Archive for August, 2008

Comcast: My Nemesis

Friday, August 29th, 2008

Comcast cartoon

What good can come from capping bandwidth for legitimate use? As the Internet provides new reasons for consumers to be online, Comcast will benefit from increased demand. Streaming HD video, for instance, might be the reason my mom tries broadband again.

I’ve had a lot of problems with Comcast, starting with being told that I don’t have an account with them every time I call them. I wish I could vote with my wallet here, but my options are Comcast or nothing: and Comcast needed a lot of persuasion in order to even service my neighborhood. Oh, and new companies that want to provide broadband to my area are being fought by Comcast’s lawyers and lobbyists who claim it will unfairly undercut their business.

c|net has coverage.

3 Secrets to Delegating Work

Tuesday, August 26th, 2008

When you want something done right, you have to do it yourself. Right? This is a classic mistake, one that leads to overworking and stress. After all, each time you take over on a task that you should delegate you’re just adding more work. At some point, that takes its toll and even even you can’t do it as well as you should.

So you delegate the work. But it never seems to get done like you’d expect. And that frustrates you, making you just as stressed as you would have been if you’d done the work yourself.

Here’s how you help get things done right.

1. Give good instructions


This should obvious, but people are terrible at giving directions. Some of the most successful people got that way because they are tremendous communicators. If you have a vision for how a task should be completed, force yourself to thoroughly describe it. Translate that vision from your head and into the email, memo, or sticky note so someone else can understand it.

2. Be helpful and accessible


You’ll get a much better response from people if you make yourself available for follow-up questions and feedback.

3. Lower your standards


Let’s face it – sometimes you can get by with less than perfect and forcing someone else to live up to your expectation of perfect may be unreasonable. I’m not saying you should accept poor performance, but the payoff from delegating work is that you saved yourself a lot of hassle. If it’s absolutely critical that it’s perfect, then make that a condition of the work going in.

Or just do it yourself


If it’s that important, then maybe you should do it yourself. But you have to give up something else. Tim Ferriss even outsourced his email. You can find some way of delegating a lot of the stuff you do. When you do, you’ll be free to focus on high priority items.

When “Perfect” Can Hurt You

Tuesday, August 26th, 2008

An observation:

Getting a project 100% right is very hard and time consuming. But getting the project 95% there is pretty quick. The next 5% percent can take a long time, though. The question for you is whether the distance between 95% and perfection is worth the investment.

Sometimes it is… but a lot of the time it isn’t.