This is something my Fogo Media colleagues and I have been discussing for many years, and I am glad to see others writing about it. I hope someone finds a way to make it a reality!
Here is a quote from Hamish's post:
So here’s an idea for how to do it better and make money from it.
Break up the bundle. Present stories on an individual basis. Do to the magazine what iTunes did to the album, but do it with a Spotify model. And put it all into one app.
In short: build a platform not for magazines, but for magazine stories.
Here’s how it works. You have an app called something like Mag Reader. When you open Mag Reader, it shows you a list of the latest works from your favorite publications, as well as ones that align with your interests, or the stories currently most talked about on social media.
Hat tip to my fellow Fogo Media friend Chris Ackermann: chrisackermann.net
Can Read It Later’s Digest feature help us organize and consume abundant information more efficiently? The demo video from their web site certainly strikes at this as the key value behind this feature. We intend to find out.
Automatic Grouping of Information
This video talks about how web articles can automatically be grouped and presented in an organized way. Since it is so easy to clip articles with the Read It Later’s embedded browser widgets, users presumably end up with a ton of unrelated content in the Reading List. In other words, uncontrolled abundant information. Not good. The key feature of Digest is to automatically organize that Reading List into a sub-topics that can be easily browsed. Sounds like a step in the right direction.
Does it Work?
Over the next month or so, we intend to try this out and see how useful it is. The key will be (1) convenience and (2) how well the automatic groupings work. We want to find out if it saves us time and helps us benefit from all the great information we will be putting into our Reading List.
Fogozine Integration
Additionally, Read It Later could become even more useful when integrated with our Fogozineproduct as both an import (article library) and export (sharing) feature. Maybe we should even add it to this blog so our posts can be quickly moved to people’s Reading List. Any Read It Later users out there who would like to see this?
How Mobile Devices Affect When We Read
Finally, I have to point out a really good post from Read It Later’s blog titled Is Mobile Affecting When We Read?. It presents some very interesting data about people’s information consumption habits and how they are shifting as more advanced mobile devices like the iPad become available. It is worth adding to your Reading List, and it is the first one in ours.
Sometimes more is better (and we all know there is no limit to the amount of information available to us).
More information makes it more likely you will find the most useful information, and it gives you more raw material to draw from when synthesizing information. It is also has the potential to drive you crazy. If you want to drink from the information fire hose, you must have a good strategy for information skimming.
Information Skimming Helps You See the Big Picture
In a nutshell, information skimming is about consuming more, highly focused (short), bits of information in order to be better informed, make better decisions, and seeing the big picture more clearly. Done well, this technique will give you a huge advantage over the rest of us who get bogged down with too much, or too little, useful information.
Goals
Unlike the focused information consumption approach discussed previously on this blog, the goal of information skimming is to continuously scan and consume small bits of information that have relevance and meaning to you. Sometimes called environmental scanning, this approach works much like a radar–you continuously scan, and received signals from, your environment. If you quickly pick up the right signals, you can make better-than-average predictions of the future. For example, think of meteorologists who use radar to help them predict the weather. They are not always right, but continuously monitoring the environment sure helps them be more accurate.
Lets look at what advantages you will have when you skim information really well:
You will know what is going on in your world. The emphasis is on you because the information is only useful if it is meaningful in the context of your industry, your interests, your tribes, your competition, etc.
A constant stream of new inputs will help you make better conversation, and it will continuously provide new inspiration for your art (which is hopefully part of your work).
Many diverse and relevant information signals will help you detect patterns. Pattern detectionis fundamental to making future predictions (which in turn greatly impacts decision making), and it also helps you become better at anticipating and adapting to change.
You will make new connections to people and ideas. Some of these connections will turn your world upside-down and some will open up new opportunities. A small number will be life-changing.
The big picture will start to emerge from the noise. Light bulbs will go on. Confusion will subside (at least temporarily).
How many of us would not want to have more of these advantages?
Is information skimming the only way to get them? Certainly not. Information skimming provides kindling for the fire, raw material for the production line, nutrients for the seedling. In other words, the best of us can not succeed without some quality information to chew on.
Input Sources and Tools
So where do we start? Where do we go for the best raw information?
The answer is highly personal. Everyone needs to find their own perfect combination of sources and consumption tools. These sources and tools have to fit your needs and your workflow, and you must find ways to use them efficiently. More on that later.
To start with some basics, here are sources and tools that will probably end up on many people’s list:
RSS Feeds: Pulling content from blogs, Internet news sites, and other sources, RSS feeds are a useful way to pull many sources together in one application for consumption.
Tweets: Twitter, when used the right way, can be a tremendously useful source (and tool). Read our blog post on using Twitter for more ideas.
Blogs: There is a ton of information published on blogs every day. Not all of it is useful or trustworthy, but some of it is perfect for information skimming.
Magazines and Newspapers: These have been used for many years to get up-to-date and specialized information. Now, most of these publications are available digitally, and many can be accessed via the Internet.
Television and Radio: The numbers may be dropping, but a most of us still rely (at least partly) on television and radio to consume information.
Email: Newsletters, links from friends, and document attachments fill our inboxes every single day. Just about all of us need to make reading emails part of our daily routine.
Discussions (online and in person): We learn a lot by communicating with other people. Whether it is face-to-face or in an online discussion group, this can be a great way to pick up new ideas and connections.
YouTube, Vimeo, Viddler (and others): Digital videos can be produced and posted by anyone, and many contain potentially useful information (if you can find it).
Podcasts: Podcasts can be a great way to consume short audio or audio/video content on the go. Some people do a fantastic job capturing their knowledge and experience in well-produced podcasts. They tend to target very specific subjects, so you must take the time to find the ones that are most relevant to your life.
Computers, mobile devices, tablets, etc.: Unless you want to be tied completely to print, TV, and radio (and face-to-face conversations), some sort of a computing device is essential. The most exciting trend here is the combination of very powerful mobile devices, fast wireless communication, cloud computing, and the proliferation of digital content. More on that in our Mobile Tech to the Rescue post.
Internet-Enabled Software Tools: There are far too many to mention, but ton of great software tools exist to help us keep up with, filter, consume, and share information. Just as technology has given us tools to create and access more information, technology also keeps giving us better tools to manage it. Find the ones that work best for you. Here are some ideas:
Fogozine (we reserve the right to plug our own product every once in a while)
I am really curious to know what other sources and tools people rely on. Please leave a comment (or email) with additional suggestions, and we will do a follow-up post that is more comprehensive. You can also enter your favorite tools and sources on our AnswerGarden poll. Your answer will immediately be shown in the answer cloud.
Tips for Effective Information Skimming
Finding the right sources and tools is only the beginning. It is extremely important to figure out how to skim information effectively. This is the hard part, and it is what separates the super-skimmers from those who waste time on useless information or simple get overwhelmed and quit. Here are some tips:
Be Mindful – Start by being mindful of what you are trying to achieve. What type of information is important for you? What is going to provide you the right connections to new people and ideas, and allow you to see the big picture more clearly? It might help to do some brainstorming and note down the key themes that emerge. Keeping these themes in mind as you skim information on a daily basis will help you focus on what is likely to help and ignore what only distracts.
Diverse Sources – You want to receive signals from a full spectrum of information sources. Breadth and diversity will give you the best raw material to work with. You will be forming your own ideas and viewpoints (at least in part) from this information, so seeding your mind with any bias.
Filters and Sorting – One of the most critical, and most difficult, parts of information skimming is quickly filtering, sorting, and prioritizing the gushing torrent of information signals coming at you. It is a skill that gets better with practice. There are many tools to help with this, but you ultimately need to decide was is true and untrue, useful and a waste of time. This theme was recently echoed by Seth Godin in his Management of Signals blog post.
Fit Your Workflow – Information skimming works best when it is done regularly and consistently. To do that, you must find a way to make it part of your daily workflow, using whatever time you have available, and with whatever tools are at your disposal. It is helpful to map out your daily routines and look for ways to seamlessly fit information skimming into your days. The more natural it is, the more likely you will do it consistently and effectively.
Share and Receive – Information skimming should not solely consist of consumption. When you come across some gems that others could benefit from, share them! In addition to making you feel good, the generosity will be contagious. You will more frequently become the recipient of the same behavior. The best part of this is that people are the ultimate information filters. Machines are getting better, but people reign supreme. In other words, your friends will feed you relevant information more often than Google search.
“Right now, we take in information from many places, but we’re not particularly focused on filtering the information that might be false, and more important, what might be missing.” – Seth Godin
Be Careful
To wrap up, we will add a few words of caution. These things are most likely to sabotage your path to “black-belt” information skimming–please avoid them!
One-Sided Information Too much one-sided information from similar sources will limit your ability to make connections and see the big picture. You want get the complete story. Seek out sources that cover diverse topics and differing perspectives. Step back and think about what information you may be missing and then find ways to add it to your routine.
Overdoing It Information skimming can go to far. If all you do is skim, you will never get the opportunity to turn these input signals into meaningful knowledge. A balanced approach is best. Reading the headlines and opening paragraph of today’s news is a great way to see what is going on, but you should also find time to read that 2000 word article that appears insightful and relevant to your world. By the way, this article is almost 2000 words. If you are reading this, then you are NOT information skimming (thanks).
Beware of The LOUD and FALSE There are some really loud information signals out there, and many are false and misleading. Think of this as noise. You must avoid as much of the noise as possible, because it wastes your time and distracts from what is actually important. Be mindful and trust that your ability to filter information will improve with practice.
All Consumption, No Sharing Most print, radio, and television is 100% consumption. Online and social media is different. It is extremely easy to share and create, and this behavior actually make it more useful. Make sharing part of your daily workflow.
Summary
Effective information skimming is essential for taking control of the information that matters to you.
If you think it is easy, work on adding more sources or spending less time with the same amount of benefit. If you are intimidated by all the information that comes rushing in when you open the door, we encourage you to keep practicing. Be mindful of what you want to accomplish and start from there.
Have other ideas? We very much appreciate the opinions and advice from everyone else out there. Please comment!
This blog is about making information more useful, so it may seem out of place to talk about sharing. But this post is about sharing information, and the act of thoughtful and generous information sharing is fundamental to making information more useful for all of us. Selfless sharing also has side benefits like improving the size and strength of your social networks and increasing happiness, but let’s first focus on how information sharing allows us to take control of the information that matters.
We have said it before, but consider all of the information being produced on a daily basis. Only a very small fraction of that information is going to be relevant to any one of us. Who has the time to find the important and relevant bits? Individually, we don’t stand a chance. There are lots of ways we can try (many of which are discussed on the blog), but a single person just can’t keep up. The answer is to look at what we can do collectively. All together, we can consume and filter a lot of information, and the act of sharing is what enables everyone to benefit. Of course, all sharing is not equal.
Effective Sharing
The effectiveness of sharing is proportional to the level of personalization, thoughtfulness, and selflessness. These three things are very important.
First, lets consider personalization by breaking information sharing down into three different types:
Sharing publicly – this is sharing information in a public forum like Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, or on a blog. Sharing information this way is generally not very personal. The most effective public information sharing usually comes from people who consistently share good information on a particular topic. By doing this, they build up followers who are like-minded and interested in the same information. In a way, this makes their public information sharing more personal.
Sharing to a group – sharing information to a [relatively small and like-minded] group is more personal than sharing publicly, and is typically done in some sort of online forum, email distribution, or newsletter. Groups share common characteristics, and information sharing can be personalized to be more useful to people with these same characteristics.
Sharing to an individual - sharing one-on-one to another individual is as personal as it gets. Emails, twitter DMs, phone calls, and face-to-face conversations are examples of individual information sharing. By knowing exactly who you are sharing information with, it can be extremely targeted and personal (and hence, more useful).
By the way, the opposite of personalized information sharing is information spamming. Constantly spewing information can cause more harm than good. Think of personalization as a filter, not a fire hose.
Next, let’s see how thoughtfulness and selflessness lead to effective information sharing. Thoughtfulness implies thinking about how shared information will impact the people you are sharing with. Randomly spamming people with information that has no relevance to them is not useful. However, information that is carefully considered and deemed useful can be of tremendous benefit. This is where the benefits of sharing goes into overdrive, and it requires us to constantly think about how the information we are consuming can impact others. In addition to thoughtfulness, it is important that sharing information is a selfless act – meaning that it is an act of generosity, not for personal gain. When you start keeping score, or you adopt a tit-for-tat mentality, you are no longer acting selflessly.
The fact is that everyone wins when we all share information that is personalized, thoughtful, and selfless. The power of social networks is unleashed, and we become a collective group of information filters for one another.
Take Personal Action
To improve the effectiveness of your information sharing (and we all have some room for improvement), you must take personal action. What can you, as an individual, do to enable collective information sharing? For starters, try to do more of the following:
Build your social network - You can’t share information if you have nobody to share it with. Most of us have some friends and family to share with, but there are ways to grown your network (and sharing information will help strengthen those connections). Try to keep track of new people you meet. What are their interests, hobbies, jobs? Keep them in mind when you are consuming information, and be sure to share when you get the chance. It is also useful to become affiliated with groups who share common interests with you. Share the information that you find to be important, and the community will return you the favor in spades. Find ways to grow the number of people you interact with on a regular basis, and you will have a solid foundation for both sharing and receiving information.
Share information that is personalized, thoughtful, and selfless – As explained previously, make your information sharing as effective as possible by targeting it at specific people, groups, and niche areas. Think about how information is going to benefit others before you pass it along, and most importantly, share information generously, not because you expect to get anything in return.
Express thanks to others who share information with you – This is important and possibly overlooked. You want to encourage others to share effectively with you (and others). By acknowledging the generosity of others, you will make them feel good about their act and make it more likely that they will share with you again in the future. Don’t feel guilty when someone helps you out by sharing a particularly important tidbit of information. Thank them, and explain how this act of sharing helped you. Allowing other people to help you is just as important as finding ways to help others.
Side Benefits
It may be enough that information sharing increases your exposure to useful, and relevant, information. But there is more. Sharing and generosity have a way of improving and increasing your connection to other human beings, which in turn leads to higher levels of success, fulfillment, and happiness.
The best thing about sharing and generosity is that it benefits everyone. If you see life as a zero-sum-game, then you may view sharing really good information as a competitive disadvantage (someone else will steal some of your potential success). But success is unlimited, and the more we share information effectively, the more success everyone will achieve.
“Thousands of candles can be lit from a single candle, and the life of the candle will not be shortened. Happiness never decreases by being shared.” – Buddha
“Humans understand how favors work. Doing and trading favors is woven into the fabric of our culture. When people are recipients of a favor, it’s in their nature to want to pay it back. Doing nice things does make people feel good, but there’s neurology behind it, too. We want to pay people back because it is in the nature of a community to do so; it keeps communities strong and protected against the outside world.” — Chris Brogan
The benefits of sharing and generosity, and the resulting increases in social connection, happiness, and success are well-documented (and won’t be rehashed here). But if you are interested in investigating further, checkout these links:
“The first person to get happy when deciding to do something for someone else is YOU”: Bob Thurman at TED.com
Deep consumption of information … free from distraction … focused on the present moment … reflecting … connecting … deriving meaning. How often has this happened lately?
Most of us experience focused information consumption much less frequently than we should. We are lured by the power of technology to make us efficient information skimmers, multitaskers, and hyper-communicators. Often times, this efficiency is for the better; it allows us to be more informed, connected, and productive with our time. However, when short, fragmented mechanisms become our sole means of information consumption, we start to loose our ability to make important connections and see the big picture. This leads to shortsighted decisions and “status quo” work production. Life-changing decisions and high-value creation requires focus. There is a time and place for Twitter, RSS feeds, web aggregators, and news headlines, but we must also make time for focused, deep consumption of information.
Meaningful Knowledge
The goal is to be able to turn information into meaningful knowledge. For this post, the term “meaningful knowledge” is something that goes beyond the mere understanding of a concept or fact. Meaningful knowledge comes from the synthesis of many facts and concepts into a new and highly personal understanding that allows you to make good decisions, see the world differently, and create value in the world (whatever that means for you). This is big picture stuff, and it will provide you with frameworks and filters for organizing the rest of your life.
A Focused State
To turn information into meaningful knowledge, we must get into a focused state that allows us to consume, and reflect on, lengthy content (e.g. books, large magazine or blog articles, and long videos or podcasts). Sometimes, a collection of related content is the key to making important connections. Here, more than anywhere, focusing on relevant content while blocking out the rest is critically important. All too often, “more is better” thinking leads us to try and get to a little bit of everything we find, which can in turn cause us to lose focus on what is most important.
Focus: A Simplicity Manifesto in the Age of Distraction
Leo Babauta has a nice ebook called focus – a simplicity manifesto in the age of distraction. He does a good job explaining the importance of focus, and he provides lots of suggestions on how to achieve it. Since he has freed this ebook from all copyrights, I have taken the liberty to aggregate it using Fogo Media’s Fogozine Mac Application – check it out here. Here are some of my favorite quotes:
“It’s not technology we should be afraid of. It’s a life where we are always connected, always interrupted, always distracted, always bombarded with information and requests. It’s a life where we have no time to create or connect.”
“When you consume information, you’re helping your creativity as well — you find inspiration in what others have done, you get ideas, you gather the raw materials for creating.”
The Web Shatters Focus
An article published this week by David Carr in Wired Magazine further strengthens the argument. This article goes deep into the science behind the power of focus, and it is a gem as long as you focus long enough to read the whole thing. Basically, frequent switching of our attention prevents us from transferring memories from short-term to long-term storage. According to the article, distractions “impede our thinking and increase the likelihood that we’ll overlook or misinterpret important information.” Carr and I agree that there is a time and place for information skimming, but he points out that “once a means to an end, a way to identify information for further study, it’s becoming an end in itself—our preferred method of both learning and analysis.” This is the problem. We do not allow any time for focused consumption of information. Here is one more great quote from the article:
“The depth of our intelligence hinges on our ability to transfer information from working memory, the scratch pad of consciousness, to long-term memory, the mind’s filing system. When facts and experiences enter our long-term memory, we are able to weave them into the complex ideas that give richness to our thought. But the passage from working memory to long-term memory also forms a bottleneck in our brain. Whereas long-term memory has an almost unlimited capacity, working memory can hold only a relatively small amount of information at a time. And that short-term storage is fragile: A break in our attention can sweep its contents from our mind.”
Ways to Harness the Power of Focus
Assuming you have bought into the argument that focused information consumption helps us build meaningful knowledge, lets move on to some practical ways to achieve it. Here are six suggestions:
Free Yourself from Distractions: The first step to achieving focus is getting in (and staying in) the zone by shutting off potential distractions. At one extreme, this might require complete isolation from people, technology, and other interruptions. More likely, you just need to find a place where email, telephone, coworkers, and family are unlikely to bother you. I personally find coffee shops a great place to get away and focus. Airplane rides are superb. At a minimum, shut off email and your Twitter application when you are trying to focus.
A Beginning and an End: One reason books, newspapers, and magazines are easy to focus on is they have a clear beginning and end. On the other hand, your RSS reader and news aggregator web site are endless — they just keep going and going, and they link out to so may other places. As stated previously, there is a time and place where this is exactly what you need, but this works against you when trying to focus. Therefore, you should try to make sure your information has a beginning and an end. This is easy in the analog world, but you will have to be very disciplined when consuming information online.
Set Aside Time, Regularly: Get in the habit of establishing focused information consumption sessions on a regular basis. Splitting your time between information skimming and focused consumption is likely to provide the best results. You probably already do plenty of information skimming, so you need to figure out how to make focused consumption a more regular occurrence. Disconnect from the computer a few nights a week or schedule time on the computer where you use a tool to help block distractions (see next section for some suggestions).
Do Not Just Read, Think: Reflection and thinking should be a natural part of focused information consumption. This is where you find ways to relate the information to your personal situation, make connections, and pick up on subtle patterns that help you derive meaning. It is OK to let your mind wander. When shut off from other distractions, your mind has a knack for wondering directly to the key realization that unlocks a new level of understanding. Bingo! Ureka! Ah Ha! This is what you are seeking.
Have a Purpose: Some of the most wonderful realizations come when you are least expecting them, but most of the time, it helps to have a purpose. Purposeful consumption (e.g. knowing what you are trying to accomplish) gives you focus, and it allows you to filter out information that is not relevant. It keeps you on track, and it keeps you from checking the score of the ball game when you forget why you were reading something.
Keep a Journal: If your goal is to gain new understandings that relate to personal situations, I have found that nothing is more effective than keeping a journal by your side. When you read about something that makes you go “ah ha,” write it down. Every once in a while, look back at all your notes and look for connections. Look for things that might relate to your life. Write all that down as well. Repeat. It will focus you on the areas most important to you, and you will feel good about the result.
Technology Tools That Promote Focus
Technology, and the internet in particular, can be a huge distraction, but there are some tools that help promote focus. Here are three that I find useful, as well as a link to some suggested by Leo Babauta. I am really interested to find others. Please share any tools that you find useful for focused consumption of information.
Instapaper: This tool takes the core text from web pages and stores it so that they can be consumed later on your computer or mobile device. Information is fed to Instapaper through web bookmarklets and integration with other applications. It can then be viewed on computers and mobile devices. The most beautiful thing is that it throws away everything but the text–so no distractions. Also, the viewing applications on the computer and mobile devices are very simple and easy to use. It promotes focus. Comparing Carr’s article (referenced earlier) viewed on the iPad Wired application versus Instapaper, Milind Alvareswrites that “as soon as you’re a few lines into the story, it’s apparent that [the iPad's] two-column/three-column layout was nowhere near Instapaper’s readability, with generous single column, whitespace, font size, making a huge difference.” Instapaper has an great iPad application, so I recommend skipping the Wired app and instead read the articles using Instapaper.
Readability: Claimed to be “an arc90 laboratory experiment”, Readability is a great little web plugin. Go to the site, add the bookmarklet to your web browser, and use it when you are reading an article that requires focus. Like Instapaper, Readability gives you large text, lots of white space, and nothing but the content you are trying to read.
Fogozine: This may be biased because Fogozine is our application. However, we firmly believe that Fogozine is a tool that enables focused information consumption. It is one of the key motivators that drives us to build it. Unlike most digital tools, Fogozine gives you a “beginning and an end.” As discussed above, this is a powerful way to prevent distraction. Fogozines also push you to have a focus. Each Fogozine is created around a central theme, or purpose, and this allows you to see multiple related content sources side-by-side. Having this all in one package (and one application) makes it easier to make connections and spot patterns. Finally, like Instapaper and Readability, we strive to make Fogozines simple, clutter-free, and easy to read, yet we also allow for other information mediums such as video, audio, and pictures. An example Fogozine can be found here.
Finally, here are some more technology tools suggested by Leo Babauta.
The following set of slides is from a presentation I gave at the NJ Mobile Meetup event on April 22nd. During my 15 minutes presentation, I highlighted the opportunity created by four technology trends: advanced mobile devices, fast wireless technology, cloud computing, and digital media. This is the opportunity we are hoping to capitalize on with Fogozine, and I really hope others continue to push the limits and make better tools to help us all benefit from information abundance.
I admit it, I am not a power Twitter user. But I want to be, and here is why:
Twitter may be the single most effective digital information filtering tool available today.
What is an information filter? Anything that separates the things you want to read from the things you do not want to read. That is a good thing. With the abundance of digital information available to us, we must aggressively filter information to make it useful. Searching, tagging, sorting, and segmenting are all examples of filtering. Everyone must do this, but those of us who filter the best will get the most relevant information in the least amount of time. Time, being the most scarce resource, is very valuable, so Twitter usage may give you an advantage in a time-starved world.
Twitter helps you find the "golden nuggets" in less time
Why is Twitter the best digital information filter? Because people filter better than machines. The trick is to follow the right people. If you follow people who tweet a lot of new content that is of interest to you, you no longer have to go out and find that content yourself. It is like you have an army of information miners working for you to find the nuggets you are most likely to want to read. Internet searching and online recommendation services are great, but they can not beat (yet) an actual human brain for filtering information.
Recommended techniques for using Twitter to filter information. Here are six techniques that help get better results with Twitter:
(1) Follow people with a high signal-to-noise ratio (S/N)
This is an engineering term, but it is a simple concept. The signal corresponds to the informative tweets that provide you with potentially useful information. Noise refers to tweets that add no real value, like “I just ate a really good fried corndog.” The higher the number of tweets in the “Signal” category relative to the “Noise” category, the better the S/N. Just about everyone includes some noise in their signal, but too much noise will become a time-waster. Avoid following people with a poor S/N.
(2) Make quick decisions on what is and is not worth reading
This is applicable beyond just Twitter, but it is especially important to be able to quickly pick out potentially useful tweets from tweets that are going to be a waste of time. When in doubt, it is probably best to move on.
(3) Be purposeful by knowing what you are trying to get out of Twitter
Is it a daily dose of the latest news? Research on a specific topic? Following the whereabouts of celebrities? Twitter can help with all of that, as long as you have a purpose that aligns with what you are trying to get out of Twitter.
(4) Use Twitter lists
If you have multiple purposes for using Twitter (different topics of interest) then you should use Twitter lists.Twitter lists are a way to group and organize the people you follow on Twitter, and you don’t actually need to follow someone in order to include them in your list. Once a list is created, you can view a tweet stream of only those included in the list. Here is a good “how-to” guide for using Twitter lists.
(5) Get Twitter clients on all your electronic devices so you can access Twitter from as many places as possible
Small bits of free time will pop up frequently, and these can be good times to catch up on the latest Tweets. Twitter clients are available on just about any device with Internet access, so make sure you have access wherever you are. NOTE: There is also value in escaping from the Internet sometimes, so don’t take this too literally.
(6) Participate
Posting your own informative tweets and retweeting tweets that you find useful is a great way to add value and attract followers who may become new recruits in your filtering army. Check out the people who are following you. The more you participate, the more likely you are to have followers that you can benefit from. Reciprocation is a great thing that only happens if you participate!
The caveat: When used the wrong way, Twitter can add more noise than it filters out. You want to avoid this by limiting the people you follow to those with good S/N. Like a garden, you will need to nurture your favorite plants with retweets and encouraging direct messages. You may also need to prune or pull the weeds that aggravate you by applying additional filters or un-following people. It does take some maintenance, but I would argue that Twitter is worth the trouble.
Here are some people that I believe have a good S/N in the areas related to Fogo Media, and this blog:
There are those who believe Twitter makes the information over-abundance problem worse, not better. Here is a well thought-out article on the impact of “activity streams” that claims our current toolset is not good enough.
A video discussing why Twitter is such a big deal.
This is a tool called Twiangulate that helps you find people to follow based on the connections of other trusted people
A personal account of Twitter use that has lead to increased awareness, personal enjoyment, and fascination. Also some good tips for how to use Twitter in a positive manner.
What is the typical progression for Twitter usage? I think The 46 Stages of Twitter comes pretty close.
We all create documents with the intention that someone will learn from the valuable insights we are sharing. I am talking specifically about written communication to other people. Whether it is an email, Word document, or blog, we expect someone is going to read, and benefit from, our hard work. Yet we all know how inundated we are with emails, documents, and blogs. Do you read everything that comes in front of your eyes? Hopefully not. If you do, then you probably don’t have much time for anything else.
So, how do you increase the odds that your documents will be read? Here are 10 ways to create documents people will actually read:
1. Use Headings
Use headings to break content down into smaller sections. Headings allow readers to quickly scan the structure of your document and determine which sections are worth reading. This is particularly important for longer documents (over 500 words) that people will tend to avoid unless they can quickly jump to parts of the document that interest them the most.
Here is an online text book with more information on the use of headings.
2. Get to the point
Unless you have the skills to captivate readers with Shakespeare-like prose, get right to the point. Don’t add words, sentences, or paragraphs that are not needed. You may have heard this concept referred to as “Keep It Simple, Stupid”, or KISS. This is another tactic to help save readers time and ensure that you get your point across.
3. Begin with the end
Most documents should state the key conclusions, takeaways, or purpose near the beginning. If you have one big build-up to the end, you risk readers never making it there. It is better to summarize the key conclusions up front and then use the rest of the document to support those conclusions.
4. Know your audience, your intentions, and desired outcome
You must know who you are writing for and what you are trying to accomplish. This sounds obvious, but is often overlooked. Before writing anything, think about who is going to read your document and what you hope will happen as a result. The desired outcome is particularly important, as this will often influence the way to structure your document.
5. Make visually appealing
This is more art than science, but there is no doubt that visually appealing documents are more likely to be read. To be clear, I am not suggesting aesthetics at the expense of good content. Rather, good content can be enhanced by clear visual layouts. Strategies for making documents more visually appealing could fill a book, but here are a few suggestions:
White space – content should not cover every inch of whatever surface the reader is using. Margins, blank lines, and purposeful white space are very important. White space focuses readers on the content, by making the content stand out. It also reduces the perception of clutter, which tends to make readers want to move on to something else.
Contrast and color – use contrast and color to make different elements look different. This can be as simple as using bold, underline, and italic text to add meaning or emphasis. It can also involve the careful use of different colors, but be careful not to overdo it.
Alignment – alignment of visual elements is a key way to make documents look visually appealing. Check out this page for more information about how grids can be used to enhance the layout of documents.
Whenever possible, it is a good idea to replace text with pictures, drawings, and diagrams. Visualizing information is a powerful way to communicate information and maintain the interest of readers. The key here is making sure the visuals help drive key points. If they are informational, but not relevant, they should be omitted or added as an appendix at the end.
7. Use bullets and lists
Bullets and lists help focus readers attention. To be effective, keep the number of list elements to 7 or less. Three is a magic number, but it isn’t always possible to boil things down to just three key point. A useful technique is to first summarize the contents of a document in a bulleted list (tip #3) and follow with headers (tip #1) that correspond to each bullet. Each header can then be expanded with more content about the specific topic. This technique helps readers target the sections of your document that interests them the most.
8. Link to reference material at end, or use external link
Keeping with tip #2 (get to the point), you should try to cut documents down to the most essential content if you want readers to read what you write. If you want to include something that is interesting, but not essential, then add it to the end of the document (with reference in the main body) or include a link to an external source. This gives hungry readers, who want to learn more, the opportunity to digest this information without scaring off readers who just want to take away a few key points.
9. Use appropriate writing style
To write documents that consistently engage your intended audience and get read, you need to develop a repertoire of writing styles. Different writing styles are appropriate in different situations, and you should learn to use the most appropriate style for your target audience. Clear, unambiguous, language is essential when communicating technical information, but this style might appear repetitive and boring when talking about pop culture. Storytelling, with vivid imagery, can capture the attention of readers and make a concept stick in their minds forever, but this same style may backfire if the attention span of your reader is 15 seconds or less (e.g. teenager reading celebrity gossip).
10. Proofread
The last tip is to proofread. Your documents don’t need to be perfect, but a lot of careless errors can be fixed by proofreading your documents. Proofreading is also an opportunity to work on improving your document with tips #1-9. Without proofreading, you run the risk that careless mistakes and unclear wording cause your reader to get distracted, and distraction is likely to result in your document getting pushed aside. Getting good at proofreading increases the odds that people read your documents and benefit from your hard work.