Information Overload – How to deal with it?

Published Categorized as Communication, Productivity
Lots of books on a long table and people around it.
Lots of books on a long table and people around it. freestocks-YTUZcmmf1eU-unsplash-545x307

Today the stream of information seems to be endless, thus information overload is a real thing. Magazines, journals, memos, emails, websites, smartphone apps and a lot more, provide us with more data than any person is able to handle.

Furthermore, information presented to us while taking part at meetings and other events will join the already obtained information from the above-mentioned sources.

Information overload is a very real concern for today’s business people, but also for everyone else, too.

A very comprehensive explanation of Information Overload could be found at Wikipedia.

We must possess skills that allow us to process huge amounts of data. Consider the following methods as an option to bring the information flowing to you under your control again.

1. Have a structure for the information you like to store.

Without a structure, you will lose overview about which information is stored where. A good solution for the beginning is a structure of your own knowledge and information requirements.

For example: Create some folders or directories on your computer. One directory or folder for one knowledge area, such as languages, computer knowledge, knowledge from your working experiences.

You could use your computer to store things you receive by email or internet searches. To store offline items, just follow the same tactic. You might create one or more folders as you need to keep your structure to work.

2. Learn scanning before reading

When you encounter information of interest, read the first paragraph or two, scan the body for keywords and read the conclusion. Then decide if you want to keep the article for future “in depth” reading.

Store the articles in a folder or directory which states that you like to read this article in full length. Furthermore, you could have a folder where you put all information, which you couldn’t allocate to a specific area of knowledge.

Learning to “preview” information before deciding to spend valuable time on it will save you many hours. Time that you could spend on the things that matter most.

3. Managing Emails

Today, it’s easy to receive 200 or more emails each day. It’s often difficult to determine which are important and which are not. To save time sorting emails, simply filter the unimportant emails into separate folders.

Then, once a day, look at the emails you filtered. Use your email program’s filtering capabilities to accomplish this. Just set up some rules to sort received emails into some folders.

Or use a spam filter. However, none of the programs available today work 100% correct. You have to bear in mind, that the spam filter might delete some important messages.

Well, my experience is, that if you use a filtering system you will probably clean up your Inbox as good as if you use a spam filtering software. But the advantage is, you won’t miss important emails.

What ever system you use, a filter in your email program, or a third-party spam filtering product, scanning through unwanted emails is a must to avoid deletion of messages that are important for you.

And if even that is not working anymore, set up a new email address and share this new address only with the people very important to you. This will reduce the flood of spam mails for a while.

4. Set aside “in depth” reading time

Assign times for the in depth reading of articles and other information. At these times you could read your articles and do further research.

While reading articles, you could also do the review which is mentioned in the next paragraph.

5. Review stored information regularly

Information has a short life. It is essential to review the information you store regularly, to keep the information actual. All old and useless information must be deleted or thrown away.

If you don’t review regularly, you will see your folders mess up and your computer hard drive will get very full. It’s not a joke, soon you will have thousands of files.

When reviewing, remember to review also the bookmark in your favorite web-browser. You may save it for later reference. A review of the stored things should be made every 6 month for business related stuff and at least once a year if the information is for private use.

Conclusion

It needs a structure and discipline to handle the information overload we all are facing every day. If you don’t follow your own rules for Information Management, you will be losing the information game one day.

To win the information game has little to do with time management, it’s an issue of self organization and discipline.

While implementing and using the above described solution, you will see that things are changing to be more comfortable for you. You might also find out that the life of information is not really that short as most people think.

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All the Best!

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