Showing posts with label tips. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tips. Show all posts

Jun 8, 2013

Book Review: Little Book of Talent - 52 Tips for Improving Your Skills

I loved Daniel Coyle's previous book the Talent Code. That's the reason I wanted check another book from him, The Little Book of Talent - 52 Tips for Improving Your Skills.

Quite soon after I started to read this book, it became obvious that this book has the same contents as his previous one, just in much simpler form. For that reason, it is hard to review this one as a separate book. The ideas and information behind all the tips are good ones. Formatting these to the form of short tips although drops something out of the credibility of the content.

Formatting book in form of short tips about how to make things better, makes books easy and enjoyable. It hopefully then helps to get more people to read the message. Once in a while I do read books formatted like this, but I always miss the background information. Same happened this time, I would have liked to really get some more information about facts and stories behind each tip. I guess it just me, for many people this kind of formatting might be enough.

Content of the book is excellent. It tells about how people learn and gives good tips on learning. It is based on visits on, what Daniel Coyle call, talent hotbeds and actual scientific proof on nervous system studies. So there's a true basis where these tips are based, it just doesn't come out in a good form.

I recommend to read either this book, if you are bit lazy or the other one, if you want to know the backgrounds too. Daniel Coyle's message is worth of checking out.

Written by +Henri Hämäläinen

Dec 8, 2011

How to survive in big companies

My time with Nokia and Accenture is now over. I recently moved to a much smaller company called Contribyte. I've never been a career driven person as such, but I've still had the luxury to get in to some really interesting projects in my time with Nokia. What I mean, is that I've never made big plans about my career and I don't work to have career, but I actually work to enjoy work and have a decent income for my family. Still I've always got to better positions and bigger projects all the time. Based on what has worked for me, I wanted to share couple of thoughts and tips on how to survive in big companies.

First tip: You can't win all the fights

In big companies there's always bureacracy and processes, that you don't like or see the sense. Many of those will cause you some extra work and also are annoying. Don't waste your time trying to fix all of those. It's easier to agree with some of the processes which are not important for you and go with flow. Then on the other hand, fight the fights that are important for you. When you notice something that is really causing more harm than benefit, make noise about it. Try to understand for what purpose the process is there for the first place, and then try to invent better ways to fulfill the original need.

Second tip: Be consistent

In big companies, there are lots of busy people. Some of them are really busy, some of them are just busy being important. What's common for these people is that they don't truely listen. You can introduce important information or issue to them, but they ignore it, due to they are not really listening in the reception mode. They are just listening, because that's what people are supposed to do. So be consistent and even stubborn. Be sure that information or issue that is important in your opinion, gets truely understood by the ones, that need to understand it. If they then ignore the issue, that might be fine, but then at least they are aware and understand the issue.

And for some issues, you might want to raise noise with many channels. If you feel that issue is understood by those in responsible of it and still they don't act on it, you should raise the issue in other channels. One way is to go to their bosses, but that's a longer and harder way. Easier way is to use social channels of your company. Most of companies seem to have intra with blogs, discussion areas or some other social channels. Test your thinking there to see if others agree on the importance or not. If they do, then you have tools to raise it again or let others to do it.

If your issue or information don't make a change in the company, be a good loser. You are not in charge of the company, and you will not get all of your thoughts trough. Lift your head up and continue with next subjects.

Third tip: Learn the tools

This might be one of the most important things to loosen your stress at the office. Also this is the thing that is most complained at the office. The fact is, that some of the tools always suck. They just don't seem feasible for some tasks or are inconvienable to work with. The best thing you do, is to learn to use those. All the tools are easy to learn and those will actually have some features that make sense.

Learning to use company tools will make your days easier. It will also make you the person, who knows how to use tools and can help others on those. It's a win in the long run. So don't whine and fight against the tools, but just learn those.

Tip four: Be transparent

In big companies it's better to communicate to too many, than to too few. This will increase the email waste, but it will keep people happy. Those guys who complain that they are getting too much email, often love to get the email. They want to be aware and kept in loop. It's better to include even the guys who you know that might not be supporting your ideas quite early. That way they don't have the luxury at the end to start arguying that they wasn't aware of this. All the information will get to them at some point, so it's better to include them early than trying to hide information from them.
  
Tip five: Understanding is the key

This is not really related to big companies only, but it's more generic working guideline. Never work for items you don't understand. If you don't understand why you are doing something, seek for understanding as long as you do. That's the only way to get job properly done.

Be also willing to share understanding to all whom might ask and all you think would benefit from the information. This will help you to understand even more and it will make sure that they will share important information with you on the next time.

Tip six: Make friends

I have to say I hate networking on it's worse. Random people are gathering names and cards of random people. That's not real networking. What I mean is really making friends. Using few extra minutes with people will make a difference in the long run. Really listening and discussing with people will pay off. But you must be real. Everyone can detect a fake person, just networking with you, but you must really care about who the other is and what is her interests. That doesn't require lot's of time, but it requires you to care. Friends will help in big companies a lot, if you are planning to stay any longer.

Tip seven: Concentrate

In big companies you can get asked to do lots of work which are really not that important. Learn to detect what really makes a difference, which really are the tasks that needs to be done properly. Then the rest you can leave undone. I know, that in reality there are tasks you don't think are important, but you must for some political reason do. So learn to do those in ease, a bit lighter way than the really important tasks.

In big companies there are people who look like really busy all the time. They complain about the lack of time all the time. Quite often they just lack the skill to concentrate to the important. Hours won't increase in the day and long working hours are not really increasing productivity. Best thing is to really learn to concentrate on the essentials.

Tip eight: Learn to live with noise  

What ever companies do with their communication solutions, one thing won't change; there will be more and more information flying around available for every person to catch. There will always be multiple communication channels in use. Even some companies are thinking on solutions to the noise, the only real way is to learn to live with it. There will be always more information available and pushed for you than what you can handle. You need to learn to pick the right pieces of information from the huge flow of information. It's not easy, but tools and practices will help you there. Try different things out to find what is the most suitable for you.

Tip nine: Be yourself

This again it's not only for big companies, but it's still a valuable lesson. You can't change yourself due to work mates or processes. You need to learn your way to be yourself with your own priorities and working habits in your working environment. That's the only way to be truely happy at work. And you must be truely happy at work, because that's such a big part of your life.


Written by +Henri Hämäläinen

Mar 26, 2011

Tips for good password management for people with bad memory

I bet I'm not the only one who is strucling with passwords with all different services in the internet and work life. Then in addition I have always had a bit hard to remember details on many things, like names and dates et cetera. I've read and heard many different ways to handle passwords, but I wanted to give my tips, if you are equiped with similar memory that I am.

Password management is easy if you don't care about privacy. You can use same or similar passwords for all services. Or just change a number in your password everytime you have to. Those area really not that secure. In some point for sure, one of the services you have created account, will be hacked. I want to prepared so that everything I have ever been signed to can't be used when one of my passwords will leak.

So here's my tips:
  1. Combine important dates, people and places for your passwords
  2. Have separate password for email
  3. Use different levels of passwords for services
Tip 1 Combine important dates, people and places for your passwords: I use passwords as way to remember also other important things. As an example I could combine my car's license plate number with car model. So if car would be Skoda Octavia and license plate ABC-789, then I could have password SkOcABC789. It wouldn't be easy to hack, but it would be easy for me to remember. Here's an other example, if I would have been in Barcelona in 2006 with my friends John and Jack, password would be JoJa06Barc. You can actually make up these quite easily. Things I have used have been parts of social security numbers of my family, important dates like birthdays, trips, addresses and many more. I find this system quite useful

Tip 2 Have separate password for email: Email is your most important account because, that's the way to recover passwords. If someone would hack you email, it would be really easy to get almost all passwords you have in any services, just by searching from email your account confirmation mails and then with service say that you have forgotten your password. Then you will get new password to email and your account is hacked. This is why I see email account being the most important one and that password I never use in any other services. 

Tip 3 Use different levels of passwords for services: I see this as one of the best ways to make sure that I don't lose it all, when someone gets a password of mine from one of the not that well secured services. So I have basically 4 levels of passwords:
  • 1st level are the most important ones like emails and work passwords. Those I keep unique. So I have 3-5 unique passwords for this level. 
  • Level 2 is the services I use really often like some of the social media's. And I use that password for only the couple main services and nothing else.
  • Level 3 are the ones I do use randomly, but those are not in everyday use. 
  • Then level 4 are all the services you create account without knowing if I'm ever going to use those again, but those require password to be able to even try. 
I've seen this 4 level password management to work for me, but it would work with anything from 2-6 levels depending on your ways to group applications and services you use.

This system has worked really well for me. It makes me feel safe with tens, even hundreds of services I've used and tried. I've always liked to try all things there are available in the web, but still I care about my privacy. This works for me and if you got some tips to take with you, it would be nice. Password management is really hard, but it remains really important before other ways to identify users become popular.  

Written by +Henri Hämäläinen