Archive › March, 2010
How To Stop Procrastination and Analysis Paralysis (Part2)

How To Stop Procrastination and Analysis Paralysis (Part2)

In the Part 1, we looked at what usually causes a person to procrastinate and mentioned what Analysis Paralysis is. In the Part 2, we are going to look at the possible practical solutions to stop procrastination and Analysis Paralysis (Information Overload).

Solutions:

B) It is true that some feeling of anxiety can be linked to a particular task, action, or situation. However, there is a way to overcome that if you truly want to reach the end result you desire.

Would you agree that it is much harder to run a 20-mile marathon, than 500 feet (to get bread at Trader Jones)?

YES! Of course it is HARDER… BUT (more…)

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How To Stop Procrastination And Analysis Paralysis (Part 1)

How To Stop Procrastination And Analysis Paralysis (Part 1)

Did you ever wonder what causes a person to procrastinate?

Did you ever ask yourself, “Why do I procrastinate?”

In a second, you will learn practical tips on ‘how to not procrastinate’, but first let’s find out what actually causes a person to procrastinate…

A) You might be over analyzing the situation or the reasons for doing whatever you need to do.  This is known as Analysis Paralysis.  In Internet Marketing arena, this can be cause by having too much information (Information Overload) and not enough scalable action.

Instead of learning one strategy and applying it to their business or just simply implementing it, some people (more…)

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Web 3.0 and Event Webs: Constructs, Connections, Causalities

I attended a seminar at the University of California, Irvine, titled: “Event Webs: Constructs, Connections, Causalities” It is not closely related to Internet Marketing, but I thought it would be interesting content. You can listen to it below…

Speakers:

Introduction, Ramesh Jain, Professor in Information Computer Sciences, Bren School of Information and Computer Sciences, University of California, Irvine.

“The Visual Perception of Objects and Events” Donald Hoffman, Professor of Cognitive Sciences, UC Irvine and author of “Visual Intelligence: How We Create What We See” and coauthor of “Observer Mechanic: A Formal Theory Of Perception.” He received the Troland Research Prize of the US National Academy of Sciences and the Early Career Award of the American Psychological Association.

“Monitoring the Remembering of the Religious Past” Jack Miles, Distinguished Professor of  (more…)

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