Media training 101 for small businesses

Image
Great news: you just scored a big press interview to promote your business. The story will expose your brand to the perfect new audience and drive meaningful traffic to your website. So…don't blow it. Yes, just as quickly as the excitement for the opportunity arrived, the realization that you now have to do an interview sets in. I get it—press interviews can absolutely be intimidating. The resulting coverage represents a significant opportunity to acquire new customers, drive sales, or raise awareness, and you want to be sure to represent your brand well and really compel the audience to check out your company. On top of that, you have to contend with adrenaline and nerves in the moment. You may be thinking, "So many other business owners are so polished and articulate in their interviews. How am I going to pull that off?" Deep breath. A successful interview is usually the result of good media training: preparation and practice in advance of an interview. I've tr...

Be Efficient, Not Productive

I'm not here to make a semantic argument, really. But there's a difference between being productive and being efficient, and efficiency wins every time.

Productivity measures how much you do or produce within a given timeframe. Efficiency, on the other hand, is about being productive with less effort. So if you answered 50 more customer support tickets this week because you worked through them as fast as possible, you were more productive. But if you answered 50 more tickets because you used a text expansion app to respond to commonly-asked questions, you were more productive and more efficient.

So to be more productive in a way that won't burn you out in the long run, you have to figure out how to be more efficient.

My Own Journey Toward Greater Efficiency

Several months ago, I wrote a Twitter post complaining about the studies that are released every so often saying things like "bloggers spend an average of three hours writing a blog post." As someone who almost always spends two full workdays writing one piece, this statistic seems ridiculous to me.

Twitter post

A couple of people replied and agreed. But one person replied and said that it never takes her more than a day to write a 3,000-word blog post. That got me thinking: is it possible to reduce the amount of time it takes me to do the same thing?

To find out, I broke down all of the tasks I complete when writing an article:

  • coming up with ideas
  • researching those topics
  • conducting SEO research
  • writing the post
  • taking screenshots and finding images
  • editing the draft
  • entering the final draft into a CMS

After I had a list, my goal was to figure out what I could cut. The answer: nothing. I mean, technically, I could skip the SEO research or leave the editing to my editors. But eliminating those tasks would also massively decrease the quality of the work I was producing.

I asked myself: if the quality is worse, am I truly more productive? I don't think so. I think I'm just worse at my job.

If I was really going to find a way to write faster, I was going to have to take a different approach. I was going to have to dig deep into each one of those tasks to find ways to reduce waste—to be more efficient.

To Become More Efficient, Ask the Right Questions

In his post Automation Is a Mindset, Not Just a Tool, David Zisner argues that when companies have more work than they're capable of doing, they tend to ask the question, "Who will do this work?" But what they should be asking instead is, "How will this work get done?"

I think this applies to individuals too. So as I was performing these tasks, I started asking myself:

  • How should this get done?
  • Is this the best way to do this?
  • Is there a more efficient way to do this?
  • Should I be doing this?

One of my tasks stood out to me as I asked these questions. In the process of adding a post to a client's CMS, I had to edit every outbound link to set it to open it in a new tab. I was sometimes manually adjusting 150 different links in WordPress, which requires three clicks per link. Once I identified that, I started doing a find-and-replace-all in Google Docs to automatically add the open-in-new-window HTML to every single link.

find and replace in Google Docs

Six clicks versus 450. Thirty seconds of work instead of 30 minutes of work.

Efficiency achieved.

With that win behind me, I started to look at other small activities I could expedite—other things that, when I asked myself Is there a better way to do this?, my answer was, There has to be.

Maybe I could use a plugin like Image Attributes Pro to automatically turn my image filenames into alt text for each image. Or maybe there's a plugin or feature that automatically centers all images in blog posts. There's not, by the way—at least not that I could find.

Even if something only saves you five minutes a day, that's still more than 100 minutes saved per month—and more than 1,000 minutes per year. Five more minutes per day, for me, means I can write one more blog post each year—and that's the efficiency boost from one five-minute-saving task. If I can find 12 more tasks that save me five minutes each, that's one more post I can write each month.

Of course, you can have big efficiency wins too. Should you be doing that task that takes you eight hours a week, or should you automate it, delegate it, or just stop doing it in favor of something else that gets you to your goal with less effort?

Broad Strokes Efficiency

Efficiency, of course, isn't only about how you perform specific tasks. You also need to consider how the general way you work impacts your efficiency.

And you can even increase your efficiency by procrastinating on purpose. Sometimes, when I'm trying to write—but every word I put on paper feels like a monumental effort—I'll walk away from my desk and do something else for a while. Inevitably, as soon as I'm not trying to write, I'll think of dozens of things I should be writing about. More output, less effort.


When it comes down to it, it's better to do less and accomplish more than to do more and accomplish less.

Improving your productivity simply means finding ways to do more. Improving your efficiency means finding ways to do more by reducing the effort required to complete tasks. Both increase your output, but while one often leads to working harder, the other focuses on working smarter.

Be mindful of every task you do during the day—no matter how small—and ask yourself: "How should this get done?"



from The Zapier Blog https://ift.tt/2J7U2KG

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

If Time-Tracking Apps Don't Work for You, Try a Productivity Journal

The 25 Best Productivity Apps for iPhone in 2018

What's the difference between the Wiki and OneNote tabs in Microsoft Teams?