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Telligenti

Serving up fresh ideas every day, Telligent style

Nicole Keith

July 2007 - Posts

  • What Dallas Lacks: Mainely Nature

     Growing up in Small Town Maine, I really enjoyed the solitude of visiting nature trails frequented only enough not to grow over. There are nature trails and parks in Dallas, but no guarantee of solitude; plus, man-made nature isn’t really nature. Spend a few moments with me as I reflect on moments in a rustic state …

     

    ·            The slow trickle of melting snow joining the larger stream

    ·            The smell of dry leaves and humid air under the forest canopy

    ·           The way a sapling can split a boulder

    ·           Watching river water detour in an eddy … there goes a beaver!

    ·           The wind carries news of distant burning leaves through the oak trees

    ·              I think that squirrel is mad at me

    ·              Hop-scotching over mud and puddles

    ·           Wolf tracks!

    ·             Inspecting tiny wild flowers for all-too-often overlooked wonders

    ·           Deer graze a family meal as the sky turns dusk

    ·           Chewing teaberry leaves found trailside

    ·             Hello, Mr. Butterfly

    ·            The frog pond stinks, but there are many tadpoles and dragonflies to catch

    ·           Get to the wild blackberries before the birds do!

    ·            Where’s a good skipping rock?

    ·           When I rejoin the neighborhood kids, rotten crab apple fight!

  • Rant: Reply to All

     

    It’s been a few since I last posted. I’ve been thinking about blogging about email a lot recently, though, and I’m quite sure I could write a lengthy—hence boring—breakdown of several specific aspects of email and the various ways it helps or erodes communication. But for now, we’ll settle for a shorter rant on “Reply to All.”

     

    There is great power in the “Reply to All” button. With a single mouse click and a few strokes of the keyboard, your voice can be heard by dozens of people in an instant. But beware: with the wrong use, this great power can work against you. You must consider your recipients, Young Jedi, before sending the message.

     

    If all your recipients don’t need to know what you are about to say, consider not replying to all. If a receiving party is too busy to read every reply or simply doesn’t care, the email is clutter and just another piece to sort.

     

    If your message could be taken negatively, don’t reply to all—or anyone, really. Any sentiment even perceived as being negative will only be amplified through text. (There is an abundance of non-verbal communication lost though test, but that is another rant.) A phone call would be a more effective way of potentially delivering a sensitive message.

     

    Related to “Reply to All” is adding recipients which I’ll go ahead and include now. Again--very useful in many situations, but also potentially irritating. Two scenarios are particularly irritating to me …

     

    First, the sender includes my boss(es). The proper use of this power would be to praise or criticize my work habits, but that’s actually a rare occurrence.  More often it seems to be a desire for attention or an attempt at adding urgency to the request. There’s no need for this: I respond to all (relevant) emails as promptly as possible. If I slack, you may include my boss :)

     

    The second scenario is adding recipients to CYA. I get it—you want people to see that you’re working … Okay, I don’t have any constructive criticism here; it’s just annoying. It has potential to fall into that first bucket of clutter.

     

    Now for a CYA of my own: These are all generalizations. Obviously, there is a time and a place for all this. But thanks for letting me vent :)

     

  • "I Don't Know"

     

    “I don’t know.” I say it fairly often during a work week. It doesn’t mean I’m not smart; it simply means I know what I don’t know and I’m not willing to substitute a guess or an assumption for an answer. This is a virtue that is true to Telligent in general; I value that there is no place for BS or salesy blabber at Telligent. It helps the company work more effectively as a team because saying ‘I don’t know’ makes everything else you say more credible.

     

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