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QuickTip: Access Your NK2 (AutoComplete) File To Extend Your Marketing Efforts

The NK2 file stores all the AutoComplete information used by Outlook to “auto complete” the e-mail addresses you use.  I discovered it a few weeks ago while getting ready to launch the QuietSpacing(tm) blog.  The immediate value of the NK2 file is that it contains all the e-mail addresses of people with whom you’ve communicated – even those that aren’t in your Contacts yet!

There are a number of free utilities you can download that will allow you to access and manipulate the Nk2 file data, including saving it to spreadsheets and uploading it into other programs – like an e-mail newsletter list.  Here’s the one I used:

http://www.nirsoft.net/utils/outlook_nk2_autocomplete.html

but a Google search on “NK2 file” will turn up a host of other sites with information and utilities about this little buried treasure!

QuickTip: Use Comments Window In Calendar Event

Here’s a QuietSpacing(tm) QuickTip:  Whenever you’re on a conference call or have your laptop with you in a meeting, open the Calendar event for that call/meeting on your computer and take your notes in the comment area provided.  There are several points of leverage here:

1.  You are putting all the transitory information (notes) in a place you’re likely to be able to find in the future.

2.  You can leave the event reminder in the Reminders Window (don’t Dismiss it) until you have done, moved or delegated all the tasks that resulted from that meeting.

3.  You can print and/or Save As that event as a document on your hard drive or document management system in the appropriate place.

Note, you can also drag and drop documents of all sorts into that event further aggregating things related to that event in one location.

Stay tuned for more QuickTips.

When What Meets When; But What About How?

I engaged in a fabulous conversation late last week with a coaching client that dissected the interchange between workflow processing and time management.  In short, we concluded that workflow management is about the “what” of productivity and that time management is about the “when” of productivity.  With that in hand, the final question centers on the “how” – which is where programs like QuietSpacing(tm) pay dividends.

The What:  Most of us have some mechanism for tracking the work that needs to get done – either efficiently or inefficiently.  Many of those techniques and behaviors were learned in an ad hoc manner when we first started working.  The “to-do list” is the most common method for tracking “what” needs doing.  These little scraps of magic are effective…to a point.  The  biggest problem we suffer in today’s working environment is the speed at which new things come at us via our advanced communication technologies.  Nonetheless, most people steadfastly adhere to the notion of a “to-do list” trying desperately to keep up-to-date during the daily barrage of e-mails, phone calls, and meetings.

The When:  Back in the “old days” we knew there would be periods during which we could get work done – quiet time between meetings and phone calls that served as periods of focus.  Those serene moments were obliterated by e-mail.  Now, most people try to snatch small segments of time to get work done in between the hundreds of new emails that come into their Inboxes.  The result, whether we admit it to ourselves (and others) or not, is productivity is greatly reduced.  In its place is lots of activity with no corresponding accomplishment.

The How:  Given that we have more coming in faster in today’s modern working environments, the historical methods for handling our workflow and time need to change.  Instead of trying to freeze moments of time and work into snap shots and blocked periods of work, we need to view these efforts as an ever-flowing event.  Our work and our use of time must be viewed as a constantly-changing continuum and the tips and tricks we use to track what needs doing and when we do it must similarly flow forward.

Whether you choose QuietSpacing(tm) as that method or some other productivity model, I encourage you to look with a critical eye at the architecture being proposed.  Does it move with time seamlessly?  Does it allow you to readily and with minimal administrative effort track your work?  Does it promote the technologies you find in your work environment as ways of increasing your productivity and your sense of well being? 

These are the questions we face in the modern world of global, electronic working environments.  Make sure you’re adapting to it by using the most effective means available to you!

Welcome…To A New Day For Time Management

This blog and it’s related resources will both leverage and challenge what you know about time management and workflow processing.  We have been overrun by the very technology that was invented to assist us down the path towards a successful life.  Instead of being our ally, modern communications and productivity technologies have begun riddling us with interruptions and distractions to such an extent that we are actually less effective and less productive than before they were introduced. 

The QuietSpacing(tm) method was developed in response to this situation.  It was conceived from an immediate need on the part of my clients to regain control over their professional and personal worlds.  The method’s objectives are to (a) re-establish command over your environment and  (b) regain focus – the heart of good productivity, effectiveness and responsiveness.

The intial posts below comment on the three subject areas of this blog - Time Management, Workflow Processing and Work/Life Balance – and I have posted a number of articles under the Articles section of side bar to the right.  You are invited to review this content, visit this site frequently, subscribe to the RSS feeds, and follow me on Twitter @QuietSpacer.  You are also invited to attend an online or on demand QuietSpacing(tm) training program.  Finally, I would welcome an opportunity to work with you individually through my coaching program or provide your group a training seminar or keynote presentation,  so please contact me if you’re interested in those services.

Be well and live life on purpose!