Managing Information and Comunication Overload
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Managing Information and Communication Overload

Is the constant crushing burden of information and communication overload dragging you down? By the end of your workday, do you feel overworked, overwhelmed, stressed, and exhausted? Would you like to be more focused, productive, and competitive, while remaining balanced and in control?

If you're continually facing too much information, too much paper, too many commitments, and too many demands, you need Breathing Space.


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Recommended Reading
Neil Postman: Amusing Ourselves to Death

Ben Bagdikian: The New Media Monopoly

Jeff Davidson: Complete Idiot's Guide to Getting Things Done

David Allen: Ready for Anything

Jim Cathcart: The Acorn Principle

Aldous Huxley: Brave New World

Kirsten Lagatree: Checklists for Life

Williams and Sawyer: Using Information Technology

Snead and Wycoff: To Do Doing Done

Larry Rosen and Michelle Weil: Technostress

Sam Horn: Conzentrate

John D. Drake: Downshifting

Don Aslett: Keeping Work Simple

Jeff Davidson: The 60 Second Organizer

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Managing Information and Communication Overload

Wednesday, July 12, 2006

Focusing on the Wrong Things?

I couldn’t help but be amused when I came across this Forbes article on the dangers to a company when top executives are distracted by opportunities for “adulation.”

“Cancel That Cover Shoot”
by Dana Wechsler Linden, Forbes, January, 31, 2005

Everyone knows about the Sports Illustrated cover jinx. Does the same misfortune happen to executives who become celebrities? Anecdotally, to be sure. FORBES picked the Charles Schwab Corp. as the company of the year in 2001. Within two years the stock dropped to $7 from $30, and 35% of the employees were on the street.

Now two economists--Ulrike Malmendier of Stanford and Geoffrey Tate of Wharton--have gone beyond anecdotes. As specialists in "behavioral corporate finance," they studied the performance of more than 500 chief executives from 1975 to 2002. Half won media awards, such as best manager or
entrepreneur of the year, and became pseudo-celebrities. The other half didn't win awards but had company performances and profiles remarkably similar to the ones who did.

Guess what? Celebrity leads to hubris--and lower returns for shareholders. Malmendier and Tate don't name names, but here's some of what they found.

* Return on assets at companies with "celebrity" executives deteriorated steadily for at least three years after a big award, while those without did consistently better than the superstars.

* Award-winners write more books than nonwinners--autobiographies, collections of self-help advice and homespun philosophy. Ghostwritten or not, they're distractions from the bottom line.

* The more awards chief executives win, the more likely they are to sit on three or more boards, leaving less time for their own directors.

None of this surprises Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, head of the Yale School of Management's Chief Executive Leadership Institute. "The truth is, people do get distracted. You can almost see them start to grow weary of the business and thrilled with the adulation."

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