snippet from NOISE
NOISE
To really achieve breakthrough performance, I’ve learned it’s critical to become really great at separating the signals from the noise in your life.
What is a Signal to Noise Ratio?
Used frequently to explain the strength of a digital signal, signal-to-noise ratios represent the true signal of something versus the level of background noise surrounding it. In life, your ability to separate signal from noise will ensure you set clear goals, nurture your most important relationships, and help you evaluate your true performance.
Example #1: “Everything” is not a Signal
When I first started in my career, I believed I would be able to create an ultimate system. It would be so efficient that I could create – and successfully react to – everything that came my way. As my responsibilities grew, both at work and outside of work, I noticed that goal was completely misguided. Instead of making “everything” a goal, I really needed to select those things that are most important (the signals) and separate them from everything else I could do (the noise). The problem is its just not easy to do, especially since that distracting noise is everywhere: in your email inbox, on your to do lists, in meetings, and in the daily interactions you have with others.
Example #2: Eliminating Emotional Noise
I recently received a very strong, challenging opinion via voicemail. If I let myself get caught up in the “noise” of the voicemail (i.e. the caller’s emotion and delivery of the message), I probably never would have found the signal in it: the fact that we had a major hole in one of our marketing strategies that we clearly had to address, but that I didn’t initially see.
By analyzing this message and searching for the signal in it, I was able to find an idea I hadn’t previously considered. Was it easy? No. Did I have to listen to the voicemail several times, take notes, and analyze the message without emotion? Yep. But, if I had simply tuned in to the emotional delivery of the message, I would have let myself become flustered and completely missed the real idea.
Noise is also constant in situations where you are new to something or some group of people. In those situations, your ability to separate signal from noise is severely compromised. Just like early in my career, when the signals and noise were all one. However, if you truly tune in and develop this skill over time, you can efficiently find the true signal in any situation.
3 Steps to Help You Separate the Signal from the Noise
1. Take some time to look at your email, to do lists, meetings, and interactions with others in your life over the past week. Are you simply reacting to the noise, or any you finding the true signals? After this assessment, check your personal development plan and goal setting worksheets. They should be great sources of signals to focus on.
2. Ask yourself these 13 questions to break through any self-imposed mental barriers. Far too often, we get distracted and let the noise rule our actions. This can cause you to miss problems growing right in front of you, or to completely squander the precious time you have in each day.
3. Manage your time. Actively block time in your calendar to work on the signals. A wise person once told me that time is our greatest non-renewable resource. And, with each day that passes, we are one day closer to not being on this earth anymore. There are few signals truer than that.
So, how will you close to spend the 86,400 seconds you have today? Find those signals around you, filter out the noise, and leverage that focus to achieve your goals!


Read more: http://dotconnectorblog.com/separating-signal-noise-life/#ixzz259Wud5XR

3

Is the story over... or just beginning?

you may politely request that the author write another page by clicking the button below...


This author has released some other pages from NOISE:

3  


Some friendly and constructive comments