ShareThis

General

I promised on the first anniversary of KirkMahoney.com that I would look at ways to make this website more useful to you.

One way is to make it easier for you to share what I write with friends and family.

ShareThis is a technology that supports this.

Until today, I did not have a ShareThis link on most pages. Now, you will find a ShareThis link near the bottom of each blog post, even if you look at it after it originally appears.

As explained at the ShareThis website, ShareThis makes sharing hassle-free through social-networking sites such as these:

  • del.icio.us;
  • Digg;
  • Facebook;
  • Furl;
  • MySpace.

Even more instantaneously, ShareThis lets you send notifications about what you are reading to friends and family via:

  • AIM;
  • Email;
  • SMS.

I hope that you find this change helpful. If you have other ideas for how to improve KirkMahoney.com, please let me know through my contact form!

What a year it has been!

General

KirkMahoney.com launched one year ago today, and what a year it has been!

A Wonderful Opportunity

This website has given me a wonderful opportunity to talk about better communication, a personal passion that has made it easy to write 366 blog posts over the past year. (Yes, we had a February 29 in the past twelve months!)

Readers Around the World

Visitor statistics tell me that I get readers from all over the world.

For example, a KirkMahoney.com reader in August referred others on a page in the LiveJournal Russian-to-English translation forum — in Russian! — to my blog post about “Classic” vs. “Classical”.

A huge spike in readership recently came from Brazil, so I have to say “Olá!” to all of the brilliant Brazilians whom I have met on LiveMocha.com.

“Hello!”, too, to my LiveMocha.com friends from South Korea to Dubai. Now that I am “back on my feet” a month after Hurricane Ike hit Houston, I will be back at LiveMocha.com, exchanging more help with fellow language enthusiasts!

Feedback, Please!

I believe that, when compared with a blog-comments approach, a forum provides a better way for readers to discuss issues raised by a website’s topics, so I plan to add a forum here, too, and to review it regularly.

You already might have seen a pop-up window that invites you to an optional survey that appears when you arrive here.

I plan to continue that general survey, but I also will look at creating specific surveys on particular topics.

Together, this will give you four ways to give me feedback:

  1. the contact form;
  2. the pop-up survey;
  3. the forum;
  4. specific surveys.

Serving You Better

I welcome your feedback because I want to do everything that I can to better meet your desires for this website.

Toward that end, I plan to:

  • review all sidebar content and eliminate what isn’t being used;
  • refine within-website advertising to focus better on your interests;
  • write more articles, for in-depth discussions that go beyond my blog posts;
  • promote the relatively hidden gems here at KirkMahoney.com;
  • highlight the most popular blog posts;
  • make it easier for you to share blog posts with others;
  • connect better to fellow bloggers.

For example, if feedback from another blogger triggers a new article or blog post at KirkMahoney.com, then I will acknowledge that blogger with a link to his or her blog.

Thank You!

Even if you have never contacted me, your visits mean a lot to me. So thank you for your explicit or implicit support over these first twelve months. May the next twelve be even more valuable for all of us!

How to keep working in a worsening economy, cont.

General

I started yesterday a list of ten tips to improve your communication skills so that you can stand out — in a good way — from the crowd and thereby keep working in a worsening economy.

I wrote five tips yesterday, and here are the remaining five tips.

Tip 6. Put it in writing.

Bosses, fellow employees, and customers have less time to meet with you as the economy worsens and they feel increasing pressure to focus on the essentials.

Do them a favor by putting any of the following in email messages:

  • action items;
  • confirmations;
  • deliveries of documents;
  • information;
  • questions;
  • requests.

You can even start your email subject line with “Action:”, “Confirmation:”, “Delivery:”, “Info:”, “Question:”, or “Request:”, so that your message recipient will know right away why you are writing to him or her.

By following this tip, you will:

  • learn to become succinct in your communications;
  • let others respond on their schedules; and,
  • develop a reputation for being thoughtful about others’ time.

Tip 7. Write more often.

This tip both supports tip #6 and is an outgrowth of tip #6.

This tip is really simple: By writing — and rewriting — what you want to say, and by doing this daily, you will improve your ability to organize your thoughts.

In contrast, most meetings, whether by telephone or in person, do not encourage organization of thoughts.

The regular habit of writing will force you to become better at organizing your thoughts, which is essential for better communication.

Tip 8. Write more succinctly.

This is another tip that both supports tip #6 and is an outgrowth of tip #6. This tip also supports tip #7.

To automatically write more succinctly, use lists. (Did you notice that these tips are in a list?!)

If you are not accustomed to writing lists, then learn about mind mapping at Wikipedia, start using mind mapping, and convert your mind maps into lists.

People generally love lists because lists show that you thought about what you wrote and because they facilitate skimming.

Tip 9. Grow your vocabulary.

I saw a television infomercial the other day that claimed that the average size of a U.S. high-school student’s vocabulary dropped from 25,000 words in 1950 to only 10,000 words in 2000.

High-school students probably are not the only ones with weaker vocabularies these days.

Here are three recommendations to help you to grow your vocabulary:

  • check an online source such as Dictionary.com daily for a “Word of the Day”;
  • get a page-a-day calendar that shows a new word and its definition every day;
  • read a book specifically targeted at expanding your vocabulary.

Although this fourth recommendation might seem odd at first, also consider taking a course in medical terminology. I took one many years ago, and it dramatically improved my knowledge of the Latin and Greek roots of many English words, which is essential to understanding their meanings.

Tip 10. Give speeches.

Giving speeches increases your visibility and increases your self-confidence.

Increasing your visibility — whether in your job, with your customers, or in your community — leads to greater awareness by others of your skills, knowledge, and aptitude. This greater awareness in turn can lead to promotions, requests for bids, and even more opportunities to let “the world” know about you.

Increasing your self-confidence is crucial to performing better in job interviews and to handling sales calls and marketing presentations with greater ease. Your increased self-confidence will put others at ease and will increase their confidence in hiring you or giving you business.

Tip 11. Keep reading this blog.

I could not resist adding this bonus tip. I enjoy delivering more than promised!

If you already read my blog daily, thank you; you know its value.

If you are new to my blog, then I invite you to review the archives and then start reading it daily for even more ideas to improve your communication skills.

Remember: Learning never ends!