Episode Transcript

Busting your Book Backlog
Episode 68: February 03, 2009

Stever Robbins here. Welcome to The Get-It-Done Guy’s Quick and Dirty Tips to Work Less and Do More.

Today's topic is getting through stacks of reading material. It must be that time of year. Gretchen and Charlene both wrote in asking how to get through their stacks of backed up reading material.

The quick and dirty tip is to read a little and often, ruthlessly tossing what isn’t useful.

But first, advertisers make this podcast possible. This week’s episode is sponsored by GoToMyPC, Web-based remote control software that you can use to set up Remote Access to your computer without being a tech expert. It’s the easiest way to access your PC from any location, and it’s built for a non-technical person, so anyone can use it. Try it free for 30 days at GoToMyPC.com/podcast.

My office is full of stacks of books, magazines, and stuff to read. I like reading. I like it so much that I’ve given myself 20/900 vision by never focusing further than a foot away from my eyes. It saves time, since I can just move my eyes from book to book, without wasting all that focusing time. Like you, I have way too much stuff I haven’t read.

Often and Little

First, make sure all the books you haven’t read are in a separate place on your bookshelf or in your office. Name the pile something clever, like, “The Well of Book Knowledge Not Yet Known,” or, “Books to Read,” or “Fred.” Keep them spine out so you can scan the pile and read through all the titles at once.

Now whenever you have a few free moments, wander over to your pile, scan the titles, and grab a title you feel like reading. Read a bit, then put it back. It’s that simple. Over time, if you read 3 pages a day, you’ll finish a 200 page book in two months. If you do 3 of these at once (9 pages a day), you’ll finish 18 books a year.

If you like reading one book at a time, do nine pages a day and you’ll be done in a couple of weeks.

What Goes in, Must Go out

Even when you’re making steady progress, it’s possible to buy books way faster than you read them. So don’t. Take a piece of paper and label it, “Books to buy.” Put it next to your stack of “Books to read.” Whenever you are tempted to buy a new book, write it on the “to buy” list instead. You only buy a new book from that list when you finish one from the “Books to read” pile.

Sometimes you need to buy and read a book sooner, for example, for a work project. When that’s the case, buy it and make it your sole reading material until it’s done. If you bought it for work, you’ll presumably be motivated enough to make some progress.

Audiobooks Galore!

If there’s a big book you want to read, an audiobook may be the way to go. When you have a title on audiobook, you can get to it in your snippets of free time. If you take a bus or ride a train you can listen to your audiobook at the same time.

You can also use an audiobook for company while doing other things. If you like to talk on your cell phone while driving, don’t. There are numerous studies showing that cell phone use while driving—even handsfree—is as bad as driving drunk. They don’t know why, it just is. So instead, pop in an audiobook and listen to your collection as you drive.

The same goes for grocery shopping. The bit about how you can listen to your audiobook at the same time, that is. Not the part about how cell phones make you grocery shop like you’re drunk.

File Your Magazine Articles

If you read lots of magazine articles, don’t lug around the magazines. Tear out the articles you plan to read, put them in a file folder labeled, “The Well of Magazine Knowledge, Not Known,” or maybe, “Fred.” Put the folder next to your pile of unread books. Next time you scan the pile to decide which nine pages to read, also consider grabbing a quick magazine article.

When All Else Fails, Punt

Once a book or article has been in your “to read” list for more than a year, it’s time to bid it adieu. If you haven’t felt like reading it yet, you’re never gonna. And all it's doing is taking up space. I once figured out, based on my life expectancy and reading speed, how many books I could read in the rest of my life. I looked at my to-read stack, counted it, and figured out it contained ten percent of all the books I will read in the rest of my life. “That pile is ten percent of my lifetime supply of books? No way!” It makes tossing the books much easier.

Your keys to success: little and often, audiobooks, keeping a book-to-buy list, filing your magazine articles, and throwing away what you’re not reading. One of these habits can change your life, do them all together, and you’ll quickly reach nirvana. (Please note that all this advice applies to books other than my book, which will be here toward the end of this year. Read it cover to cover and buy ten copies for all your friends. Ten copies per friend, that is.)

Before you go off to read a book, try GoToMyPC free for 30 days at GoToMyPC.com/podcast.

This is Stever Robbins. Email questions to getitdone@quickanddirtytips.com or leave voicemail at 866-WRK-LESS. You can find this episode's transcript at getitdone.quickanddirtytips.com. Get the Get-it-Done Guy and other great shows from Quick and Dirty Tips streamed to your iPhone. Download Stitcher free today at Stitcher.com

Work Less, Do More, and have a Great Life.


Comments (5) for Busting your Book Backlog |  Subscribe to Comment

Stephanie Says:
3/20/2009 8:34:25 PM
Here are some tips for improving reading from the Arizona Department of Education's Promising Pratices e-newsletter for February 2009: THIS ISSUE: 10 Tips to Improve Reading The Arizona Promising Practices Forum and website, www.azpromisingpractices.com is a FREE resource of the Arizona Department of Education. In this issue of the Promising Practices Forum we have bee asked to provide tips for improving reading. Brought to you by reading guru and academic coach Jim Allen, these 10 tips can be shared by educators to parents at anytime to help boost student interest in reading. Promising Practice Research and Tips 10 Tips to Improve Your Reading Skills by Jim Allen In the modern age of information, reading truly is a fundamental survival skill. Here are ten tips that anyone can use to improve their reading skills: 1. You don't have to be a great reader to get the point. Some people read fast and remember everything. Others read slowly and take a couple of times to get all the information. It doesn't matter, really, so long as when you read, you get the information you're seeking. 2. Know WHY you're reading. Are you reading for entertainment or to learn something? Decide why you're reading before you start and you'll greatly improve your comprehension and your enjoyment. 3. You don't need to read everything. Not every magazine, letter, and email you receive contains information you need. In fact, most of it is simply junk. Throw it away, hit the delete key! Just doing this will double the amount of time you have available to read. 4. You don't need to read all of what you DO read. Do you read every article of every magazine, every chapter of every book? If so, you're probably spending a lot of time reading stuff you don't need. Be choosy: select the chapters and articles that are important. Ignore the rest. 5. Scan before you read. Look at the table of contents, index, topic headers, photo captions, etc. These will help you determine if, a) you have a real interest in this reading, and b) what information you're likely to get from it. 6. Prioritize your reading. You can't read everything all at once (and wouldn't want to). If it's important, read it now. If it's not, let it wait. 7. Optimize your reading environment. You'll read faster and comprehend more if you read in an environment that's comfortable for you. 8. Once you start, don't stop! Read each item straight through. If you finish and have questions, go back and re-read the pertinent sections. If you don't have questions, you got what you needed and are ready to move on. 9. Focus. Remember, you're reading with a purpose, so focus on that purpose and the material. If you lose interest or keep losing your place, take a break or read something else. You can keep track of where you are by following along with your hand. This simple technique helps you focus and increase your concentration. 10. Practice! The more you read, the better reader you'll become (and smarter, too)! So, feed your mind: read! Author's Bio Jim M. Allen is a life, career, & business coach -- and an avid reader.
Eric Says:
2/15/2009 12:48:14 PM
Nice tips. I will try some of those. Other tip: hire somebody to taze you when you don't adhere to your reading schedule. I've got about 50 books that I'm supposedly reading, some for about 10 years now.
Valarie Says:
2/4/2009 6:30:59 PM
Love the part about putting all the unread books in one spot. This will be an astonding reminder to me that I don't "need" to purchase that next book!!! I'm a audiobook junkie too, but thankfully they are mostly downloads from Audio.com! And it felt like horrors at the time but I gave away six boxes of books to the local library, and have only wanted one back :)
Amy Says:
2/4/2009 10:24:23 AM
Great topic! My New Year's resolution this year was to read a book a week. I have a box of books (both long and short) as well as a list of books to borrow from the library. I have a feeling that whatever I don't finish by the end of the year will be donated to someone else's "FRED" pile.
Chris Christensen Says:
2/3/2009 3:18:00 PM
My books to buy list is my Amazon wish list.

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