The 80-20 rule for bloggers
Better use of time leads to more success Pareto distribution.
The following list contains some very interesting statistical handy links:
• 80% of sales accounted for 20% of the customer base
• 80% of days lost accounted for 20% of staff
• 80% of dirt on the floor accounted for 20% of room area
• 80% modal share of 20% of the transport network
• 80% of all private financial assets account for 20% of the population
• 80% of support requests in the Internet accounts for 20% of a FAQ database
These examples are mainly taken from the Internet. The list of links seemingly trivial assignments can be continued merrily:
• 80% of the wear and tear of a carpet accounts for 20% tread
• 80% of the reading time accounts for 20% of the pages of a newspaper (front page, sports, columns and special pages)
• 80% of the time you spend on the phone with 20% of callers
• 80% of the problems created by a company 20% of customers
The commonality: 80/20 or 20/80Gemeinsam this proportionality is that they do all the numbers 80 and 20 as a relation with it. Has naturalized the term Pareto distribution for the ratio of 80 to 20 or 20 to 80 for
The 80/20 rule: Pareto Named as distribution -the Pareto distribution by the Italian engineer, sociologist and economist Vilfredo Pareto.
Pareto Vilfredo Federico, born Wilfred Pareto Fritz was on 15 Born in Paris in July 1848 and died on 19 August 1923. Research he had at the end of the 19th Century, the British economy, when he made this discovery.
Distribution of wealth and recurring pattern starting point of his research questions were measured on asset allocation using the population within different countries. Was discovered by Pareto in this case that there were recurring patterns in the distribution of wealth of the countries. 20% of the population collected 80% of private wealth to itself - and this was with slight variations for all of their countries surveyed.
Appropriately, Pareto is considered the founder of welfare economics.
Are deviations from the ratio 80/20 is. Proportionality distributions as 90/10, 70/20/10, 25/75, etc., are based in principle on the principle of Pareto distribution.
Time is money was later transferred to his discovery of certain proportionality also to other areas of the economy, especially the time management. Here too, the frequency of particular causes and effects was considered in context and evaluated accordingly:
• 80% of the tasks to be done in 20% of the time available
• 20% of the tasks to be done in 80% of the time available
80/20 rule can be expressed Generalizing generalized hold on to that the Pareto Principle or the 80/20 rule says that 20% of the labour input cause for 80% of the realized benefits. From the opposite conclusion in turn implies that therefore contribute 80% to only 20% use the benefit.
Sober examples may illustrate this.
• who purports to write articles for a research on the Internet to make, usually 80% of the sources added together, after he researched 12 minutes or 80% of the sources used for the product accounts for 20% of time.
• account for 48 minutes again to clicking enticing links, which we follow willingly and contribute if necessary to 20% of other possible sources for an article, conversely estimate but 80% of the search time. (In view of my introspection I must know it!)
• Writing blog articles is done quickly. Fine-tuning, proofread, etc. changes, however, are real-time thieves, especially against the background that one must look for the few mistakes of an article really a magnifying glass.
Rule, not the 80/20 rule deliberately makes Who Act, will notice the many things considered in a broader context make another assessment.
• If you spend reading in relation to writing an article too much time correction, should a time limit set for proofreading and then stops? The benefit is in proportion to use.
• Those who constantly tinker on his blog theme should be careful that he does not see it on the main task of blogging, blogging itself is the creation of articles.
Perfectionism and Procrastination right inspect the Pareto principle warns against the consequences of perfectionism. Separately, each task of a global project is equally important and equally. Using the 80/20 rule you can always re-set priorities and see that the main carrier of the project will not be ignored and finished.
Internet searches are growing rapidly to an extended session, "Let's chat short" or "check your emails" are well intentioned, but as a subterfuge recognized as such not at first sight, and bring avalanche whose behaviour patterns are generally seen as called procrastination.
I like the 80/20 rule are applying roughly in an article included the following steps:
• Writing the article
• Proofreading
• Find
• Link
• Items
• Miscellaneous
The article contains 80% of the benefit. 20% are the other steps such as proofreading, etc. For same reason I invest 80% of my time in writing the article and not vice versa, only 20%.
Other priorities, other time-window otherwise it is divergent focus when the focus is not on the writing of the article alone.
If I am currently in the setting of specific links, research, or are almost flawless articles on this very important event, I vary according to the time window. Without precision in other areas in this case, the article would lose value, that's why you have to apply in certain places more polish.
Selective Perfectionism I call it selective perfectionism. Instead of each area to meet 100% do I make sure not to spend 80% of my time with 20% of the value in use?
Conclusion of this effort and time required and the overall result must always be seen in the relationship. Priority should be placed and not every part of the whole area must be 100%, just perfect.
The following list contains some very interesting statistical handy links:
• 80% of sales accounted for 20% of the customer base
• 80% of days lost accounted for 20% of staff
• 80% of dirt on the floor accounted for 20% of room area
• 80% modal share of 20% of the transport network
• 80% of all private financial assets account for 20% of the population
• 80% of support requests in the Internet accounts for 20% of a FAQ database
These examples are mainly taken from the Internet. The list of links seemingly trivial assignments can be continued merrily:
• 80% of the wear and tear of a carpet accounts for 20% tread
• 80% of the reading time accounts for 20% of the pages of a newspaper (front page, sports, columns and special pages)
• 80% of the time you spend on the phone with 20% of callers
• 80% of the problems created by a company 20% of customers
The commonality: 80/20 or 20/80Gemeinsam this proportionality is that they do all the numbers 80 and 20 as a relation with it. Has naturalized the term Pareto distribution for the ratio of 80 to 20 or 20 to 80 for
The 80/20 rule: Pareto Named as distribution -the Pareto distribution by the Italian engineer, sociologist and economist Vilfredo Pareto.
Pareto Vilfredo Federico, born Wilfred Pareto Fritz was on 15 Born in Paris in July 1848 and died on 19 August 1923. Research he had at the end of the 19th Century, the British economy, when he made this discovery.
Distribution of wealth and recurring pattern starting point of his research questions were measured on asset allocation using the population within different countries. Was discovered by Pareto in this case that there were recurring patterns in the distribution of wealth of the countries. 20% of the population collected 80% of private wealth to itself - and this was with slight variations for all of their countries surveyed.
Appropriately, Pareto is considered the founder of welfare economics.
Are deviations from the ratio 80/20 is. Proportionality distributions as 90/10, 70/20/10, 25/75, etc., are based in principle on the principle of Pareto distribution.
Time is money was later transferred to his discovery of certain proportionality also to other areas of the economy, especially the time management. Here too, the frequency of particular causes and effects was considered in context and evaluated accordingly:
• 80% of the tasks to be done in 20% of the time available
• 20% of the tasks to be done in 80% of the time available
80/20 rule can be expressed Generalizing generalized hold on to that the Pareto Principle or the 80/20 rule says that 20% of the labour input cause for 80% of the realized benefits. From the opposite conclusion in turn implies that therefore contribute 80% to only 20% use the benefit.
Sober examples may illustrate this.
• who purports to write articles for a research on the Internet to make, usually 80% of the sources added together, after he researched 12 minutes or 80% of the sources used for the product accounts for 20% of time.
• account for 48 minutes again to clicking enticing links, which we follow willingly and contribute if necessary to 20% of other possible sources for an article, conversely estimate but 80% of the search time. (In view of my introspection I must know it!)
• Writing blog articles is done quickly. Fine-tuning, proofread, etc. changes, however, are real-time thieves, especially against the background that one must look for the few mistakes of an article really a magnifying glass.
Rule, not the 80/20 rule deliberately makes Who Act, will notice the many things considered in a broader context make another assessment.
• If you spend reading in relation to writing an article too much time correction, should a time limit set for proofreading and then stops? The benefit is in proportion to use.
• Those who constantly tinker on his blog theme should be careful that he does not see it on the main task of blogging, blogging itself is the creation of articles.
Perfectionism and Procrastination right inspect the Pareto principle warns against the consequences of perfectionism. Separately, each task of a global project is equally important and equally. Using the 80/20 rule you can always re-set priorities and see that the main carrier of the project will not be ignored and finished.
Internet searches are growing rapidly to an extended session, "Let's chat short" or "check your emails" are well intentioned, but as a subterfuge recognized as such not at first sight, and bring avalanche whose behaviour patterns are generally seen as called procrastination.
I like the 80/20 rule are applying roughly in an article included the following steps:
• Writing the article
• Proofreading
• Find
• Link
• Items
• Miscellaneous
The article contains 80% of the benefit. 20% are the other steps such as proofreading, etc. For same reason I invest 80% of my time in writing the article and not vice versa, only 20%.
Other priorities, other time-window otherwise it is divergent focus when the focus is not on the writing of the article alone.
If I am currently in the setting of specific links, research, or are almost flawless articles on this very important event, I vary according to the time window. Without precision in other areas in this case, the article would lose value, that's why you have to apply in certain places more polish.
Selective Perfectionism I call it selective perfectionism. Instead of each area to meet 100% do I make sure not to spend 80% of my time with 20% of the value in use?
Conclusion of this effort and time required and the overall result must always be seen in the relationship. Priority should be placed and not every part of the whole area must be 100%, just perfect.