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Feature:

Staying Afloat in a Digital Flood

  

Feature Contents
Top of Feature

1. Communication: One Size Does Not Fit All


2. Five Tips for Taming Information Overload
Keeping focus in the face of digital distractions can be difficult. Here’s how you—and your organization’s employees—can make a start.

3. Taking a Break From E-mail
One company’s experiment with “E-mail Free Fridays” offers some lessons in how to manage the flood of often unnecessary messages.

4. Measuring the Weight of Information Overload
Several recent analyses have highlighted the costs of information overload and its close cousin—interruptions.

5. Raising the Problem’s Profile
The newly formed Information Overload Research Group will promote research studies and delve into solutions for information overload, including technology tools and training strategies.

6. Taking Time to Think: The Irony of Bill Gates’ Legacy
Big thoughts, reinvention and career growth come not only from embracing all the benefits of technology, but also from finding the time away from the office and daily pressures.

7. Social Revolution: A Wired Workforce Community
The online social networking phenomenon has pervaded business. Whether it becomes a mere time-waster or a useful tool for recruitment, employee development and collaboration depends on how employers embrace the technology.

8. Building Business Value Through “Communities of Practice”
More and more companies are taking the time to think together and share knowledge from remote corners of the globe.


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Communication: One Size Does Not Fit All


Employees should be trained to assess the business context before deciding whether to dial the phone or hit the ‘send’ button on an e-mail or instant message.
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ot all technology works equally well on the job, says Jonathan B. Spira, chief analyst at Basex, a knowledge economy research firm in New York. Instead, employees should be trained to assess the business context before deciding whether to dial or hit "send," he says.

Among his recommendations:

Instant messaging is better than telephone when:
    a.) Many people are participating and all need to talk/be active.
    b.) At least one participant is located where people could listen in, and privacy or confidentiality is an issue.

Telephone is better than IM when:
    a.) Many people are participating passively, and one person is speaking, such as a CEO announcing a merger or acquisition.
    b.) A more personal touch is required, and the nuances of voice matter, such as in the delivery of bad news.

E-mail is better than IM when:
    a.) The text needs to be memorialized and archived for future reference, although more companies are archiving IM sessions.
    b.) An announcement must be sent to many people.

IM is better than e-mail when:
    a.) An issue demands an immediate response—it’s both urgent and important.
    b.) The issue is relatively trivial, such as lunch plans.

Source: Managing the Knowledge Workforce: Understanding the Information Revolution That's Changing the Business World, by Jonathan B. Spira

Workforce Management Online, July 2008 -- Register Now!


Next Article: 2. Five Tips for Taming Information Overload
Keeping focus in the face of digital distractions can be difficult. Here’s how you—and your organization’s employees—can make a start.

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