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Link Roundup – Thursday April 9th, 2015

I read a lot.

I have a reading list of blogs and other websites in Feedly that I read throughout the day, every day.It includes everything from traditional news through to cartoons.

Often I find something that I want to share on this blog. I
quite often share links here to other articles, but I always try do it in the
context of providing my own commentary and thoughts on the content. What Iā€™m
getting at is that sharing links on here is not a quick, one-click process,
because I donā€™t want this blog to be merely a long list of links to other
peopleā€™s content. Iā€™m much too egotistical for that.

Anyway, the result of all this is that over time I build up
a handful of flagged articles that Iā€™ve been intending to share but never got
around to doing so.

This is the first of what may become a semi-regular feature,
where I spew those forth with (in the interests of time) only a sentence or two of comment instead of the full-blown article I was originally planning. Enjoy!

  • Three Communication
    Strategies for Building Strong Relationships from Far Away

    Working in a ROWE is great, but is not without its
    challenges. Communication is by no means impossible, but can certainly suffer
    when the face-to-face aspect it lost: particularly with a team thatā€™s become
    subconsciously reliant on bumping into people in the hallways. This article
    lays out some strategies for addressing that.
    Ā 
  • Why
    Resource Management is Better from a Dedicated PM

    Another post from the excellent Brad
    Egeland
    , this one talks about why a dedicated project manager is better
    than using somebody with another role (like a lead designer) to occasionally
    manage projects as the need arises.
    Ā 
  • Fluency
    with Excel and Word are Key to Getting a Higher-Paying Job

    I wanted to link to this article because it surprised me. Higher-paying
    compared to what? Isnā€™t fluency with office applications a prerequisite for getting any
    job? Maybe ā€œfluencyā€ is the key word here, and a basic understanding is a prerequisite
    and those with more advanced skills will find more opportunities to progress up
    the corporate ladder, but the article doesnā€™t really say that. This is the
    knowledge economy here, people! We donā€™t make things anymore, unless of course
    you count spreadsheets. Get on board!
    Ā 
  • How to Put an End
    to Workload Paralysis

    I absolutely suffer with this. As the author notes about herself, ā€œthere seems
    to be a tipping point for me when I go from being really busy to so-busy-Iā€™m-paralyzed-and-canā€™t-do-anything.ā€
    The four steps to fighting this paralysis are not rocket science, but of course
    nor should they be, and itā€™s well worth a read if, like me, youā€™re an
    occasional sufferer. At least you now know youā€™re not the only one.