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/>7 Habits of Web-Savvy Entrepreneurs
Web-savvy people always know the latest tech trends and they can get more work done faster than you.
Here's how to be more like them.
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Web-savvy entrepreneurs are always a step ahead of everyone else: They're up to date on technology
trends, they're constantly trying out new tools, they're often at the center of major online conversations,
and most importantly they know how to use the Web to get things done faster.
If that doesn't sound like you, maybe it's time to adopt a few new habits:
1. Become an email ninja.
Are you one of those people who spends more time communicating about a project than actually doing
the project? Stop. Only allow yourself to check your email a few times throughout the day. If you have
important emails that need to be sent out, try scheduling them with Boomerang. And to limit your time
even further, check out five sentences or less, which stops you from sending emails longer than five
sentences. To make the most of your inbox, and time spent in it, try ActiveInbox, a Gmail/Google Apps
plugin that helps you organize your emails into to-do lists. So organize your inbox, write your five-
sentence email, and then get the hell out of that inbox.
2. Blog (it's never been easier).
The most successful people online, starting with Seth Godin, Chris Brogan, or Guy Kawasaki, all have
one thing in common. They maintain a very active blog. At the end of the day, this is where your online
home base resides.
If you want to succeed online, get a blog (via Tumblr, WordPress, or Typepad) and start crunching out
quality content. It's the lifeblood of your online presence.
3. Be the information guy (or gal) for your followers.
One of Stephen Covey's habits for highly effective people is to "seek first to understand, then be
understood." Put another way for the online world: "To be interesting, one first has to be interested."
Take a look at one of the most successful independent social media curators, such as authors
@brainpicker or @MichaelHyatt with close to 200,000 Twitter followers each. Both of them share great
content more than 10 times a day, picking the most interesting finds from their daily reading routines
(see more about that below). They hit Twitter at optimal times but space out their posts so as not to
clutter followers' streams. To do this efficiently, they likely use a simple scheduling tool such as Buffer to