I met Eric Mack, the eProductivity Specialist, during my recent trip to the US. Eric and I share a professional interest in productivity amongst business teams, we both home school our children, and we both love the same swashbuckling movies (eg, Pirates of the Carribean, The Man in the Iron Mask, and the Three Musketeers)! I got to spend a day in Eric's "digital sandbox", that oft-discussed electronic and digital haven in the hills above Los Angeles. Eric has created an amazing environment full of digital tools to enable business and personal productivity, ranging from a Xerox LiveBoard, to an HP Digital Sender (or two), a Toshiba Tecra M4 Tablet PC, and many other things. His sandbox was the paragon of all things digital!
You can imagine my surprise, therefore, when during the next week Eric spent a great deal of time using paper and a pen! And in the past week, he's started to post about "analog productivity" (see Print a Next Action Form on the Back of Your Business Card and No Digital Tool Beats My Paper Scheduling Tool). What's going on? Is Eric changing from being an "eProductivity Specialist" to an "aProductivity" one? Look at the evidence and decide for yourself.
Firstly, I got an (amazing) welcome at LAX with paper welcome signs. What happened to Neon lights?

Secondly, when he was away from the conference and the need to be seen with his new Tablet, what was his notetaking device of choice? See for yourself (and this is on two different occasions!).


Finally, when we visited the wonderful Levenger store in Boston, what item did Eric most want? The new Levenger Tablet ...

The writing on the pad says "Eric's Next Tablet" ... and this photo was taken with his camera!
Seriously though, I had a neat week hanging out with Eric. We had numerous discussions about technology and productivity, although not as many as I would have liked. Regardless of what happens next for Eric, here's my final word: There are many people who become so enamoured with electronic tools that they fail to see the pure simplicity of paper, pens and pencils. Eric defly demonstrates a clear understanding of the pros and cons of each, which is why I have no reservation in recommending his thinking and approach to eProductivity. Keep up the good work Eric (once, of course, you get back from a supplies trip to Staples).