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Welcome to the new @elsua!

Gran Canaria - Presa de Ayagaures & surroundingsOr welcome to the new Luis, for that matter! I guess there is nothing better than honest, constructive, candid, helpful feedback about your blog and blogging style, specially when it comes from people you respect and treasure for what they have taught you over the years in one of the areas you feel very passionate about; in this case Knowledge Management and blogging.

Yesterday afternoon my good friend Jack Vinson shared the following tweet across with me:

"@elsua I know I have mentioned this before, but consider getting an editor :-) "

Of course, he was referring to this, my personal business, blog and my own blogging style, which some times tends to meander in and out quite a bit and become perhaps too verbose, making it almost impossible to go straight to the point at times and get people confused in the process.

Check! Guilty as charged! If you have been reading this blog for a while now, you would reckon it’s been one of those on-going challenges I have been wanting to address and fix, specially for those folks out there who can’t afford to spend lots of time reading through lengthier blog posts to then have difficulties finding out where the golden nuggets are. Yet, it’s been such a complex challenge to fix that Jack suggested, for the second time, I should look for an editor to help tame that storytelling flavour my blog posts seem to be permeating from all along.

Well, this is it, folks, this is a new beginning for yours truly, Luis Suarez (a.k.a. @elsua), as I am about to make one extra effort in order to accommodate that potential audience out there wanting to read and grasp those knowledge nuggets in the shortest time possible and move on. Not sure how it is going to pave out in the end; it will be, I guess, another on-going learning experience, but, if it helps, I’m surely willing to give it a try and then see how it may conflict with my usual self.

Earlier on this morning I had one of those wonderful and rather educational Skype calls with another good friend of mine, David Tebbutt , who saw my Twitter exchange with Jack yesterday and who kindly offered, during our conversation, some tips on what I could do to change some of the flavours that may be coming from those blog entries. I do know I just cannot pretend to be someone else I am not; I do know I am someone who isn’t too preoccupied with getting thousands of reads per article published.

I do know, however, I am someone who cares a great deal for those folks out there who may be following this blog (Or bump into it by pure chance) and who candidly provide lots of constructive feedback as a token of gratitude to help improve the overall content from this blog. So I decided enough with the meandering in and out, let’s cut to the chase, go straight to the point with what I would want to do, or say, because, after all, that’s what constructive feedback from folks you care about is all about: a continuous learning experience that helps you become better at what you do, i.e. that helps you become better at who you are!

So hello and welcome to the new @elsua! Feel free to drop by, say "Hi!" and leave a comment if you would want to improve that overall learning experience from yours truly. It will be very much appreciated… And a big thanks to both Jack & David for triggering something I should have done a while ago. Hopefully, it won’t be too late ;-)

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Spark – CBC Radio – Full Interview: Luis Suarez Explains How to Quit Email

After a couple of rather long blog posts I think it is now a good time to probably go for a short one, don’t you think? A little bit of a breather; actually, I thought I would go and share with you folks a follow up blog post from one I did earlier on this week and which I would think you would find quite interesting, specially if you have been following my little project of living "A World Without Email".

Earlier on this week, you would remember how for the weekly progress report for week #29 I mentioned that later in the week, yesterday, to be more precise, I would actually be spending a few minutes doing a Skype interview with the wonderful Nora Young from CBC radio show Spark, where I would be talking much more in detail about how to give up on corporate email for good and how I have been doing it for the last 18 months and counting…

And it looks like the interview is now available at the CBC Spark blog under the following title: "Full Interview: Luis Suarez explains how to quit email". You will be able to listen to the podcasting episode directly from that blog post or you could download the MP3 from here.

It lasts for a little less than 28 minutes and in it we had a great conversation throughout where I started giving some background on why I begun with this initiative over 18 months ago; the consequences and key learnings over time; the kind of responses I have been receiving all along; where I would go further from here, and, perhaps the much more interesting part, which is the one where I share a few tips that would help out everyone out there, who may be interested, how to perhaps not give up on email altogether in favour of social software tools, but certainly how to reduce quite a bit of that email clutter we have probably gotten too used to and, instead, make good use of social software tools to share our knowledge and collaborate with other knowledge workers.

I must say that being interviewed by Nora was actually plenty of good fun, because we eventually managed to talk about a good number of things I didn’t touch base in the various blog posts I have done so far, or the numerous conference events I attended last year or the ones I have been involved in this year so far. I was surprised about that, because I thought I had said most of the stuff around this topic of giving up on corporate email already, but it looks like Nora just asked the perfect set of questions to help me share a different set of insights on what it has been like living without email at work for over a year and a half now and still going strong…

So, I am going to keep this post on the shorter side of things, and leave it over here for now. And if you would be interested in listening to the interview I did with the delightful Nora (We surely had plenty of good laughs, too, on common misuses of corporate email! Hilarious some of them!), you can head over to the original blog post Dan Misener put together, or, alternatively, you could download the .MP3 file from here.

Hope you enjoy listening to it, just as much as I did participating in it. It surely was a blast and I would want to take this opportunity to give a special thanks to Tony Burns, who made the introduction with Dan possible in the first place and to Nora & Dan himself for having me in their show! Thanks ever so much, guys! It was fantastic and I thoroughly enjoyed it!

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Killing Email: How and Why I Ditched My Inbox by Zen Habits

Gran Canaria - Playa Las Canteras - Las Palmas de Gran CanariaAs you may well remember, on the on-going series of blog posts dealing with the weekly progress reports of living "A World Without Email" I usually get to share a link or two of some interesting related articles I happen to bump into rather often and which I think would help complement nicely each of those different reports.

Thus earlier on today, I had one of those articles I wanted to reference on the last entry I put together on this subject, but then I thought it was just too good not to dedicate it its own space as a separate article over here. When I first bumped into I knew I would eventually be linking to it, and up until now I didn’t have the chance. But today is a good time.

If you are into some amazingly crafted blogging with some of the most insightful articles you can think of out there on the Internet Blogosphere, combined with a natural talent to write stuff that matters and makes a difference with such a wonderful byline as "Simple Productivity", then you know I am talking about the stunning Zen Habits blog by Leo Babauta. Indeed, one of those blogs you need to subscribe to to get your daily dose of Zen.

Well, a couple of weeks back, Leo put together what I can describe as one of those essential readings for everyone out there who keeps struggling with taming the email beast. Yes, that’s right, under the title "Killing Email: How and Why I Ditched My Inbox" he gets to describe a common problem most of us can surely relate to (Well, in my case, lucky enough, after 18 months, not anymore! :-) ): how to keep up with email while keeping our sanity. Sometimes it’s more difficult than what people think, and other times, it just needs to happen…

And that’s exactly what Leo seems to have done: move away from email and start using other forms of interactions, mostly making use of social software tools. And by the looks of it I think things are going all right for him. That well crafted piece covers eventually the various steps he is attempting to go by in order to, slowly, but steadily, move away from email as his primary means of communicating, collaborating and sharing knowledge.

In that amazing article he gets to share some of the various tips he is now following to finally ditch email for good. And I thought about quoting them over here, so you could have a look into how he is doing it. But then I thought it would probably be much better if I just quickly quote the steps and then share a one liner, or two, on what I think about them myself, after having given up on corporate email over 18 months ago! And see where it would take us …

So without much further ado, here you have got the six steps that Leo shared over in that article shared a couple of weeks back:

  1. I’ve set up an autoresponder: I haven’t. I didn’t feel I would need to and so far I haven’t had a need for it either, indeed. Usually, I set up an Out Of Office autoresponder message to let folks where I am when I am away, but in that same OoO message I stress out very clearly how can people reach out to me way faster than email. Yes, using social software. Perhaps main reason why I haven’t set it up as well is because I still process my calendaring and scheduling events through email and I still get to engage 1:1 with folks on sensitive / confidential conversations. Only set of interactions that still go through email in my case. Some things you always need to keep them private.
  2. Twitter will be my main form of communication: It is mine, too! Well, actually not just Twitter, but micro-sharing / micro-blogging social software tools in general. I use several of them both internal and externally in order to quickly reach out to folks and share information / knowledge quickly. What I like is the variety of options I have: 140, 250 and 500 characters. So I can even write down slightly longer messages than usual and get them across to an individual or to my entire set of network(s).
  3. For longer conversations, there’s IM or Skype chats: I live on these! Instant Messaging is probably the main tool I use on a daily basis to escape email’s yoke successfully. I am way much faster sharing information across through a short exchange of quick messages on IM than an ever lasting mail threaded discussion. Oh, and if that set of messages tend to go on and on and on, I usually turn to VoIP or the phone and talk. Like I have been saying all along, I have always been considering myself a fast typist, yet, I talk much faster! So what initially may take me a couple of minutes to get across, with the phone or VoIP I can relay that same message in a matter of seconds … and move on …
  4. For collaboration, I’ll use Google Docs and/or wikis: I must confess I don’t really make heavy use of Google Docs; instead I use plenty of other collaborative, knowledge sharing and social software tools like wikis (As well!), blogs, Activities, file sharing tools, social bookmarks, online community spaces, etc. etc. And I still keep following that golden rule: If it is not confidential or sensitive in nature, outside the Inbox, please. Let’s bring the conversation out there with a chance for everyone to chime in and contribute. Not just me.
  5. Friends and family can call me: Indeed, I do this one, too! And quite heavily. This bullet ties in quite nicely with what I consider my private life and in this case it’s no longer about respecting my own, but also that one of others, so a phone call is always much more efficient in this matter, specially, when once again, I can talk faster than type. And when trying to keep up with family and friends there is always time to talk. Not to write. Make it (more) personal.
  6. A few types of emails will get through for now: In my case two different types of emails still get through that would require my attention and which I have already talked above briefly above. First the calendaring and scheduling notifications which I still need to process so that they go into my calendar (I still haven’t found a way around that one!) and, secondly, the 1:1 conversations with an individual on a subject that may be rather sensitive or confidential and where the dialogue needs to happen but only for our eyes to see. The rest? … All out!

From there onwards, Leo gets to share as well a very interesting FAQ section where he shares some additional insights on the reactions from his readers on this very same topic. Worth while reading through it, for sure. I must say that, out of all of the various questions the one I found the most interesting was this one: "I couldn’t do it — it’s required for my business". He gets to share a wonderful reply which I would want to point you folks to it as opposed to just reproduce it over here, but my first reaction to that question was… "What did you go in your business before email arrived?" Pretty much that, I am sure: business.

Well, the same would apply over here. Just like Leo mentioned, there are a whole bunch of fitter and more suitable collaborative and knowledge sharing tools to work better amongst groups (Teams & Communities), i.e. social software, and certainly one of the things we are realising over time is how restricted/-ing and limiting email has been all along, and still is, when we get more and more exposure to some of these social tools, which certainly encourage us to share our knowledge in a much more open, public and transparent manner. Something difficult to obtain through email alone, don’t you think?

So if we made that first switch a few decades ago with email (And survived!) and then we switched a second time with the introduction of Instant Messaging (And we also survived that one!), what’s stopping us from making a third switch in order to augment, even further, each and everyone of those former interactions we keep having by making heavy use of social software? Oh wait … Yes, I know… 

Ourselves.

(Remember the change starts within you)

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