Wednesday, January 07, 2009

Obstructive Perfectionism

One of my challenges, lately, with accomplishing decent-sized tasks has been perfectionism coupled with inadequate follow through. By that I mean, I'm
  • smart enough to run far with the idea (or realize it's "breadth" potential)
  • rather overly detail-oriented (giving it "depth" potential)
  • not focusing well enough, or making enough time, when sitting down to do something about it
Historically, I've looked at outlining tools to help with the first two. For the last one, I've looked at task tracking and prioritization tools. Natara's Bonsai, FreeMind, flavors of GTD, and varieties of TiddlyWiki have all been attempted, with varying degrees of success.

I think I need to schedule more of my own work time, instead of letting other meeting invitations fill up my day, and improve my focus, or eliminate distractions, during that scheduled time. Why is this so hard? I have several friends who are much better about both. Why can't I imitate them more effectively?

Saturday, January 03, 2009

Resuscitating Personal Weblog

I'm going to give a "general musings" blog another shot and am resuscitating "1/4 Empty." As you can see, it has been 2.75 years since I tried this. At the time, I managed a grand total of two posts within one week, and that was it.

Why try again? Life-wise, 2008 was a very good year for restoring some semblance of work-life balance:
  • Not as much overtime since springtime
  • Spent more time with Kathleen
  • Got back to exercising via starting to row with Kathleen
  • Enjoyed being outside and on the water via rowing and kayaking
  • Rekindled interest in birding, hydrology, and limnology
What didn't get done?
  • No further work on our landscaping. Although Kathleen did uproot a bunch of bushes that had become overgrown.
  • No real improvement in a self-organization system. Several attempts that produced some fruit, but weren't sustained.
  • In spite of several week-long "staycations," very little career-related self-study investigations got off the ground
And, career wise, the Wells Fargo acquisition of my employer, Wachovia, is both presenting and forcing a re-assessment of my current trajectory within information technology, really software development. First Union, then Wachovia, have been fine places to do IT - each has had it's own strengths and weaknesses. Business practices had rather greater degrees of strength and weakness. A friend and coworker has posted rather stronger opinions. Early indications are that Wells may be a "better" spot for the software segments of IT.

So, as 2009 begins, what to focus on?
  1. non-development aspects of application management? monitoring, SLA's, etc
  2. funding models for teams?
  3. people management?
  4. further blah-blah-blah regarding SOA (besides just doing it)?
  5. architecture?