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July 03, 2008
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<p>Multitasking Is Not A Dirty Word!<br>By <a href="http://ezinearticles.com/?expert=Greg_Deal">Greg Deal</a></p>


<p>A newspaper reporter has a human-interest story to do on a football player whose team’s field is 45 minutes away from the office. The reporter takes a camera, a notepad and a tape recorder and drives to the field. The reporter returns two hours later with an amazing feature story and picture for the next day's paper. Job well done, right? Not exactly.</p>

<p>Today’s young workers think in terms of one day, one task. Granted, the newspaper business is much different from other businesses, but it helps to illustrate a point: The reporter could have gotten the same story, but spent an extra 10 minutes talking to the coaches and asking if there are other players who have interesting stories worth telling. That reporter could have gotten the phone numbers of those players and taken action photos of them at practice and put them on file so she wouldn’t have to drive 45 minutes the next time a human-interest story is assigned. On your way back to the office, you stop by the local soccer field and take a couple of pictures of teams playing and publish them in the paper. Welcome to multitasking! It required just a little more time and a little more forethought, and the result is more news for the paper and less expenditure waste. Granted, most daily newspapers have staff photographers these days, but I hope you still get the point.</p>

<p>For any given reason, young workers don’t think this way—even if you explain the process. Young workers think multitasking is being able to put on makeup while eating and doing work.</p>

<p>Recent research conducted at several colleges, and authors, though, suggest that multitasking can be counterproductive. A working mother of two probably multitasks more than any average employee. Have a young worker tell a super-multitasking soccer mom that he or she has problems handling more than one task at a time.
We don’t want people who drive big-rig trucks while multitasking. That’s obvious. Nevertheless, it’s illogical and irresponsible to suggest the average worker in an office setting is incapable of balancing more than one task at a time.</p>

<p>Imagine a world without multitaskers. A certified pharmacy technician, for instance, has to handle multiple orders at the counter, take new prescriptions by phone, and attend to customers at the drive-thru window. Was there multitasking? Are you prepared to wait in line for 24 hours to get your prescription filled?
Tell it to an emergency room doctor working on a busy Friday night when there is a stabbing victim in one room, two car wreck victims in two other rooms, and a kid who broke his arm in a football game screaming in the triage. No multitasking?
Tell that to a person working at a fast-food restaurant or a waitress at a busy cafe. No multitasking? If the work world involved no multitasking, there would be a lot more angry customers.</p>

<p>While young workers need to realize that multitasking is possible and is not a dirty word, employers must do their part to provide proper guidance for multitasking. The boss needs to set an attainable multitasking goal and make sure efficient work is taking place. Moreover, it’s a good idea for employers to regularly talk to employees about their workload and analyze how it’s being handled.</p>

<p>Young workers often complain that they do all the work while their bosses sit behind a desk and act like an orchestra conductor in delegating tasks. Young workers need to realize the boss was once in their place and obviously learned how to properly do the job, which is why that person was promoted to the position.</p>

<p>Young workers don’t seem to have a problem multitasking in their private lives. In fact, they seem to prefer it. But when it comes to work, they cry foul. Schools at all levels can better prepare students for the workforce by engaging them in activities to teach them how to handle multiple tasks with freezing up. But these activities need to be positive ones. Kids don’t need to learn how to do homework while e-mailing, instant messaging, playing a video game, and updating a social networking blog.</p>

<p>ADHD (Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder) experts certainly won’t like the idea of teaching kids how to multitask. They’ll say kids already are fed up without having to add more things to their slate. But it’s not about adding more things; it’s about prioritizing what you have on your slate and chipping away a bit at each item.</p>

<p>Some research has shown that those who handle multitasking best are people who play video games. Educators have frowned upon TV learning and video games, maybe looking at learning that incorporates video gaming is a possibility. This is an example of using technology as a tool in education instead of a replacement for learning. Video games make the user think several steps ahead and press multiple buttons simultaneously. This teaching tool is used in moderation, of course, because it can be addictive. Why not harness youth’s natural drive to play these games by offering in-class exercises? But you can’t stop there. It must be defined to the kids or young adults that the purpose is to teach handling multiple tasks. We don’t want to fail the kids again by making it their primary mode of learning. Lessons should follow based on the results, including accuracy assessments and overall scores. Students can discuss methods they use to handle the multiple tasks associated with the games and the ways to learn navigate the game.</p>

<p>Multitasking is only a dirty word if you don’t know how to do it.</p>


<p>Greg Deal has been in the newspaper business for 11 years, working as a sports writer in Hendersonville, N.C., and sports writer and editor in Greenwood, S.C., for five years before assuming roles as assistant managing editor and managing editor of the daily paper there.</p>

<p>Deal has moved on in his writing journey to become a full-time author and children's news Web site developer. He received an Associate of Arts degree from Central Piedmont Community College in Charlotte and later a Bachelor of Arts degree in mass communications from the University of North Carolina at Asheville. He has a wife, Shea, and two children, ages 13 and 2.</p>

<p>Deal has covered everything from the Carolina Panthers to college and high school sports to major hard news stories. He's written commentary about the 2003 shooting deaths of two Abbeville, S.C., lawmen during a 13-hour standoff over a road-widening dispute that was called by the State Law Enforcement Division chief the "fiercest gunbattle" in state law enforcement history.</p>

<p>READ MORE AT THE WEB SITE <a target="_new" href="http://www.kidsinspotlight.com">www.kidsinspotlight.com</a>.</p>

<p>You can also participate in forums there and offer your feedback on workplace relations.</p>

<p>Article Source: <a href="http://ezinearticles.com/?expert=Greg_Deal" target="_new">http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Greg_Deal</a><br><a href="http://ezinearticles.com/?Multitasking-Is-Not-A-Dirty-Word!&id=412801" target="_new">http://EzineArticles.com/?Multitasking-Is-Not-A-Dirty-Word!&id=412801</a></p></html>
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March 22, 2008
Specialty Or Niche Directory Submission Specialty Or Niche Directory Submission by David G. Hallstrom, Sr.

You are an attorney or other service or product provider. You have built an excellent web site, it looks good, it is well optimized and it tells your clients and prospective clients or customers everything they need to know in order to do business with you or purchase your product. You have submitted your site to the major and many minor search engines. Now all you need to do is sit back and wait for clients or customers to come flowing in, right? Wrong.


As the number of websites grow on the internet, it is getting more and more difficult for web sites, even excellent web sites, to obtain good rankings in the search engines. Nowdays it appears that in order to obtain good search engine rankings (somewhere on the first page for your catagory) you must have your meta tags, format and text just right, and then you have to get tons of other web sites to link to you. Even if you do everything right there are still numerous other businesses out there also doing everything right. Therefore, you still might not obtain good rankings. Even if you do obtain good rankings today, the search engines might change there way of ranking sites next week, and your site might well drop or even dissapear from the rankings.


Additionally, it is estimated that nearly 200 million adults use the internet as a source to search for products, services or information,
and this number is likely to grow each year. As the number of websites grow on the internet, it is getting
increasingly difficult for web surfers to find the product or service that they need. As a result, web surfers are turning to online specialty or niche
directories, such as the legal and service directories from Resources For Attorneys.com or the Lifestyle Directories from Resources For Attorneys, to sift through the numerous websites and locate the product, service or information that they need.


Specialty and niche directories normally charge a small fee, $3.00 to $100.00 per year, for your listing. They are usually much smaller and have far fewer listings than the regular search engines. This makes it easier for you to obtain a good listing and it makes it easier for consumers that are actually looking for your service, product or information to find you. Additionally, there is a collateral benefit to listing your site in a directory. Most search engines count directory links as good links and this can sometimes increase your link ranking with those search engines, thereby improving your search engine listings.


Although there is a cost in subitting to these directories the total cost of submitting to several specialty and niche directories is much less than the cost of yellow page, radio or television advertising and the benefits can be as good or sometimes far better.


Finally, many of these directories allow you to submit articles, press releases, news storys and testimonials about your services. This can increase your presence and allow your customers to learn more about you, your service or product.

David G. Hallstrom, Sr. is a retired private investigator and currently publishes several internet directories including http://www.resourcesforattorneys.com a legal and lifestyle resources directory for attorneys, lawyers and the internet public.

Article Directory: Article Dashboard

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