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If I Were a Realtor
2. I open Tweetdeck. Before e-mail, before anything else. I check through my columns to check the morning's stream for cool links and to see what people are up to, respond to @ replies & DMs, & scan for any comments about our company.
3. I check my e-mail and respond to anything.
4. Facebook (I always check birthdays to make sure I don't miss one, respond to messages and wall posts, check out the home feed, and if there's any RedWire news I update the Fan Page)
5. Google Reader (I spend time every morning going through my reader, commenting on blogs, saving articles on Delicious for later, and sharing the best articles/posts)
As long as I've done those things I feel like I have a handle on my life - of course there's other things I check like LinkedIn, Google Alerts, etc. but they're done as I see requests. My morning routine though? Non-negotiable.
Thanks for sharing yours - I'm assuming coffee is #6 on your list? :)
In a separate window: Gmail Business Account, Google Calendar, Basecamp (for client projects). I make sure I have my appointments set for the day and GoToMeeting info confirmed.
1. Look at blackberry to see what's going on
2. seesmic to see if there's anything happening in my groups
3. Facebook to keep it real
4. Check RSS feeds
5. light email based on what's happening in the digital world (5-10 emails)
My typical morning includes:
1. Email - Committed to getting my personal and Blue Sky Factory inbox down to <25 (n scroll).
2. Blogs - Reading (this one included), Engaging (commenting), Writing (my new personal blog launched yesterday - http://socialbutterflyguy.com/)
3. Twitter - What did I miss? How can I contribute? What can I learn?
4. IM - Who is awake? What are they doing? How can I start their day off with a laugh or smile
5. Coffee - Fresh french press loaded with that notsogood for you creamer.
Thanks Chris for getting me thinking this morning...(and for helping provide inspiration for my blog). Looking forward to meeting you in person - Social Fresh?
DJ Waldow
@djwaldow
1) Davezilla admin screen (check for spam, approve new comments, etc.)
2) Facebook (approve friends, try to beat my brother at Chess)
3) Mashable (keep up those crazy Intar Webs)
4) Twitscoop (the live tagcloud is great for trendwatching)
5) Radian6 (client work)
http://www.buzzding.com
Email - About 250 - 300 a day: first I need to check for emergencies with my clients, if no problems then I go to FF...
Seesmic - Same as you, handle all of my replies, dms, and my "dailys" group
Firefox
- Google Reader: My morning news and coffee, check articles I like (this one) and socialize the ones that I READ
- Facebook: Friends and damn Mafia Wars, I'm addicted now.
- Friendfeed: Trying to get used to this one, just don't have the time yet. Trying though.
Instant messengers (start in offline mode)
Do you use Symbaloo? I'm on PC and create desktops to share w/clients of sites and feeds to help ease the job search or new business start-up.
I also separate my feeds in Google Reader between those I've commented on and those I want to check out. Makes it easy to see which conversations I've contributed to.
I'll check out Monday's newsletter!
Thanks!
Usually I check tweetdeck, gmail, comments on my blog, facebook and blog contact emails, but I often get hung up browsing one or another of those apps.
2. Twitter or Hootsuite (to address @replies and share posts from G.R.)
3. Email
4. Pidgin (inter-office communication)
5. English Muffin, large cup of coffee
2. Fire up various email accounts
3. Respond to conversations on Twitter, LinkedIn, Facebook
4. Read through my Feedly / gReader feeds, respond & pass along
5. Consume more coffee... Read More
6. Start to tackle work to-do list for day
Getting started with #1-#5 takes me about 2 hours (from about 7:30am - 10am). Every. Single. Day. Weekends included. On occasion I get 'sidetracked' by an urgent work issue or with client calls etc. I'm actually trying to reduce my startup time in the morning because I work better in the morning and 'wasting' so much time just getting caught up is starting to seriously cut into my productive brain time (when the coffee works the best)
Similar tabs for me. I've switched to Feedly from Google Reader, and instead of Read it Later I email pages to Evernote. I've also started a Lazyfeed account, which I've really been liking.
Morning tasks are:
1. Twitter, via TweetDeck and CoTweet. Say good morning, check overnight dm's and mentions on the various accounts I help manage.
2. Feedly/Lazyfeed/SocialMedian. Post relevant links to Twitter accounts I manage, comment on some stories (I neglect this part!), bookmark some for future reference in Evernote, and schedule tweets for the day.
3. E-Mail (GMail)
4. Facebook
5. Google Calendar/Tasks in Action Method Online - get organized and plan my day.
Oh, and coffee comes first!
1. Literally the first thing I do when I wake up is check twitter and facebook via the Tweetdeck and Facebooks apps on my iPhone to see what was brewing over night. Also read any e-mails sent to my personal account.
2. I get to work and check work e-mail and respond to pretty much all of them. Low volume.
3. Head to my netvibes.com account to check RSS Feeds for the blogs I follow. I have also found that I can read and write to Twitter from Netvibes even at work where it is blocked. Check thru our day.
4. Later in the day I hit google reader, flickr, and youtube. I also go back to any new blog entries that I haven't had a chance to read yet.
5. Keep up to date on everything else via iPhone apps.
Cheers,
Jason Aiken
99designs.com
1. sharing the day's StressTip on Twitter and FB with a link to the Weekly StressTip.
2. reading and sharing on Twitter Seth Godin's blog of the day; MarketingProfs' Getting to the Point;
3. RTing various members of our tribe (people we follow and follow us)
4. answering eMail
5. commenting on blogs - thank you Chris for this opportunity
Afterrnoon begins with...
1. sending out DailyStressTips to opt-in members
After I hit snooze, I grab my iPhone and open a twitter app (one of the 3), then check out my facebook app to see what my friends back east are up to. After compulsively making the bed I:
- Brew Coffee (8 seconds with my Keurig!)
- Open NetNewsWire (all 12 subscriptions... including yours!)
- Tweet 'n stuff
If I have time before I realize I've gotten sidetracked and have to rush around before work, I'll brainstorm and draft ideas for my blog. Oh, and all the while I am spending far too much money on iTunes.
Just wanted to say thanks.
1. Outlook for work email
2. GMail personal mail
3. Firefox with : BBC News / LinkedIN / Facebook / salesforce.com / RSS feeds
4. Seesmic / Tweetdeck
5. Links from articles/respond to posts/comments
but like everyone else - coffee & breakfast first to walk me through this...
Its interesting to see everyone here so social and interacting so much - the other thing for me is how long this takes. I used to spend 30 mins in my 'pre work' routine, now this takes at least an hour, so Ive set my alarm to get up earlier! how do you bake this into your day?
Here's my challenge: I find routines sap my creative energy. I feel trapped in routines. Keeping life surprising me seems to keep me thinking differently. Which I value. My hope is that, like exercising regimes that preach keeping muscles surprised, I'll keep that edge.
But this approach obviously does not bode well for regular social/new media participation. Do you mix routine with with non-routine stuff?
1.) Blackberry first thing to check if there are any messages.
2.) Get kid ready for pre-school.
3.) http://parentella.com
site (check is something major occurred), errors, feedback, tickets to see progress.
4.) Breakfast and tea.
5.) Tasks for the day, week, more reading blogs, news, email etc. This continues throughout the day.
Great idea for a post.
In order to keep my email and RSS feeds under control, though, I feel it's necessary to check them out each morning. I've compromised by going through what I consider important (1. Email, 2. RSS feeds, 3. Twitter, 4. A brain teaser) before I have breakfast. That time away from the computer lets me refocus and switch gears between email and other work. It also gives me an opportunity to decide if I need to change up my priorities for the day.
How long does your morning list typically take?
Thanks!
#1. I scan my blackberry for Seth and Chris's blog emails but that's plenty to get me "thinking".
#2. I avoid my Twitter and Facebook account like the plague lest they suck me in hours of chit-chat (the equivalent of hanging out at the water-cooler).
#3. I check email, try to ignore most of it, and start "supervising" oDesk contractors and trying to get some writing, client calls, and wordpress MU systems and plugins set-up. (I need to get to my PPC and SEO stuff but usually can't.) NO WAY I could respond to 100 emails intelligently much less 400 and I'm very fast and not as dumb as I look.
*I work from about 9 - 2:30 and then on and off again from 2:30 - 9 pm, and then from 9 to midnight.
#4. Now, I suppose if I had a very coordinated system using Freshbooks, Batchblue, Mail Chimp, FormSpring, and Wrike - I could have more time for social networking, reading, etc...but hell, setting these up alone would take at least a day per application to really get it...
Imagine the difficulty most non-tech-savvy people would have with these apps.
Sigh....My advice is that until you have the Systems set up to capitalize on all the contacts you are making through networking (or if "sales" is your only job")....networking in person or online can be a big waste of time.
Anyway, back to focusing on systems I go.
P.S. I try to apply Steven Covey's Quadrant Principles i.e. staying in q2 land i.e. tasks that are important but not urgent (like systems), as opposed to doing urgent but not-important (q3) and not-urgent/not-important (q4) tasks (like many emails and commenting on facebook posts of old classmates.)
I wish I had a filter that would take all my incoming emails, messages, tasks, etc... and stick them into those quadrants.
Q1 - Urgent, Important (deadlines)
Q2 - Not Urgent, Important (systems)
Q3 - Urgent, Not Important (most emails, messages)
Q4 - Not Urgent, Not Important
Covey says that successful companies spend 70% of time in Q2 so if the filter attached "time-needed to complete" to them and Bonked me on the head everytime I strayed, that would work.
Heck, I had to name my company q2 Results to try and keep on track! I help other people do this...but it's my way of "the teacher learn more than the student" - as Confucious said...
Dr Wright
http://www,wrightplacetv.com
Love having this insight into the tools and routines that work for you. I think so many of us have a similiar passion about making connections but don't have the ability to develop processes that allow us to seamlessly work the necessary tasks into our day.
Though I haven't proven it yet, I'd guess that consistency is a BIG part of success in this arena - in terms of both how you're perceived and also in terms of just making it happen at all.
Been teetering back and forth between Tweetdeck and Seesmic. The fact that you use Seesmic may have just tipped the scales in that direction. I'll have to go check out the latest update release. Oh, and I'll also have to go check back into Google Calendar. Been toying with the idea of scheduling blocks of work time (with specific, assigned tasks) in addition to meetings ... should be an interesting experiment.
:)
Ever tried PeopleBrowsr for reading Twitter and other sites?
JoeC
ps. Loved the Maine camp vacation pics. :)
I liked seeing your routine, I have a similar one, but not quite as many emails to ansewr in the morning.
Your quote:
"Because participation is part of the currency. If I’m not in the game, I can’t play. "
Spells out what most of the "old school" marketers do not understand about social media marketing. They are used to being able to take and take without giving back and still don't understand the new paradigm and how much you can be rewarded by simply understanding and adopting to the new rules.
Doug
its good to hear that You take time to answer peoples questions too,
1) Wake up, switch on iPhone (which is next to my bed), load Tweetie and read @replies and general conversations I was tracking
2) Switch on PC, and check what news has been breaking overnight at techmeme.com
3) Check Emails
4) Make Coffee, whilst reading more news off my iPhone, and also whilst replying to @replies on Twitter
5) Begin sifting, filtering and consuming links on Twitter.com (yes, I do it old school), and highlighting blog worthy links in a text file
Since LinkedIn is my domain of choice I make sure I always check what those in my network are doing first on my home page. Since LinkedIn grows by one person a second there is no question there will always be new people showing up who want to link with me. I really have not reached out and linked with anyone in over three years so my network is made up of, mostly, people who wanted to connect with me for one reason or another. So far I have over 4500 connections.
I accept all invitations that are thoughtful from people who are what I call "awake in the network" if you will. That means they took the time to view my profile and then talk about something they thought was relevant and connective to things that they care about or are involved in. I have met amazing people that way and, currently, 40% of all my business is a result of people who connect with me through LinkedIn.
I make it clear that the way I work is that if I can hep someone or know someone who can help someone I am there to help. However, if someone is actually pushing something and is not thinking about a more mutually beneficial relationship, then I don't connect.
Best,
Melissa
1. Emails
2. Facebook / Friendster
3. Google Reader
4. Twitter / FriendFeed
5. Plurk ( I love seeing my karma go down!)
....ok, maybe that one doesn't count.
1. I open my Google Office, a set of tabs that includes the reader (which is the center of my universe) and the calendar so I know what I have in store for the day.
2. Read and comment on blogs I find interesting, then share the one's that stand out.
3. Facebook- respond to comments and catch up
4. Participate in my communities
5. Check my twitter
Turn on Comp and open:
2) Gmail (for business/organizations)
3) Skype
4) Check facebook
then...
5) Pick up Breakfast on the way to the office
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