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You are here: Home / Archives for Matt Perman

Facebook Plans to Start Geotagging Your Activity

November 1, 2009 by Matt Perman

According to Fast Company, it looks like Facebook will soon link geo-location information to your actions on the site.

Filed Under: Web Strategy

Probably Not Too Many are in Danger of This

October 30, 2009 by Matt Perman

Apparently, too much sleep can make you tired.

Filed Under: g Renewal

Get Back in the Box

October 30, 2009 by Matt Perman

Chip and Dan Heath have a good article on how sometimes you don’t need to “think outside of the box.” Instead, you might just need a different box because constraints can free your team’s thinking.

Filed Under: Innovation

Drawing Results

October 30, 2009 by Matt Perman

Thanks to everyone who entered the drawing! I’ve drawn the winners and will be emailing them today.

Thanks again, and thanks for reading!

Filed Under: WBN News

The Essence of Time Management in One Paragraph

October 30, 2009 by Matt Perman

Stephen Covey pulls together the essence of time management into four sentences:

The essence of time management is to set priorities and then to organize and execute around them. Setting priorities requires us to think carefully and clearly about values, about ultimate concerns. These then have to be translated into long- and short- term goals and plans translated once more into schedules or time slots. Then, unless something more important — not something more urgent — comes along, we must discipline ourselves to do as we planned. (From Principle Centered Leadership, p 138.)

Filed Under: a Productivity Philosophy

Managing in a Downturn: Don't Overreact

October 30, 2009 by Matt Perman

Post 4 in the series: Managing in a Downturn.

We’ve seen that recessions are opportunities for those who refuse to obsess on the constraints of the external environment (post 2) and that one corollary of this is that you shouldn’t retreat (post 3).

Another corollary is that you shouldn’t overreact. Baveja, Ellis, and Rigby’s article continues:

Companies that fared poorly during the last recession exhibited a common response: they overreacted, then “stayed the course” even when rougher seas lay ahead.

The lesson? If your strategy isn’t showing results, reevaluate it. don’t expect it to start paying dividends just because the economy is recovering. Winning firms react to trouble early, scrapping ideas that aren’t working and turbocharging those that are. Firms that hunker down can miss opportunities and create even bigger problems down the road.

So don’t overreact, but if you do, make sure to course correct in a timely manner.

Perhaps the primary and most important example of over-reacting is excessive cost-cutting. That will be the subject of the next post.

Posts in This Series

  1. Managing in a Downturn: An Introduction
  2. Managing in a Downturn: The Good News
  3. Managing in a Downturn: Don’t Retreat
  4. Managing in a Downturn: Don’t Overreact
  5. Managing in a Downturn: Be Careful of Cost-Cutting Campaigns
  6. Managing in a Downturn: Keep Making Meaning
  7. Managing in a Downturn: It’s Time to Hire

Filed Under: c Strategy

9 Productivity Practices in one Paragraph

October 29, 2009 by Matt Perman

This is an excellent, dense summary of some key productivity practices from Stephen Covey’s Principle Centered Leadership. I count 9 practices here:

Highly effective people carry their agenda with them. Their schedule is their servant, not their master. They organize weekly, adapt daily. However, they are not capricious in changing their plan. They exercise discipline and concentration and do not submit to moods and circumstances. They schedule blocks of prime time for important planning, projects, and creative work. They work on less important and less demanding activities when their fatigue level is higher. They avoid handling paper [and email!] more than once and avoid touching paperwork [and email!] unless they plan on taking action on it.

Filed Under: a Productivity Philosophy

Managing in a Downturn: Don't Retreat

October 29, 2009 by Matt Perman

Post 3 in the series: Managing in a Downturn

We saw in the previous post that recessions are actually intense crucibles of opportunity. But you will be unable to capitalize on this opportunity unless you retain the faith that you will prevail despite the brutal facts (the Stockdale Paradox) and take ownership of your situation instead of focusing on the systemic problems.

A critical corollary of these realities is: Don’t retreat.

It can be tempting to think that recessions should be treated like hurricanes. You don’t go outdoors. You go indoors and retreat. Or, if it’s bad enough, leave town altogether.

But if you do this in a recession — if you treat it like a hurricane and hunker down — your strategy will backfire.

The Harvard Business Review article that I quoted previously goes on to say:

Many managers tolerate subpar results during a recession, believing that their firms will accelerate past competitors once the economy recovers. This rarely happens [emphasis added]. More than two-thirds of the companies that made major gains in our study period did so during a recession, not before or after [emphasis added again].

The authors give Dell as an example of a company that took intelligent action in light of the recession:

In 2001, Dell Computer grew unit sales by 11% even as industry sales declined 12%. Realizing that price elasticity sometimes increase during a recession, Dell used sensible price cuts to gain more than six points in U.S. market share and, in the toughest period of all — the fourth quarter of 2001 — to capture more than 90% of the profits in its industry.

Such opportunities always exist for strong companies, but the impact of exercising them is much higher during a recession, when many competitors are either distracted or hibernating.

In other words, one of the reasons that recessions present such an opportunity is precisely because most of your competitors are hunkering down or losing focus. Don’t fall into that trap, and you can advance. (Even if you are a non-profit, where your competition is not always another non-profit, but perhaps something less tangible — apathy, for example? — or time and attention and dollars spent on other things generally.)

Another reason you don’t want to hibernate in a recession is that “gains or losses made during a recession tend to endure.” As the article points out:

Of the firms that made major gains in revenue or profitability during the last recession, more than 70% sustained those gains through the next boom cycle. The corollary was also true: fewer than 30% of those that lost ground were able to regain their positions.

So if you advance during a recession, you are likely to hold that ground. But if you lose ground, you are unlikely to recover it.

In sum: Don’t retreat.

And here’s a post I wrote last January that says a bit more on thus: Recessions are Not for Hunkering Down.

Posts in This Series

  1. Managing in a Downturn: An Introduction
  2. Managing in a Downturn: The Good News
  3. Managing in a Downturn: Don’t Retreat
  4. Managing in a Downturn: Don’t Overreact
  5. Managing in a Downturn: Be Careful of Cost-Cutting Campaigns
  6. Managing in a Downturn: Keep Making Meaning
  7. Managing in a Downturn: It’s Time to Hire

Filed Under: 4 - Management

Beyond the Kindle

October 28, 2009 by Matt Perman

Fast company has a quick update on how color and video e-paper devices are just around the corner.

Filed Under: Technology

The Type of Culture that Encourages Entrepreneurial Activities

October 28, 2009 by Matt Perman

Tom Peters gives a good example from 3M of what a culture that encourages entrepreneurial activity looks like:

A good staring point as any is [3M’s] value system, in particular its “eleventh commandment.” It is: “Thou shalt not kill a new product idea.”

The company may slow it down. Or it may not commit a venture team. But it doesn’t shoot its pioneers.

As one 3M observer notes, the eleventh commandment is at odds with most activities in large corporations. Moreover, he adds, “If you want to stop a project aimed at developing a new product, the burden of proof is on the one who wants to stop the project, not the one who proposes the project. When you switch the burden from proving that the idea is good to the burden of proving that the idea is not good, you do an awful lot for changing the environment within the company with respect to the sponsorship of entrepreneurial people (In Search of Excellence, pp 227-228).

Filed Under: Innovation

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About

What’s Best Next exists to help you achieve greater impact with your time and energy — and in a gospel-centered way.

We help you do work that changes the world. We believe this is possible when you reflect the gospel in your work. So here you’ll find resources and training to help you lead, create, and get things done. To do work that matters, and do it better — for the glory of God and flourishing of society.

We call it gospel-driven productivity, and it’s the path to finding the deepest possible meaning in your work and the path to greatest effectiveness.

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About Matt Perman

Matt Perman started What’s Best Next in 2008 as a blog on God-centered productivity. It has now become an organization dedicated to helping you do work that matters.

Matt is the author of What’s Best Next: How the Gospel Transforms the Way You Get Things Done and a frequent speaker on leadership and productivity from a gospel-driven perspective. He has led the website teams at Desiring God and Made to Flourish, and is now director of career development at The King’s College NYC. He lives in Manhattan.

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Foundational Posts

3 Questions on Productivity
How to Get Your Email Inbox to Zero Every Day
Productivity is Really About Good Works
Management in Light of the Supremacy of God
The Resolutions of Jonathan Edwards in Categories
Business: A Sequel to the Parable of the Good Samaritan
How Do You Love Your Neighbor at Work?

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