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Taming the Evil Work BlackBerry

Pop Quiz- It’s 8:39pm, and there are two fresh emails waiting on your work BlackBerry. What do you do? What do you do?!!

Overuse of your work BlackBerry at home is the seventh most frequently reported reason for marital strife.

Actually, I haven’t a shred of data to support this claim.
I just thought it would grab you to stick around for another few words.

But don’t be too quick to dismiss my claim.
If you use a work BlackBerry at home, you know I’m onto something.

In today’s techno-centric culture, we celebrate the fact that so much work can be done just about anywhere… not at work.
On the beach, on the commuter train, at a restaurant, and of course…at home.
With computer and mobile technologies, you are no longer chained to your offsite desk from 9-5.
Work is flexible. Work is mobile. You’re free! How liberating.

If you’ve been assigned a BlackBerry, your job has also oozed into every orifice of your home life. Work is now 24/7. And your work BlackBerry strapped to your belt buzzes away non-stop.

How are you supposed to deal with that? You’ve got other priorities on the home front that may not react well to your tapping away at the dinner table.
And you’ve got to sleep.

I’ve been using a work BlackBerry for the past seven years, and though I don’t quite call it my CrackBerry, I’ve got a few tips that might help you use this mighty evil to your advantage.

Read the Emails as They Come in
…But don’t go crazy. If you let the emails pile up, getting through them all will get progressively more difficult. And some will eventually get lost underneath the ever-growing stack.

Respond Quickly
If a quick response is sufficient, do it right after you read the email.
It’s very similar to what your mother taught you about desk clutter-
Touch a piece of paper once and do something with it. File it or trash it. Don’t keep picking it up and looking at it and putting it down. That just wastes more time.
The same idea applies to all the hundreds of your digital emails.

Plus, responding quickly keeps you in front of the conversation. And staying in front of the conversation keeps you in control of the dialogue, especially when there are multiple players talking. The power of the BlackBerry allows you to do just that.

Don’t Diss your Kin
If you’re talking or doing an activity with a family member, put the BlackBerry down. Unless, you’re waiting for an important email, it’s downright disrespectful to be tapping away during family time. If you absolutely must check your email at the dinner table, apologize first and then be quick about it.

Everybody Turns into a Pumpkin
Actively choose a time you normally stop responding to emails on weekday nights and weekends. And be consistent about it. Otherwise, people will expect you to always respond to them immediately whenever they reach out.
I tend to move to email silence after I get home from work around 7pm. Unless your job requires it, no one expects you to be in active email mode after dinnertime.

I may check my BlackBerry before turning in, but simple awareness of an email does not mean you’ve got to respond.
And last I checked, just viewing the subject line on your BlackBerry does not activate the big-brother ‘just-read’ alert trap the email may contain.

Similarly, in the morning, I check my BlackBerry around 7am, but I don’t typically respond to emails till I get in to work.
That said, I do take care of important emails that help me move my workflow forward, while I’m commuting in on the train.
The difference here is I’m using the time to get a jump on my own day, as opposed to helping out someone else’s day. There’s a difference. Pay yourself first.

During the weekend, you should be dark for the full 48 hours. I don’t wear my Blackberry on Saturday and Sunday, but I do check it in the morning and at night to stay on top of things.

Is Your Boss an Exception to the Rule?
In one word-
Are-You-Kidding-Me?
Of course!

I learned a long time ago that it doesn’t only matter that you do amazing work on the job. If your boss doesn’t know it, you’re not doing it.
It’s like that ‘tree falling in the forest’ line.

Being responsive to every email your boss sends creates a great foundation for your success. So one of the best ways to show how amazing you are as an employee is to simply reply quickly. And that means as soon as you see the email.
If you’re at home. If you’re out shopping. If you’re getting an ice cream.

Effective communication with your boss is always your job, and your dark BlackBerry is your shining sword in this ongoing quest we all must pursue.
Wield it at home often!

But remember, you don’t have to wear your BlackBerry into the shower in case your boss pings you.
Just don’t be so strict with my earlier pumpkin rule from above.

Don’t Send Huge Attachments
At home, you wouldn’t think twice about sending a big file with pictures or a home movie to a friend or family member. My home email can handle a little data strain now and then.

But work email is a different beast. The IT departments I’ve known over the years have been a little curmudgeonly with how large your email files can get, before you can’t send emails anymore. So you’ve got to pay attention to how full your email is, because I can pretty much predict when you’re going to go over your limit. It’s when you’re at home with only your BlackBerry, and you have to send an email or your world will end. That’s when.

And you can’t just fix the problem by deleting emails on your bulging BlackBerry. That doesn’t clear them off the work server. You’re still dead in the water.

So don’t ruin a work colleague’s night by emailing them a huge file.

Texting VS the BlackBerry
I find a lot of people I work with don’t have BlackBerries. Yes, they send me emails the old fashioned way via a computer, but I find they also like to text me on my personal iPhone. Especially with something that requires a quick and simple response. The irony here is texting is all about speed and immediacy. Nobody thinks twice about responding quickly to a text.
That is, until more work colleagues realize this little sea change and decide to hunt you down with the mighty text.

Lead the Rescue Mission
A lot of the above advice is defensive posturing.
Many of the same tactics can also be used for positive offensive action. If an emergency comes in over the BlackBerry, you can be the hero if you follow the above rules and simply take action quickly. Again, nobody expects you to respond to an email at 3am, unless you’re working with colleagues on the other side of our Mother Earth.

Use Common Sense
Much of this falls under the simple umbrella of setting appropriate limits with people who tend to make your job a little more challenging when they hunt you down outside the normal work day, further cementing the 24/7 work mindset.

So it’s all about setting appropriate limits.

And by the way, there’s no rulebook here. I’m not aware of official BlackBerry etiquette in company handbooks. (But come to think of it, that’s not a bad idea.)

I say it’s okay to set up your own boundaries for when you spend time on your BlackBerry. Just be smart about it. If you’re consistent, you will still appear more responsive than most who use this beastly and wonderful device.

Keeping these common sense suggestions in mind, the BlackBerry can be a force of good in your life, both at work and at home.

Wait, I gotta go. My belt is buzzing…

Living in the Amazon and Loving It

Another Amazon Prime box has arrived. It’s become a regular care package to keep the gears at home moving. Joy.

Have I mentioned how sweet I am with Amazon.com, and how I gladly pay them an extra $79/year to get free two-day shipping with their Amazon Prime Service?

Do you consider me impatient and extravagant?
Am I just lazy, when for thousands of years, men have hunted
(and gathered) in the wilderness, or what we now call the shopping mall?

Do you feel you can’t trust a distant and faceless company with the very personal act of delivering to you what you used to get for yourself?

I used to feel that way.
Then something happened.
I became a dad, and I lost all of my free time.

I am a very proud 21st century father of a little boy who just turned two.
(In fact, my son had his big party last Saturday.)

But I’ve got to admit that life has gotten a bit disorganized lately. I need a little help. So I like to use available hi tech tools.

Who’s Got Time for the Brick and Mortar Store?
I don’t know how parents multitasked before Y2K, but I regularly tap the power of online shopping.

In fact, I find buying our basic supplies online not a convenience but a necessity. Getting in the car to get to a store can take an hour or more.
A few clicks on Amazon, and I’m done in three minutes.

Yes, buying online took some getting used to.
It felt like I was cheating.
Not doing it the right way.
Worried it wouldn’t work.
But once I got started, I never looked back.

Life is Messy
Let’s take a look at a slice of my daily life in the jungle…
(and then we’ll discuss Amazon some more)

I used the last of the kitty litter. Looked at my watch. All the stores were already closed.
D’oh!

My wife reminded me we needed Bacitracin ointment for my son’s boo-boo under his chin. What I’m calling a boo-boo are actually three stitches he received at his first trip to the emergency room.
He tripped and fell at home last week, while I was standing guard.
D’OH!

Even though the doctor said there wouldn’t be a scar, I’m still feeling super guilty, as I was only a few feet away from the ‘incident.’
A couple days later, a colleague, who is a father with daughters tried to be helpful after hearing my story, and he suggested that scars give boys character.
(Anybody out there know the name of a good plastic surgeon?)

All this happened while my wife and I were in the middle of final preparations for our son’s birthday party.
(Yes, that shiner on his chin looked really great on his big day. The good news is all of the other toddlers at the party were jealous and commented that his stitches really gave him character.)

And had I put off getting his birthday present to the last minute? Of course.
D’OOHHHH!!

Amazon to the Rescue
It’s now 10:30pm – I need help.
Time to sit down and boot up. Hello Amazon Prime!

First step- Cat litter.
Amazon had about twenty options, though not all were offered on the Prime plan.
(You need to pay attention to this detail as not all products fall under the Prime plan.)
I chose Arm and Hammer and clicked through.

Next was boo-boo maintenance.
Typed in ‘eye patch’ for my kid. (just kidding)
Almost immediately, the Bacitracin ointment was on its way!

Finally, the birthday present.
It was a Kettler tricycle that my wife was talking about. Here it was on Amazon. Sweet.
(Amazon often has more competitive pricing, though not always.)

11:00pm – I’ve hunted. I’ve gathered. Mission accomplished.
Order has been restored.

King of the Forest…for Another Day
This particular shopping expedition was an expensive one, because of the Kettler bike. But often, I’m just picking up little things here and there.
The beauty of Amazon Prime is you don’t have to worry about meeting minimum order amounts to get the free shipping. And it’s wicked easy to return the occasional item.

So you can buy with as much haphazard organization as life requires.
You can see how the $79 Prime fee pays for itself really quickly.
And it even has its own fledgling video streaming service that competes with Netflix. That’s a nice bonus, but it’s not really why I’m so excited about Prime.

For the past two years, I’ve had a little bet going with myself that I’ll never have to run out of the house at the last minute to buy diapers.
For me, that mini emergency represents the ultimate level of disorganization I hope to never sink beneath. (Even I have some minimum standards to meet if I am to remain king of my little forest.)
With the help of Amazon, and other online shopping sites like diapers.com, I’ve been holding that line. So far…

Amazon Prime doesn’t work for everything.
(Sometimes you’ve got to get out there and squeeze the melons.)
But it comes pretty close.

Joe and the End of Your World

Will this cup of Joe greet your next sunrise or doom your computer to a gloppy death?

How important is all the content on your computer?
If you lost it tomorrow, how much would it hurt?

  • All your family photos
  • Your home movies
  • Music collection
  • Every word you’ve written over the past ten years

Gone.

That would be bad.

The Terminator is Real
Like it or not, we live in an age where much of your life is stored on a small metallic box on your desk. Whether it’s a laptop, desktop or all-in-one, an ever-increasing amount of what’s important to you lives there.

Unfortunately, it is inevitable that your digital life will be in crisis… sooner or later.
Eventually, all hard drives fail. Period.
You need to protect your content and back it up.

Fortunately there are a variety of strategies to do just that with external drives and Cloud storage.

You must fight against that unexpected doom you know is waiting out there.
Thankfully, you have a good chance to prevent your personal digital apocalypse.

And if the unthinkable were to happen, at least you could take some comfort in the belief that it was not your fault. Blame would lie elsewhere. Your conscience would be clear.

But how would you feel if you caused it all?
What if you were your own digital Terminator?
Last week I had a glimpse of that.

There is a quiet evil that often lurks quite close to your computer.
It’s name is-
Coffee

Every morning I happily sit down at my desk with my cup of Joe.
I’ve been doing this for as long as I can remember. And yes, we all know that spilling java on your computer is a catastrophe. Motherboards don’t react well to any fluid, let alone coffee. If the circuitry survives the moisture after the drying out stage, the dried gloppy residue would surely seal the deal.

So I’m careful. Very careful.
Still…

Judgement Day
Last Tuesday at 6:31am, the unthinkable happened.

My right hand moved too quickly to pick up a piece of paper and clipped my travel mug. It was a glancing blow, but it was enough.

The mug was recently filled with freshly brewed French roast mixed with a little hazelnut blend I like to throw in for some flavor zing.

And like a movie scene in slow motion, I watched my mug tip over, and its black digital death start to spread across my desk like a tidal wave.

Ahead of the creeping wake were my old laptop, my new iMac, and my backup external hard drives.

Time was short, and I had to act quickly.
At best, paper towels from the kitchen were fifteen seconds away, round trip.

As I sprinted, I heard myself muttering, “No, no, no, NO!”
I knew my rescue mission would not return in time.

But I had to try.

Sixteen seconds later, I layered my desk with a complete paper towel roll, soaking up the evil goo.
I plunged targeted crunched-up Bounty balls into the empty spaces in front of my sacred back up drives.
A gauntlet… a final line that I hoped would hold.

An Unlikely Ally
My desk was particularly cluttered that day with scattered note pads and folders, representing my ongoing reliance on my old analog ways.
All of the paper was now soaked and mutated brown.

I quickly removed the engorged paper towel strips to get a clear view on whether my brew had reached my precious hardware.

With just fractions of an inch to spare, remarkably, the coffee had been successfully repelled on all critical fronts.

But I wasn’t the hero.
Remember, my rescue mission had arrived too late.

What saved my digital life?
My analog life.

All that disorganized paper on my desk. The coffee spent too much time doing its destruction there. The delay allowed my rescue mission to arrive in time.

All that outdated paper. Mostly useless in today’s digital world.
Imagine how angry and bitter it must have been feeling.

And yet, it willingly gave up its existence for the greater digital good.
(Sniff. Sob.)

Anyway…
I’m just very lucky.

Wake up and Smell the Coffee
So moving forward, no more morning coffee at my desk anymore, right?
Are you crazy?!

What I did do is go to Amazon and buy a pear-shaped desk coffee mug with a much lower center of gravity that is designed not to tip over.

I still highly recommend it.

Do I still tempt fate? Maybe.
But like having a good digital back up plan…
at least now, I’ve got an upgraded no-spill strategy.

Our cat sits close by and purrs at me.
Eight more lives.

My computer should be so lucky…

Hope I never have to write about this ever again.