Productivity 101: The Benefits Of A Daily Reading List.

<p>Do you have enough time to read all the interesting articles, newsletters and books you want to read? You are not alone.</p> <p>Accumulating reading material is easy; the difficulty is finding the time to read it all. Technology is making it easier than ever to collect this stuff, and there are apps that will happily collect it together for you so you have a single place to go to read your articles and newsletters; yet, the real issue is not being addressed, finding the time to read it all.</p> <p>The British government has a system that has been around for hundreds of years. At the end of the day,&nbsp;<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_box_(government)" rel="noopener ugc nofollow" target="_blank">each government minister is given a red box</a>&nbsp;containing all the documents and articles their officials feel they need to read.</p> <p>Depending on the minister&rsquo;s department, this could be a single box or several each day.</p> <p><img alt="" src="https://miro.medium.com/v2/resize:fit:700/1*KYsQ7gLX7stJ9SgdaDXR2g.jpeg" style="height:394px; width:700px" /></p> <p>Even King Charles gets his daily box.</p> <p>While this means a government minister always takes work home with them, at least they have a system for staying on top of their reading materials. Given how the British media works, it would be a foolish minister who did not spend time reading these documents.</p> <p>In his book Total Competition, Ross Brawn, the former Ferrari and Mercedes Benz F1 team&rsquo;s Technical Director, writes about having his assistant put together a daily reading list for him to read on his journey home. This reading list could be technical directives from the FIA (the Formula 1 governing body) or a briefing document on a following day&rsquo;s meeting.</p> <p><a href="https://carl-pullein.medium.com/productivity-101-the-benefits-of-a-daily-reading-list-b3f8960bc09c"><strong>Read More</strong></a></p>