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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars How and why more information usually means less information has impact, August 31, 2011
This review is from: Overload! How Too Much Information is Hazardous to your Organization (Hardcover)

Chip and Dan Heath are the co-authors of two brilliant books, Made to Stick and Switch. In the first, they explain (as its subtitle suggests) "why some ideas survive and others die." In his book, Overload!, Jonathan B. Spira addresses a much larger issue: Why too much information is "hazardous" to an organization's health and also to the health of many among its workforce. As he explains, "Information Overload is killing us. It is death by a thousand paper cuts in the form of e-mail messages, documents, and interruptions...While there is relatively little we can do about Information Overload, we don't have to grin and bear it. What does help reduce Information Overload and lessen its impact is 1.) raising awareness and 2.) presenting context and history as to why the problem is occurring."

He goes on to observe, "Raising awareness helps because most people are simply unaware of the root causes of Information Overload, such as poor search techniques, unnecessarily copying dozens if not hundreds of colleagues on an e-mail, or calling someone two minutes after sending an e-mail simply to tell the recipient of its presence. Providing context and history puts things into perspective." Spira organizes his material within two Parts: "How We got Here" and then ""Where We Are and What We Can Do."

My own rather extensive experience supports Spira's assertion that Information Overload is both the result of several serious problems that are its root causes, and, is itself the root cause of countless other serious problems. For example, in an organization in which senior management has determined that collaboration must be increased and improved, people will be under severe pressure be become much more involved in communication and cooperation between and among associates. This will create an Information Overload that, in turn, consumes time and energy that should have been allocated elsewhere.

I presume to offer four suggestions to those who read this brief commentary. First, decide whether or not you and/or your organization now suffers from Information Overload. If so, pin down precisely what the most serious problem is (e.g. too many non-essential emails to send and/or read, too many non-essential reports to complete or read). Next, carefully check Spira's coverage of that specific problem in the book. Finally, read Part I and then only the material relevant to the most serious in Part II. All or even most of the problems cannot be solved simultaneously.

I have no quarrel with any of his advice but do think he calls prey to the perils of Information Overload his book was intended to reduce. The more information, insights, and recommendations he provides throughout the 21 (count `em, 21) chapters within 237 pages, the less impact his most important ideas have. I think a much different format that includes reader-friendly devices such as checklists, self-diagnostic exercises, and end-of-chapter summaries of key points would have better served his purposes. One man's opinions.

That said, I commend Jonathan Spira on the quality of content and the scope and depth of his analysis of serious problems that cause or result from Information Overload. I now urge him to consider an Overload! Fieldbook (with a workbook format), one that correlates with this book's sequence of subjects but also enables people to interact with the material by completing exercises that accomplish two important objectives: They help the respondent to define the nature and extent of a given problem -- in its context -- within her or his own situation and/or organization; also, they emphasize the most important points, thus facilitating, indeed expediting frequent review of both those points and responses later.

As I said, one man's opinions.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A timely and compelling read, May 23, 2011
This review is from: Overload! How Too Much Information is Hazardous to your Organization (Hardcover)
Jonathan Spira's engaging and thoroughly researched book, Overload: How Too Much Information Is Hazardous to Your Organization presents an urgent call to action to confront this ubiquitous problem. Employing case studies and storytelling linked to recent business catastrophes he brings clarity to the problems proliferated by overload as well as to their enormous hidden costs. He includes a discussion of preemptive steps that may be taken at all levels in the organization to reduce and mitigate the toxic effects of information overload. This should be required reading in MBA programs, for knowledge workers, their managers and executives. I highly recommend this book.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars what the etailers don't want you to know., April 27, 2011
By 
James Miller (Seattle, WA, USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Obvious, intuitive, and right on - what the etailers don't want you to know. Not only is this a costly time waster, he shows it can be unhealthy as well.

Wasted time due to e-litter is another unintended consquence of the Information Superhighway. Just like drivers - maybe we should have to qualify for an elicense to show we know the rules of the road before we are allowed to use the service.Much of the time-wasting traffic is just bad manners, like bad drivers.

Not sure if the facts are valid, but even if i just close, the savings could be huge if only 10% accurate.

Add the cost of added IT support, data storage and transfer and it just gets worse.
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Overload! How Too Much Information is Hazardous to your Organization
Overload! How Too Much Information is Hazardous to your Organization by Jonathan B. Spira (Hardcover - May 31, 2011)
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