Ever feel you’re drowning under the weight of uncontrollable
admin in your work and private life?
The information age was supposed to set us free but sometimes it
feels as if all it has done is enslave us to the yoke of
never-ending e-mails, texts and calendar reminders, not to mention
all the nondigital flotsam that demands our attention.
However, the web can help with a host of sites that provide
advice, tests and tools to help you organise your life more
efficiently. Not only can you improve your powers of memory and
concentration, but there are sites that will help you to unleash
your creativity and keep your brain in trim by honing your mental
faculties.
TIME MANAGEMENT
How many wage slaves do you know who find themselves working
obscene hours simply to keep their heads above water? But unless
they are working efficiently, those long days chained to the desk
are for nothing. The answer is to make more use of the time that
you have.
The time management section of
www.mindtools.com
offers
targeted tips, such as analysing your daily behaviour by keeping an
activity log and setting “sharp, clearly defined goals”. This may
sound obvious – the log should range from lifelong aims to more
prosaic short-term tasks – but the key to effective management is
knowing how to prioritise each task and understanding how
completing one task leads to another. You can download the entire
guide as an e-book for $19.99.
The ability to process quickly large amounts of information is
also crucial to making the most of your day. While it’s a dog’s
dinner to look at,
www.magicspeedreading.com/words/index.html
throws some light on the the art of speed reading. For instance,
there are interactive exercises that will train you to understand
text while skipping over vowels. It also advises to use soft focus
as you read, which means resisting the urge to peer tensely at the
words in favour of relaxing your eye muscles and letting your
peripheral vision do the work. This allows you to cover more ground
more quickly.
MEMORY AND CONCENTRATION
When it comes to improving powers of memory and concentration,
there are more snake-oil remedies online than in an 1870s Yukon
town. But among the dross, up pops
www.lumosity.com
, which offers a
free two-week trial without requiring you to hand over credit card
details.
The well-designed site addresses four areas – attention, memory,
cognitive control and processing speed – with imaginatively themed,
against-the-clock games that are good fun to play. For example you
are tested on remembering names and faces together and pictures of
various shapes. If you like what you see, a subscription costs
$9.95 a month.
The University of Kent website serves as a straight-talking
introduction to the art of concentration (
tinyurl.com/occzl
). One of
the biggest causes of poor concentration is distraction, and the
site makes the distinction between internal and external
distractions. It explains that the first step to blocking them out
is identifying them. It also discusses physical factors: for
instance, too much food will send your body into a “rest” mode,
making it harder to focus.
Concentration is easiest when you enjoy what you are doing. If
you hate your job then it may be time for a fresh perspective:
www.learndirect-advice.co.uk
has questionnaires you can take to see what your ideal career might
be if you’re having trouble deciding; it can also provide practical
advice on how to improve your CV.
BRAIN EXERCISE
The brain, just like the body, needs to be kept in shape to perform
at its optimum level, and there are a whole host of computer games
that purport to hone your mental faculties with interactive puzzles
such as sudoku.
The most popular is Nintendo’s Brain Training game which has
sold millions of copies. There is no magic formula that will turn
you into Einstein overnight, and Nintendo makes no formal
scientific claims for its titles. However, one new game called
Mindfit (£69 from
www.mindweavers.co.uk
),
comes with an endorsement from Baroness Susan Greenfield, the
neuroscientist and director of the Royal Institution, and is
apparently backed by research from the Sourasky medical centre at
Tel Aviv University in Israel, which suggests that regular use of
the program could increase short-term memory and attention.
Mindfit assesses your various mental strengths and weaknesses,
before coming up with a training programme tailored to your needs.
It requires you to take part in challenges such as rebuilding
abstract patterns from given parts (like a digital jigsaw) and
matching up groups of pictures.
To assess your mental agility (and see whether the training has
worked) try the IQ tests at
uk.tickle.com/test/iq/intro.html
,
which has 40 questions (largely based on verbal reasoning and
maths-based conundrums) and takes about half an hour. The more you
practise the better you’ll get.
On a more practical level anyone can improve their ability to
score highly on psychometric tests, which are becoming increasingly
popular with employers. Head to the practice tests at
www.shldirect.com
and
www.psl.co.uk/practice
.
UNLOCKING CREATIVITY
Forget that rickety whiteboard in the corner of the boardroom,
these days brainstorming has gone digital. The beauty of
www.mindmeister.com
is that you can start using it to create mind maps – the proper
term for those spider diagrams – instantaneously, and then share
them with your colleagues or have a joint brainstorm over the web.
Go to the website, play with the demo and start bashing out
ideas.
Creativity coaches are two-a-penny online, and like speedreading
gurus they are usually more ready to peddle their wares than
dispense helpful advice. The relentlessly sunny optimism emanating
from www.stevepavlina.com may make you want to put a fist
through the computer screen, but once you’ve overcome that urge
there’s practical advice among the positive thinking – his post on
becoming an early riser can be summed up thus: go to bed only when
you’re too sleepy to stay up, and get up at a fixed time every
morning. The result, according to Pavlina, once your sleep patterns
have readjusted, is an increase in alertness and creativity.
STREAMLINING INFORMATION
The web is as guilty of cluttering our lives with information
overload as anything else. However, with a few shortcuts you can
bypass the superfluous and head straight to the important stuff.
When it comes to news and current affairs, Really Simple
Syndication (RSS) is the best way to check the newest material on a
selection of websites without having to visit them. Instead,
headline bulletins – also known as news feeds – are sent to
you.
You need to sign up to an RSS reader – the slick, free and
handily featured
www.newsgator.com
is a good
place to start. Then head to InGear’s recent feature on the subject
(
tinyurl.com/yvljzw
)
which explains fully how to set up the reader and start collecting
feeds.
Spend any amount of time online and it’s likely that you will
accumulate a host of usernames and passwords. The ingenious
www.roboform.com
takes the sting out of trying to remember them all. Once you have
downloaded the program, every password and username you use for
subsequent sites is automatically stored and remembered when you
next visit the site. The only thing you need to remember is the
master password needed to activate RoboForm.
But perhaps the best way to make more use of your time is to
follow the advice of Mike Davidson, a self-styled productivity
guru. He has launched a campaign dedicated to reducing the length
of all e-mails to five sentences or less. Check out his (brief)
explanation at
tinyurl.com/3x9se4.