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Manage Your Day-to-Day: Build Your Routine, Find Your Focus, and Sharpen Your Creative Mind [Glei, Jocelyn K.] on desertcart.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. Manage Your Day-to-Day: Build Your Routine, Find Your Focus, and Sharpen Your Creative Mind Review: Well written and super motivating - This book, while seemingly small, and super inexpensive, is one of the best books I've read so far. I've been struggling with motivating myself to work, and trying to organize my schedule, and this book really helps to put things into perspective and offer many different ways of organizing your life. Plus, it's great because it knows that there are plenty of different ways to approach your own unique situation and offers a variety of experts advice, so you can pick and choose what works best for you. It's like a Choose-Your-Own-Adventure book for your life! I highly recommend it. And if you are a very creative person and would like some extra motivation and a boost of confidence, I highly recommend this book in tangent with Steal Like an Artist: 10 Things Nobody Told You About Being Creative . I'm about to read the new Maximize Your Potential: Grow Your Expertise, Take Bold Risks & Build an Incredible Career (The 99U Book Series) , that just came out and goes along with this book. Here's hoping it's just as good. I'll post a review when I've read through it. Review: A Go-to Source for When Your Work Week is Careening Off the Tracks - In a world with ever increasing demands and diversions it becomes more and more difficult for most of us to manage our time. Specifically, having the opportunity to dig into work and get things done can be the ultimate challenge. Emails, group schedules, and virtual meeting may be useful tools hatched from the information age, but they also present a new set of distractions that make bearing down and producing good work problematic. Add in android phone applications and social media (Facebook, Twitter, Linked-In, Pinterest) there are even more balls to juggle. The idea with the book is to compile best practices from specialists that have the expertise and the collective abilities to explain how to get things done. The book is laid out through a series of brief but effective chapters with each of the book’s contributors presenting a short article or interview describing what they have found to be the best ways to manage work. To make it practicable, the Manage Your Day-To-Day is broken down into four sections each hold their own as separate pieces while flowing seamlessly from one to the next. The first such section, Building a Rock-Solid Routine, zooms in on practices that are imperative for having a system in place to get work done but also leave inspiration for creativity. An interview with marketing guru Seth Godin is a motivating piece entitled: Honing Your Creative Practice. The Finding Focus in a Distracted World section includes five best practice stories for dealing with workplace diversions. The best of the bunch is a question and answer piece with the behavioral economist Dan Ariely. Understanding Your Compulsions explains many of the traps that email creates for sidetracking our work day. Ariely also suggests viable solutions to such distractions. The section Taming Your Tools explains how to best blend and utilize the growing choices of internet and technology tools with the more traditional problems of workplace efficiency. The stand out here is Banishing Multitasking from Our Repertoire by psychologist Dr. Christian Jarrett. Sharpening Your Creative Mind makes up the book’s final section which emphasizes the need to enhance our creative work on a regular basis. Letting Go of Perfectionism by Elizabeth Grace Saunders is one of four standout pieces in this unit. I enjoyed this well-organized series of best practices for time and workplace management presented in Manage Your Day-To-Day. It’s a good change of pace and sometimes makes sense to have multiple expert recommendations instead of the standard, elongated, one author-single theory book. Manage Your Day-To-Day is one of several recent books that address the growing problem of workplace productivity. Several months ago I read the book The Four Hour Work Week, where author Timothy Ferris offers up his unique ways to eliminate work distractions and unique methods for working less and working when and where you really want to. According to Ferris, doing work that excites you is more important than that next conference call. The Four Hour Work Week set the business world on its ear when it was first released. Another book that comes to mind is Boring Meetings Suck which draws a line in the sand for the tired and outdated practice of “meetings, just to have meetings”. Manage Your Day-To-Day provides a logical follow up to both of these books. With a minimal amount of monetary and time investment, Manage Your Day-To-Day is a great choice to have close by for those times in the day when you wonder exactly what you are supposed to be doing. Bottom Line: In addition to being an interesting and enjoyable read, Manage Your Day-To-Day can serve as a reference guide or a go-to source for those times when your work week is careening off the tracks.
| ASIN | 1477800670 |
| Best Sellers Rank | #160,119 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #5 in Business Health & Stress |
| Customer Reviews | 4.3 4.3 out of 5 stars (6,448) |
| Dimensions | 5 x 1 x 7 inches |
| ISBN-10 | 9781477800676 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-1477800676 |
| Item Weight | 2.31 pounds |
| Language | English |
| Part of series | 99U |
| Print length | 253 pages |
| Publication date | May 21, 2013 |
| Publisher | Amazon Publishing |
A**L
Well written and super motivating
This book, while seemingly small, and super inexpensive, is one of the best books I've read so far. I've been struggling with motivating myself to work, and trying to organize my schedule, and this book really helps to put things into perspective and offer many different ways of organizing your life. Plus, it's great because it knows that there are plenty of different ways to approach your own unique situation and offers a variety of experts advice, so you can pick and choose what works best for you. It's like a Choose-Your-Own-Adventure book for your life! I highly recommend it. And if you are a very creative person and would like some extra motivation and a boost of confidence, I highly recommend this book in tangent with Steal Like an Artist: 10 Things Nobody Told You About Being Creative . I'm about to read the new Maximize Your Potential: Grow Your Expertise, Take Bold Risks & Build an Incredible Career (The 99U Book Series) , that just came out and goes along with this book. Here's hoping it's just as good. I'll post a review when I've read through it.
R**R
A Go-to Source for When Your Work Week is Careening Off the Tracks
In a world with ever increasing demands and diversions it becomes more and more difficult for most of us to manage our time. Specifically, having the opportunity to dig into work and get things done can be the ultimate challenge. Emails, group schedules, and virtual meeting may be useful tools hatched from the information age, but they also present a new set of distractions that make bearing down and producing good work problematic. Add in android phone applications and social media (Facebook, Twitter, Linked-In, Pinterest) there are even more balls to juggle. The idea with the book is to compile best practices from specialists that have the expertise and the collective abilities to explain how to get things done. The book is laid out through a series of brief but effective chapters with each of the book’s contributors presenting a short article or interview describing what they have found to be the best ways to manage work. To make it practicable, the Manage Your Day-To-Day is broken down into four sections each hold their own as separate pieces while flowing seamlessly from one to the next. The first such section, Building a Rock-Solid Routine, zooms in on practices that are imperative for having a system in place to get work done but also leave inspiration for creativity. An interview with marketing guru Seth Godin is a motivating piece entitled: Honing Your Creative Practice. The Finding Focus in a Distracted World section includes five best practice stories for dealing with workplace diversions. The best of the bunch is a question and answer piece with the behavioral economist Dan Ariely. Understanding Your Compulsions explains many of the traps that email creates for sidetracking our work day. Ariely also suggests viable solutions to such distractions. The section Taming Your Tools explains how to best blend and utilize the growing choices of internet and technology tools with the more traditional problems of workplace efficiency. The stand out here is Banishing Multitasking from Our Repertoire by psychologist Dr. Christian Jarrett. Sharpening Your Creative Mind makes up the book’s final section which emphasizes the need to enhance our creative work on a regular basis. Letting Go of Perfectionism by Elizabeth Grace Saunders is one of four standout pieces in this unit. I enjoyed this well-organized series of best practices for time and workplace management presented in Manage Your Day-To-Day. It’s a good change of pace and sometimes makes sense to have multiple expert recommendations instead of the standard, elongated, one author-single theory book. Manage Your Day-To-Day is one of several recent books that address the growing problem of workplace productivity. Several months ago I read the book The Four Hour Work Week, where author Timothy Ferris offers up his unique ways to eliminate work distractions and unique methods for working less and working when and where you really want to. According to Ferris, doing work that excites you is more important than that next conference call. The Four Hour Work Week set the business world on its ear when it was first released. Another book that comes to mind is Boring Meetings Suck which draws a line in the sand for the tired and outdated practice of “meetings, just to have meetings”. Manage Your Day-To-Day provides a logical follow up to both of these books. With a minimal amount of monetary and time investment, Manage Your Day-To-Day is a great choice to have close by for those times in the day when you wonder exactly what you are supposed to be doing. Bottom Line: In addition to being an interesting and enjoyable read, Manage Your Day-To-Day can serve as a reference guide or a go-to source for those times when your work week is careening off the tracks.
R**J
Excellent book for anyone looking to build a routine and get organized!
"Manage Your Day-To-Day" was the first book I read and reviewed for my blog (Mad Man Thoughts)—and I was not disappointed. Anyone who knows me or follows my blog knows that I'm an unorganized person whose mind is constantly drowned in abstract thought and incomplete reflection. I felt like this book was written specifically for me. Behance—the company behind this book and the 99U program—interviewed a plethora of intelligent, witty, creative people and gathered their insights and strategies for building a routine, finding focus, managing new technology, pushing through creative blocks, and taking your skills and talents to the next level. I highly recommend this book to anyone who struggles to get organized, focus on the task at hand, and/or finish creative projects. This book flows well and is very easy to read (it's also visually appealing, even on a Kindle Paperwhite E-reader - Black, 6" High-Resolution Display (300 ppi) with Built-in Light, Wi-Fi - Includes Special Offers ). The only downside of this book is that it does not go into great depth on any of the tactics or strategies mentioned. However, this seems to be purposeful as it allows you to ruminate on what was said. Overall, I loved it! Next, I'm reading the other book in the series: Maximize Your Potential: Grow Your Expertise, Take Bold Risks & Build an Incredible Career (The 99U Book Series 2)
M**C
I like the series so when there is a new book ...
I like the series so when there is a new book where I think I'll get some value, I usually pick it up. This one wasn't quite as compelling as others. Maybe Day-to-Day management isn't as creative a topic so there was less to work with, but I felt that about 75% of the information was already out there or pretty intuitive so I found myself skipping over sections that were not valuable. I got a few good pointers about structuring time and a couple of other useful ideas. So, if you don't know that you should not pounce on your email first thing in the day, perhaps this is the book for you.
I**A
Able to teach practical stuff that can be used directly to improve daily life. Tackles very common aspects of life.
A**M
"Manage Your Day-to-Day" by Jocelyn Glei, with contributions from various creative minds, is a good read for anyone wanting to improve their creativity and seeking more control over their lives. The book is around 240 pages and has around 22 chapters containing suggestions from folks in the creative thinking community. Some of the contributors have multiple inputs for the book and each chapter is around 8-10 pages. This is not the book to be completed in one go, In my opinion, reading every chapter and discussing it with our closed peer group will be an value addition. Been an ardent fan of 99U for last couple of years, I find many topic already covered in their website and videos, but still as an complete package and as well as to lend to a friend in need, I had bought this book. I would like to reiterate my friend Micheal review below, I too found the below mentioned points interesting & imperative. Though it is not necessary to follow everything to the point, but a mix of the below will help us to see the big picture. Consider each one as the missing part of a Jigsaw puzzle to get the main picture. 1. Drawing a line between the world's demands and your own ambitions. 2. We can accomplish much by working slowly and consistently over a long period of time. 3. Setting a daily routine by regularly and reliably doing your work in an habitual way. 4. We are not designed to operate at high speeds for long periods of time. 5. Blocking off time for focused creative effort. 6. Multitasking is overrated (Finally Some one had the Guts). 7. Suggestions for improving self-control. 8. Being involved in the moment enhances your creativity. 9. Many people want success in so much haste that they do not take time to be true to themselves (what good does it do to gain the whole world if you lose your soul in the process?). 10. Disengagement from a situation may provide a solution for your problem. The book is a delightful read and may be completed in a few sittings. I will often refer to the book when needing either an inspiration or reminder of how to access creativity. This is not a Self-Help Book, I would recommend as a value add or opening up of your creative side book
A**R
I measure a book by the number of highlights I mark it up with and this is full of highlights. Allot of wisdom here without the fluff some books have to fill them out. Recommended for anyone who wants to manage their business, work life, self more efficiently and be more productive and creative.
J**L
I found this book both inspirational and very practical. I've already implemented more than one of the suggestions made. I loved having the input from a variety of successful people.
S**L
Dieser Titel sprach mich gleich in mehrfacher Hinsicht an: Mich stärker fokussieren und konzentrieren zu können ist genau mein Thema, an dem ich mich weiter entwickeln möchte. Wie sich hierfür Routinen für die tägliche Arbeit finden lassen, interessierte mich sehr. Und dann habe ich mir auch noch vorgenommen, künftig mehr englische und französische Bücher zu lesen. Gesagt, getan. Um es gleich vorweg zu nehmen: Das Buch begeistert mich! Auf jeder Doppelseite gibt es mindestens eine Erkenntnis, ein Zitat, eine Zahl oder eine kluge Beobachtung, die mich fasziniert und die es wert ist, in Stein gemeißelt zu werden. Etwa die Erkenntnis, dass es bei Kreativität in erster Linie darum geht, aufzunehmen und nicht überwiegend Neues zu produzieren. Die genialsten Schreibenden sind in erster Linie fleißig und folgen einer festen, täglichen Routine. „Bringing incredible creative projects to life demands much hard work down the trenches of day-to-day idea execution. Genius truly is 1 % inspiration and 99 % perspiration.” Ich habe gelernt, dass unser Geist umso brillanter funktioniert, je achtsamer wir ihm Ruhepausen gönnen. „Your mind will answer most questions if you learn to relax and wait for the answer.” William S. Burroughs Ein weiterer kluger Satz, den ich mir angestrichen habe: „Look at the word responsibility. RESPONSE-ABILITY — the ability to choose your response.” by Stephen Covey. Oder dieser hier: „It's not the load that breaks you down, it's the way you carry it.” by Lena Horne. Ich liebe dieses Buch nicht nur, weil es schlau ist. Es ist außerdem schön. Der Titel ist in rot auf's Cover gedruckt und hochgeprägt. Die glatte Oberfläche mit den hervorgehobenen Buchstaben liegt wunderschön in der Hand, sobald man das Buch angefasst hat, möchte man es auch gleich nicht mehr weglegen. Die Typographie ist sehr ansprechend: wichtige Aussagen stehen ganz allein auf farbigen Doppelseiten. Die Kapitel sind in appetitliche Häppchen unterteilt. Jedes davon wurde von einem anderen klugen Kopf verfasst, auf den ich durch seinen Beitrag neugierig geworden bin. (Gretchen Rubin war mir schon ein Begriff, sie hat das Happiness Projekt geschrieben.) Selbst ein müder Geist schafft es am Ende eines ereignisreichen Tages noch, einen Abschnitt vollständig und aufmerksam zu lesen. Ich empfehle diesen Titel jedem Kreativ– und Kopfarbeiter, der sein Potenzial noch bewusster für sich nutzen möchte. Ganz nebenbei hat das Buch auch eine tröstende Wirkung, weil man erkennt, dass man nicht der einzige Spinner auf der Welt ist, der ab und zu einen müden Tag hat und sich fragt, was er heute eigentlich genau geleistet hat. Kaufen! Ich verleihe meins nicht ;-)
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