Nation:
How I Work
by Bill Gates
Its pretty incredible to look back 30 years to when Microsoft was starting and realize how work has been transformed. Were finally getting close to what I call the digital workstyle.
If you look at this office, there isnt much paper in it. On my desk I have three screens, synchronized to form a single desktop. I can drag items from one screen to the next. Once you have that large display area, youll never go back, because it has a direct impact on productivity.
The screen on the left has my list of e-mails. On the center screen is usually the specific e-mail Im reading and responding to. And my browser is on the right-hand screen. This setup gives me the ability to glance and see what new has come in while Im working on something, and to bring up a link thats related to an e-mail and look at it while the e-mail is still in front of me.
At Microsoft, e-mail is the medium of choice, more than phone calls, documents, blogs, bulletin boards, or even meetings (voicemails and faxes are actually integrated into our e-mail in-boxes). I get about 100 e-mails a day.
We apply filtering to keep it to that levele-mail comes straight to me from anyone Ive ever corresponded with, anyone from Microsoft,Intel, HP, and all the other partner companies, and anyone I know. And I always see a write-up from my assistant of any other e-mail, from companies that arent on my permission list or individuals I dont know. That way I know what people are praising us for, what they are complaining about, and what they are asking.
Were at the point now where the challenge isnt how to communicate effectively with e-mail, its ensuring that you spend your time on the e-mail that matters most. I use tools like in-box rules and search folders to mark and group messages based on their content and importance.
Im not big on to-do lists. Instead, I use e-mail and desktop folders and my online calendar. So when I walk up to my desk, I can focus on the e-mails Ive flagged and check the folders that are monitoring particular projects and particular blogs.
Outlook also has a little notification box that comes up in the lower right whenever a new e-mail comes in. We call it the toast. Im very disciplined about ignoring that unless I see that its a high-priority topic.
Staying focused is one issue; thats the problem of information overload. The other problem is information underload. Being flooded with information doesnt mean we have the right information or that were in touch with the right people. I deal with this by using SharePoint, a tool that creates websites for collaboration on specific projects. These sites contain plans, schedules, discussion boards, and other information, and they can be created by just about anyone in the company with a couple of clicks.
Right now, Im getting ready for Think Week. In May, Ill go off for a week and read 100 or more papers from Microsoft employees that examine issues related to the company and the future of technology.
Ive been doing this for over 12 years. It used to be an all-paper process in which I was the only one doing the reading and commenting. Today the whole process is digital and open to the entire company. Im now far more efficient in picking the right papers to read, and I can add electronic comments that everyone sees in real time.
Microsoft has more than 50,000 people, so when Im thinking, Hey, whats the future of the online payment system? or Whats a great way to keep track of your memories of your kid? or any neat new thing, I write it down. Then people can see it and say, No, youre wrong or Did you know about this work being done at such-and-such a place?
SharePoint puts me in touch with lots of people deep in the organization. Its like having a super-website that lets many people edit and discussfar more than the standard practice of sending e-mails with enclosures. And it notifies you if anything comes up in an area youre interested in.
Another digital tool that has had a big effect on my productivity is desktop search. It has transformed the way I access information on my PC, on servers, and on the Internet. With larger hard drives and increasing bandwidth, I now have gigabytes of information on my PC and servers in the form of e-mails, documents, media files, contact databases, and so on.
Instead of having to navigate through folders to find that one document where I think a piece of information might be, I simply type search terms into a toolbar, and all the e-mails and documents that contain that information are at my fingertips. The same goes for phone numbers and e-mail addresses.
Paper is no longer a big part of my day. I get 90% of my news online, and when I go to a meeting and want to jot things down, I bring my Tablet PC. Its fully synchronized with my office machine so I have all the files I need. It also has a note-taking piece of software called OneNote, so all my notes are in digital form.
The one low-tech piece of equipment still in my office is my whiteboard. I always have nice color pens, and its great for brainstorming when Im with other people, and even sometimes by myself. The whiteboards in some Microsoft offices have the ability to capture an image and send it up to the computer, almost like a huge Tablet PC. I dont have that right now, but probably Ill get a digital whiteboard in the next year. Today, if theres something up there thats brilliant, I just get out my pen and my Tablet PC and recreate it.
Days are often filled with meetings. Its a nice luxury to get some time to go write up my thoughts or follow up on meetings during the day. But sometimes that doesnt happen. So then its great after the kids go to bed to be able to just sit at home and go through whatever e-mail I didnt get to. If the entire week is very busy, its the weekend when Ill send the long, thoughtful pieces of e-mail. When people come in Monday morning, theyll see that Ive been quite busytheyll have a lot of e-mail.
On Bills Desk Now
Hardware
Dell desktop and Motion Tablet PC, both running Microsoft Windows XP
NEC 21-inch monitors (a souped-up videocard lets three serve as a singledesktop)
Microsoft wireless mouse
Logitech camera (for videoconferencing)
Software (all by Microsoft)
Outlook (e-mail, calendaring)
SharePoint (collaboration)
OneNote (note taking)
Communicator (instant messaging, PC-to-phone integration, and more)
Paper : None.
How I Work
by Bill Gates
Its pretty incredible to look back 30 years to when Microsoft was starting and realize how work has been transformed. Were finally getting close to what I call the digital workstyle.
If you look at this office, there isnt much paper in it. On my desk I have three screens, synchronized to form a single desktop. I can drag items from one screen to the next. Once you have that large display area, youll never go back, because it has a direct impact on productivity.
The screen on the left has my list of e-mails. On the center screen is usually the specific e-mail Im reading and responding to. And my browser is on the right-hand screen. This setup gives me the ability to glance and see what new has come in while Im working on something, and to bring up a link thats related to an e-mail and look at it while the e-mail is still in front of me.
At Microsoft, e-mail is the medium of choice, more than phone calls, documents, blogs, bulletin boards, or even meetings (voicemails and faxes are actually integrated into our e-mail in-boxes). I get about 100 e-mails a day.
We apply filtering to keep it to that levele-mail comes straight to me from anyone Ive ever corresponded with, anyone from Microsoft,Intel, HP, and all the other partner companies, and anyone I know. And I always see a write-up from my assistant of any other e-mail, from companies that arent on my permission list or individuals I dont know. That way I know what people are praising us for, what they are complaining about, and what they are asking.
Were at the point now where the challenge isnt how to communicate effectively with e-mail, its ensuring that you spend your time on the e-mail that matters most. I use tools like in-box rules and search folders to mark and group messages based on their content and importance.
Im not big on to-do lists. Instead, I use e-mail and desktop folders and my online calendar. So when I walk up to my desk, I can focus on the e-mails Ive flagged and check the folders that are monitoring particular projects and particular blogs.
Outlook also has a little notification box that comes up in the lower right whenever a new e-mail comes in. We call it the toast. Im very disciplined about ignoring that unless I see that its a high-priority topic.
Staying focused is one issue; thats the problem of information overload. The other problem is information underload. Being flooded with information doesnt mean we have the right information or that were in touch with the right people. I deal with this by using SharePoint, a tool that creates websites for collaboration on specific projects. These sites contain plans, schedules, discussion boards, and other information, and they can be created by just about anyone in the company with a couple of clicks.
Right now, Im getting ready for Think Week. In May, Ill go off for a week and read 100 or more papers from Microsoft employees that examine issues related to the company and the future of technology.
Ive been doing this for over 12 years. It used to be an all-paper process in which I was the only one doing the reading and commenting. Today the whole process is digital and open to the entire company. Im now far more efficient in picking the right papers to read, and I can add electronic comments that everyone sees in real time.
Microsoft has more than 50,000 people, so when Im thinking, Hey, whats the future of the online payment system? or Whats a great way to keep track of your memories of your kid? or any neat new thing, I write it down. Then people can see it and say, No, youre wrong or Did you know about this work being done at such-and-such a place?
SharePoint puts me in touch with lots of people deep in the organization. Its like having a super-website that lets many people edit and discussfar more than the standard practice of sending e-mails with enclosures. And it notifies you if anything comes up in an area youre interested in.
Another digital tool that has had a big effect on my productivity is desktop search. It has transformed the way I access information on my PC, on servers, and on the Internet. With larger hard drives and increasing bandwidth, I now have gigabytes of information on my PC and servers in the form of e-mails, documents, media files, contact databases, and so on.
Instead of having to navigate through folders to find that one document where I think a piece of information might be, I simply type search terms into a toolbar, and all the e-mails and documents that contain that information are at my fingertips. The same goes for phone numbers and e-mail addresses.
Paper is no longer a big part of my day. I get 90% of my news online, and when I go to a meeting and want to jot things down, I bring my Tablet PC. Its fully synchronized with my office machine so I have all the files I need. It also has a note-taking piece of software called OneNote, so all my notes are in digital form.
The one low-tech piece of equipment still in my office is my whiteboard. I always have nice color pens, and its great for brainstorming when Im with other people, and even sometimes by myself. The whiteboards in some Microsoft offices have the ability to capture an image and send it up to the computer, almost like a huge Tablet PC. I dont have that right now, but probably Ill get a digital whiteboard in the next year. Today, if theres something up there thats brilliant, I just get out my pen and my Tablet PC and recreate it.
Days are often filled with meetings. Its a nice luxury to get some time to go write up my thoughts or follow up on meetings during the day. But sometimes that doesnt happen. So then its great after the kids go to bed to be able to just sit at home and go through whatever e-mail I didnt get to. If the entire week is very busy, its the weekend when Ill send the long, thoughtful pieces of e-mail. When people come in Monday morning, theyll see that Ive been quite busytheyll have a lot of e-mail.
On Bills Desk Now
Hardware
Dell desktop and Motion Tablet PC, both running Microsoft Windows XP
NEC 21-inch monitors (a souped-up videocard lets three serve as a singledesktop)
Microsoft wireless mouse
Logitech camera (for videoconferencing)
Software (all by Microsoft)
Outlook (e-mail, calendaring)
SharePoint (collaboration)
OneNote (note taking)
Communicator (instant messaging, PC-to-phone integration, and more)
Paper : None.
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