The Secret to Focusing Your Digital Attention

The internet is becoming infinitely denser, it’s your job to filter it

Written by Everett Bogue | Follow me on Twitter.

Every day more people decide to start publishing. More voices enter the web, all frantically crying out for attention.

In the early days of the web, it was a simple matter to keep track of all of the information yourself. Only a few sources of information existed.

It was a simpler time.

But most of the information was boring, so it was destined to change.

Now there is infinite remarkable material, contrasted with infinite trash.

The biggest problem is finding the good stuff. This is where we all enter the equation.

Everyone adds their bit to the web, and the result is a great equalizer. The power is no longer in the hands of the media, it is no longer in the hands of the governments, it is no longer in the hands of the corporations.

The power is in your hands now.

You are the filter of your digital reality.

You decide what to consume every day. You decide what you pass on to the people who you lead every day.

The thing is, you have the choose. Every one of us is a filter of our digital reality.

Each of us makes major decisions every day, such as:

  • Where do I focus my attention?
  • What do I share with the people who focus on me?
  • What do I publish?

I talk to many people who are seeking popularity on the web. They want to know how to get a lot of followers, they want to know how they can be heard. There is no easy answer to these questions, but I can tell you where to start.

You need to cultivate an intelligent filter of digital reality.

If every single bit of information that flows through is valuable, people will come to you to listen to that value.

You are only as valuable as the information you choose to pass on to the people who follow you.

  • If you contribute nothing, your value online is zero.
  • If you contribute garbage, your value online is garbage.
  • If you contribute value, you will be valuable online.

Your growth online is in direct correlation with these metrics. This is why I tell everyone who starts a blog that they must think first about how they can help people, and then think about themselves.

This isn’t about you, it’s about everyone else.

  • If you contribute nothing, your growth will stagnate.
  • If you contribute garbage, you lose authority and followers.
  • If you contribute value, you will see measurable growth.

It doesn’t matter if you’re using Facebook, Twitter, or you’re a blogger. All of these rules apply.

It doesn’t matter if you’re a photographer, a scientist, a painter, or you roast coffee beans. All of these rules apply.

If you publish remarkable, intelligent, and useful information with every interaction with the web, you will grow on online and offline.

The secret to success online should be obvious, but it’s not.

You would think this would be obvious, but very few people understand the full potential of interacting this way. These people fling information into the ether with no regard to whether it’s useful or not, and they do it as much as they possibly can. These people believe they can maintain attention via the sheer volume of material that they send out, but it doesn’t work that way. Volume does not equal quality.

It’s your job to filter out these people. Don’t retweeet their stuff, don’t ‘Like’ their blog posts. Unsubscribe from these people. If you aren’t gaining value from something, don’t pass it on.

I follow less than 100 people on Twitter. I read less than 15 blogs on Google Reader. I’m only following 15 people on Google Buzz at this moment. My attention is finite, because if I spend all day reading nonsense, I get nothing done.

How finite is your attention?

Are you willing to bounce around all day reading stuff that doesn’t help you?

Are you spending all day reading and reacting?

Or are you creating and publishing value?

Or are you creating remarkable content that helps people?

This is the secret that every successful person online is trying to tell you. Just contribute value. That is all you need to do.

A remarkable idea naturally spreads across time and space.

  • Hi Everett,

    I must say the Universe always seems to be working in mysterious ways. For all the reading I do (and time wasting) I always manage to stumble upon a post that really speaks to my current situation.

    I think you're absolutely right about minimizing how much you "follow" online. This is exactly the problem I have with producing content. I'm working on launching a new version of my blog but I constantly find myself having trouble keeping up with the people/blogs I follow and in turn I get nothing done!

    Thank you for the encouraging words. I really needed them. You will surely be staying on my Reader list *thumbs up*
  • Nice to meet you Vanessa. It's always great to listen, that's amazing that you are. Thanks for introducing yourself. Let me know if there's ever anything I can do to help you more.

    Best,
    Everett
  • Vanessa
    Great article, Everett :) I have been reading your blog for some time now and I thought I'd say hi. I do participate in a few social media but I'm mostly quiet with my online presence, more of a listener/reader than a loudspeaker :)) I have gained so much from your writings!
  • Exactly Sahail, I agree with Seth Godin's advice. That's so cool that you have an interview coming up with him. Definitely send me the link when it's up.

    Thanks for the link Lyn! I really enjoyed reading your article. I'm glad you found me through Leo. It's great to connect with you.
  • More good stuff Everett,

    I agree. Seth Godin says you can only really connect with 1000 people.

    I've just started a Twitter guide on my blog, with the aim of giving this most saturated of social networking platforms a dose of integrity.

    The way the Net is going, if you don't stand out, you're toast.

    An upcoming interview on my blog with Seth Godin (I know, I can't believe it either...) shows his take on this. He says now that it is almost an insult to read stuff that isn't inspiring.

    Think I know what he means...

    see you soon...
  • "Reading advice is not applying advice, and I think that’s something to consider when deciding on how we spend our time and live our life."

    @Jeff: That's a really good point, well said. In fact, that's really good advice! :-D
  • Since Leo doesn't allow comments, just want to say I love your post over at Zen Habits about creative flow. I write about that fairly often on my blog too, love the Csikszentmihalyi book (my comments at http://quotesqueen.wordpress.com/2008/07/19/fin...), and in at least one post quote Bradbury: "WORK. RELAX. DON'T THINK." Brilliant.
  • Oh no! I totally didn't mean to seem like I interpreted you that way. I think your comment was spot on.

    I find myself randomly flitting between all of the minimalist blogs as well in some cases. It's no secret that it can be a little bit of an echo chamber. I know the lifestyle design blogs have the same circumstances: they're all living in the shadow of Timothy Ferriss's brilliance. Some people are making great work, others are just trying to figure out how to design their lives.

    They're all valid points of view, but as you said, we can sometimes feel that we need to read them all.

    Let's get outside and enjoy the sunshine. Let's read a good book. Let's make a difference in this world.
  • Jeff
    Everett: Reading back on my comment, I didn't mean to sound like I was attacking you or like I was insinuating that your content isn't genuine or that I have stopped reading blogs altogether (even though that's how the end is written). I have just been addicted to reading minimalist blogs - not a fault of theirs, of course, actually on the contrary as bloggers typically want a larger audience - and your post reminded me of this fact. I think there are people out there with a lot of great content, you included. But it's also nice to be reminded of *why* any of us are reading at all. If I want a better, more fulfilling life, and I spend an hour of my short, 24-hour day, taking advice on how to live a fulfilling life, well then that is a vicious cycle that goes against the very ideal of being a minimalist.

    Reading advice is not applying advice, and I think that's something to consider when deciding on how we spend our time and live our life. Take care.
  • Thanks for the insightful comments all.

    Tammy, exactly! Simple Living News is awesome, and such a valuable source of information. I love checking it out every Monday. It's true though that most of the best information comes from Twitter. That's why I'm only following 15 blogs, because I know for certain someone in my Twitter network will retweet the good stuff to me. You're also working on a great project right now, I can't wait until your e-book launches.

    Jeff, I'm with you. It's true that there are a number of blogs out there just rehashing Leo Babauta's work. I think that's fine. Blogging is an equal opportunity employer, and anyone can do it. We've all read Leo's blogs, because Zen Habits and Mnmlist are so incredibly brilliant -- I mean, Leo's living with 50 things now!

    However, it's so apparent when someone is just rehashing what he's already written. We've all read it, we've internalized it.

    Most of these folks are using blogging as a medium to figure out how they can fix their clutter problem, and that's fine. That kind of information won't travel though. It's also the kind of information that we don't necessarily benefit from reading.

    Here's my approach though: I got rid of all of my stuff, I quit my job, I jumped on a plane and flew across the country. Only then did I start writing about being minimalist, only then did I publish an e-book about my experiences.
  • Thanks for this - it is so easy to get into the mode of thinking that you have to read everything, because you might "miss something". And yet I've found that if it's really something worth getting, it will probably make it's way to you anyway.

    Now I'm off to create some remarkable content that helps people :-)
  • Jeff
    I have recently begun to notice this digital over-saturation, even following these minimalist blogs. Everyone is starting to echo everyone else. There's not a lot that feels personal or unique anymore. I enjoy Leo Babauta's tidbits as much as the next minimalist, yes, but living a simple life does not justify reading even 5 (never mind 10, 15, or 50) blogs that are all telling me to clean a drawer or own less than 100 things.

    A simple philosophy I am trying to ascribe to:

    When you wake up in the morning, be mindful of what you think, do and use throughout the day - after a week or two, keep the positive thoughts, regularly-used things, healthy habits, and ditch the rest. Repeat. This will filter out what you shouldn't believe or own, and harness what makes you happy - because that is what is ultimately important, minimalist or not.

    It took a digital avalanche of people (some looking to make money, some genuinely looking to help people, some trying to become a brand among many other brands and companies, and some a combination of these) for me to come to this; so in a way, I am thankful for being beat over the head time and time again with the advice of those looking to adhere to the code and/or label of "minimalist." Now that I have, I am able to completely wash my hands of what has been, ironically, stealing my time, without me even realizing it: reading blogs.
  • This is so timely for me. I've been thinking about significantly pairing down my feed reader. I subscribe to way too many blogs and in the last 2 weeks I haven't touched my reader.

    All the cool content I find for my Simple Living News Update comes from Twitter. I'm following about 150 people, which is over my limit (100). I love connecting with folks via social networks, but there is only so much time in a day and my main priority is producing kickass content for RowdyKittens and my clients.

    It's time to do some digital housekeeping. Thanks for the great post! :) You rock!
  • Hey Everett, I gotta say I enjoyed reading your article. I do believe that it's important to only share information with your readers or followers that you find interesting yourself.
    I have started to only visit blogs that are presenting useful and unique information themselves. There is no value in following someone who doesn't help you grow personally.
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