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Thanks for sharing,
Matt
Thanks for doing this - you and I do have a little different approach, because we have different aims - and boy is that the point of wanting to hear your system.
The point though that struck me the most from your post is that the exercise of thinking through and documenting what you actually do was more worth it then you thought it would be - I had the same thought when I did it and it really makes me believe everyone should do this exercise if for no other reason than if you document your system you can pay someone else to do all that social networking for you! Doh! I was kidding on that last point.
I appreciate your breakdown -- as someone who is beginning in (online) social media (gazining and contributing) this is a reality check! But, I do wonder how you prioritize your activities. Do I assume that what you spend more time on is more important?
I honestly don't know how you keep the pace but it is always interesting following what you are up to. From a purely selfish standpoint I hope you keep up the pace because I find your content is useful in some way, shape, manner or form a remarkably vast majority of the time.
Would love to hear how you work in the personal life schedule with all this as well. I realize that you seem to have more energy than most but we all only get 24 hours per day, right? Thanks for your hard work.
14 or so tabs in Firefox, but down to 5 when I clean up my reading.
@Business Podcast Co Host with No Name But Hey - What's most important to growing business is connecting with people. So, I have to try and balance that.
With all this how to reading and writing, I am still without a clue as to how one makes money? and I don't seem to learn how to do things fast enough - I need an IT person to add things to my blog for me and put up my posts...
I only follow 80 blogs. And I am being followed by more and more people on twitter, but don't know what to do with them?
Back to the tutorial.
I enjoy reading what you write and am so glad you have such good archives
Thank you
Doug
I'm in a heavy acquisition phase so my time looks about like this...
20% Blog
20% Post on other blogs
20% Write articles
20% Correspond w/ clients and prospects
5% Networking events/speaking
15% Writing next book, business planning
What about everyone else? Can I see more breakdowns?
Of course, I wish I was an independent consultant (he says with tongue in cheek) that could get away with only 20% execution!
I'm afraid my list, to reflect reality, is going to add up to something like this:
correspondence--80%
discovery--30%
execution--40%
Such is the life of a services provider. :-)
I was curious - you said you limit your time on social networks. I am part of a handful of Ning social networks and am trying to convince my boss to let me start one at work but fear it won't add value (we are a membership assocation). How do you decide what social networks to join? How many are you a part of? What do you find valuable about them?
I winced as I scrolled your routine...
Mine: I do what I must during the workday, do a little extra I can when I can create some time, and I catch up all the time!
Thanks for the good read.
As college senior, Facebook is quite popular and and probably the most prominent networking site among my peers. I have found that twitter is becoming more and more prevalent but a lot of my peers don't know enough about it or find it unnecessary. As I have started using it, I can already see the benefits from following top CEOs and business execs that I would normally never have the chance to interact with. It's great and your efforts don't go unnoticed!
I've been reading quite a few of your posts lately :)
I'm just getting started, but I'm finding that I:
- usually start my day off with TechCrunch, PopURLs, and Tumblr
- have HootSuite, Tumblr, and Google Analytics up all day long
- check links from Twitter (usually Mashable), review PopURLs (digg, delicious, & dzone mostly) throughout the day
- find myself doing Twitter searches at night