Pitfalls to avoid as a Newbie – Managing Yourself: Grouping
Author: Steve Castle.
Previously I have written on budget (time and money) and also on organising your
email routine. I touched on basic tools needed and would like to share a little
on browsing. I see you sit up and take notice – this is not on how to surf the
net….;-) but rather how to organize your various programs and activities into
one ‘dashboard’ for lack of a better descriptor.
I found it incredibly
difficult to remember which programs and activities ‘go together’ – especially
if I have not been working with them for a week or so. It would take me a half
hour or so to fiddle around and eventually identify all of the bits and pieces
that I need to have open to do the job for that day. Once again - time wasted
and frustration levels raised.
I have found it very effective to use
tabbed browsers. What’s this? A tabbed browser allows you to have multiple
sessions open simultaneously and keeps them all in one place. In the first
instance, this makes my desktop a lot tidier as I do not have a whole ream of
Explorer icons filling up my power bar at the bottom of the screen.
Another real benefit of tabbed browsers (the main one in my opinion) is
the ability they give you to save your Internet sessions in groups. This is
really cool, because the next time you want to do something, you now only need
to start the browser, select the Group or Bookmark you created and voila – all
of your related sessions in one place. My two favourite tabbed browsers are
CrazyBrowser and Mozilla/FireFox.
I use them for grouping my Affiliate
programs logically, so I have set my browser groups by type of program – cool
when I need to check status etc. I also use the tabbed browser – CrazyBrowser –
to group the various traffic exchanges I surf in logical bunches – for instance
Group 1 I know is Monday, Group 2 Tuesday etc. One click and ten traffic
exchanges open and I can go ahead and surf for credits…. Smart!
I also
use tabbed browsers when testing new web pages – open up the sites I need and
then it is easy to hop from site to site as I make changes and need to verify
them.
A tool that is a MUST to have when you use the tabbed browsers (in
fact for any work that you do online) is RoboForm. This is a password and
location repository that will recognize a URL and then offer you a selection of
previously saved passwords to choose from. This is a definite win, especially
when you have to recall 40 or 50 different web addresses and related passwords.
One of the features is that if you do not recall the address of the
site, but have the password saved under a name you have given, all you do is
click on the name and RoboForm will take you to the site and log you on.
If I can leave you with one thought for today:
Rather than waste
time scrabbling around to recall site addresses or passwords, organize these
into a neat compartment that allows you to manage your time and routine tasks
more easily.
Steve Castle is a respected Internet Marketer who is
committed to ethically helping others to achieve their financial freedom.
mailto:steve@ask-a-southafrican.co.uk
http://www.ask-a-southafrican.co.uk/pips.html
http://www.xponentialsystems.co.uk
http://www.triseven.ws