Aug 26, 2007
The 4-hour workweek applied: How I spent $100, saved hours, and boosted my reading workflow
While reading The 4-Hour Workweek by Tim Ferriss (site, blog) I found myself playing with the idea of using personal outsourcing to fix a problem I have with my reading workflow. Short answer: It helped a lot.
As you know, I've made reading a central part of my M.S. in Personal Productivity, and anything that slows it down is a problem. My overall strategy is to pour ideas into head, write about them, and try them out with clients, and wait for something great to pop out. I know you care about reading as well - two of my most popular posts are How to read a lot of books in a short time and A reading workflow based on Leveen's "Little Guide" (hey - I love having smart readers).
However, I noticed over the past few months that my reading pipeline - the number of books read, reviewed, and captured in my Big-Arse Text File - had jammed up; I had a backlog of books read, but not processed. And the bottleneck was transcription - I just hate doing it, it takes a lot of time, and it's become a source of procrastination.
I talked When inputs exceed your workflow system's capacity, and this was an example of that. I needed to fix it. So I decided to apply Tim Ferris's ideas by outsourcing transcriptions of my audio book notes.
The experiment
Here's what I did: I submitted audio comments - zipped WMA files from my Olympus WS-300M Digital Recorder (more at Notes on using a digital voice recorder for taking reading notes) - from three different books to three firms. They were:
- Do It Tomorrow and Other Secrets of Time Management by Mark Forster [1] submitted to Tech-Synergy Voice transcription services ($0.60/minute),
- Order from Chaos: A Six-Step Plan for Organizing Yourself, Your Office, and Your Life by Liz Davenport submitted to Enablr | Transcribr ($1.00/minute), and
- The 4-Hour Workweek: Escape 9-5, Live Anywhere, and Join the New Rich by Timothy Ferriss submitted to GMR Transcription Services ($1.50/minute). (Hey - as a former geek how can I resist Recursion [2]?)
- Tech-Synergy cost me $21 (including a one-time discount) to transcribe 50 minutes of audio, 3 day TAT, resulting in 16 pages of notes.
- Enablr was $33.60, 33 minutes of audio, 7 days, and 8 pages.
- GMR was $49 (including a one-time sign-up fee), 26 minutes of audio, 1 day, and 10 pages.
- [1] You might enjoy A conversation with Mark Forster (check out his site and blog).
- [2] Check out the Droste image the Wikipedia authors used for the article. Why do I care? It reminds me of my very early off-topic post - How to Make The Ultimate Cup of Hot Chocolate. Still drinking it every morning!
No Comments, Comment or Ping
Reply to “The 4-hour workweek applied: How I spent $100, saved hours, and boosted my reading workflow”