Is Information Overload Making Us Nuts? It has for thousands of years.

Is Information Overload Making Us Nuts? It has for thousands of years.

People don't run out of dreams - people just run out of time.

Glenn Frey - The Eagles

In 1970, my hero, the brilliant futurist Alvin Toffler predicted that by the turn of the century, we would be in continual information overload. This has come to pass. Today, we consume 34 gigabytes of content or about 100,000 words of information per day. We encounter enough information to fill 174 newspapers. We tend to get overwhelmed but perhaps it is the quality of the information that is causing the stress. For example, the brain processes 400 Billion bits of information per second without causing any distress at all.

The rate of change in our new world has reached such epic proportions that active learners are becoming the leaders of our new world of work. We find active learners devour information. They have responded to the abundance of information with enthusiasm and they use this historic time as an opportunity to grow. But, they are also selective about the information they digest. This is a key difference. Additionally, they don't become overwhelmed with information, they simply prioritize where they spend their time.

Complaining about "too much information" is nothing new. That irritation seems to be embedded in human DNA for thousands of years.

“What is the point of having countless books and libraries whose titles the owner could scarcely read through in a whole lifetime?”

        Seneca – Roman Philosopher – 4 BC

“The growing “multitude of books which grows every day in a prodigious fashion” could prompt the kind of collapse that befell Seneca’s civilization, leading to -style barbarism.”

        Adrien Baillet – French Scholar – 1685 

"One of the effects of living with electric information is that we live habitually in a state of information overload. There's always more than you can cope with."

    Marshall McLuhan

The quality of our lives is directly related to the quality of the information we take in. It is a little like food. If we consume five pounds of fast food per day, there is a price to pay. If we eat healthy and wholesome food, the results will be quite different. In the information space, being selective is also vitally important to our health as well as the quality of our growth.

Recent statistics from Harvard Business Review indicate how vitally important the quality of information is:

  • Ringing phones and e-mail alerts lower IQs by 10 points
  • Knowledge workers average 20 hours a week managing e-mail
  • Information overload costs the U.S. economy $900 billion a year
  • 60% of computer users check e-mail in the bathroom
  • A typical knowledge worker turns to e-mail 50-100 times a day

Some of us embrace the notion that we are helpless. But, this is completely untrue. Information filtering is an emerging technology that will give us greater control over what we read and what we see. But, there is a great deal we can do before technology manages the quality of information for us.

Here are a few:

  • Limit watching the news for 30 minutes a day. This will lower the probability of having your head explode like a Fembot from Austin Powers.
  • Set up filters on social media to limit seeing issues that are of interest to you. Some of us want to keep track of Kim Kardashian's whereabouts and some do not.
  • If you work in a large organization, encourage everyone to stop sending cover-your-ass e-mails.
  • Set-up Favorites on your TV, YouTube, Google feeds.
  • Recognize that Artificial Intelligence is growing at such a rate that all of us will have the ability to curate the kind of information that helps us grow in ways that fit our aspirations and dreams. Keep track of this new resource. It will become life changing.
  • Turn off the cell phone for just two of your waking hours.
  • Do not sleep with your cell phone.
  • If a new connection on LinkedIn sends you a large spammy sales pitch, perhaps it would be better to disconnect.

In today's new world, establishing standards for information consumption, is critical to the quality of our growth. When I come across a new source of information, my most comming question is,

"Will this take me back to defending or explaining my past when I need all of my attention on the future?"

Brought to you by David Harder, President - Inspired Work, Inc.

(C) Copyright, Inspired Work, Inc. - 2018 (All rights reserved)

Schedule 15-Minutes to Discuss Your Workplace or Career with David (Here)

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Upcoming Event:

The Inspired Work Program (Los Angeles)

Saturday and Sunday, February 24 & 25

The Inspired Work Program - Los Angeles

Please note: Half of this event has been reserved by Ivy. Enroll early.

Come to the program and you will answer the questions in your life.

How can I make more money? 

Will I get swallowed or surf on the waves of change? 

Do I change jobs or change myself?

I've been thinking about starting a business. Where do I begin? 

How can I succeed with what I really want to do? 

What was I born to do? I'm the sole breadwinner, how can I change?

 From a time perspective, work is the biggest relationship that we have.

We invest much of our waking hours getting ready for work, getting to work, being at work and recovering from it.

As a result, the quality of our relationship towards work impacts the quality of every other relationship in our lives. 

The Inspired Work Program is far more than a “what am I going to do with my life?” program. 

It is a life-changing process that turns you into a skilled designer of your life.

Most of us were pushed to pursue survival and predictability in making career choices. Inspired Work’s curriculum is based on raising our standards. Common sense dictates that basing our work on happiness includes making a good living and having a good life. Hence, our approach is vigorous and is not finished until we’ve attained intellectual, emotional and spiritual satisfaction.

Results from The Inspired Work Program include:

  • A clear, compelling, actionable, personalized mission, vision, and purpose
  • A curriculum that supports positive change in the balance of your professional life
  • Access to a vital new support system and community
  • The ability to anticipate and initiate positive career change more quickly and m

In Los Angeles, The Program is delivered by David Harder, Founder & President of Inspired Work.

A few words from participants:

“David’s like a heat-seeking missile for finding and fostering a person’s destiny. I don’t know how does it, but he’s brilliant.”

  • Linda Sivertsen, Bestselling Author and Founder of bookmama.com 

“ His seminar and coaching helped me discover what I needed to do to break out of a rut and into something much more creative and fulfilling. My current success owes much to the techniques he taught me.”

  • Michael Browning, SVP, Bovitz, Inc.

“For most of us, there are only a few people that we can say have truly changed our lives. David is one of these people for me.”

  • Scott Lochridge, President, Dragonfly

“David simply delivers time and again.”

  • Dennis J. Pitocco, and CEO - Solopreneur

To enroll now, click here.

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