news updates, and financial tickers on the bottom of the screen. Applying this kind of filtering to other mediums of information requires practice. Use technology to your advantage by getting rid of unnecessary alerts, cc's, mass emails, and pop-ups. If people are open to information 24 hours a day, there's no time for the brain to relax, process, and absorb. Try not checking for new messages every 20 seconds. Every so often, turn off all devices and become technologically unavailable. By giving yourself time to absorb information, learn, and grow, you may feel less overwhelmed. If finding time is difficult, create it, like an appointment for yourself. Avoid self-interruption. Bouncing back and forth between working on a report, checking emails or the latest news, and changing your background music, is a classic example of self-interruption. Catch yourself and refocus. Say "Stop" out loud if you have to. Finish your report and then check your email.
Tags
wellness,
employee assistance,
stress,
eap,
work life balance,
attention,
information overload,
employee assistance program,
information saturation,
overwhelmed,
well-being
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