Your February Learning Triggers
As part of this month’s Rapid Fire Learning with Karen, I thought it would be fun to check our FeedBurner item stats over the first 24 days of February, and see which 5 emerged as the most popular postings in their combination of views and click-throughs. We are a site about the joy of learning, and so what if we assumed that these were the top learning triggers for all of you during February?
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These were the posts that rose to the top of our traffic counts during the month:
- Learning Perspective: Use It Or Lose It by Tim Draayer, author of Network Marketing Journey
- How to Read an Unfinished Book by Tim Milburn, author of Studentlinc
- Lessons of Shadows and Light by Steve Sherlock, author of Steve's 2 Cents
- 5 Joyful January Learnings by Ariane Benefit, author of Neat & Simple Living
- More Power to the Point by Dwayne Melancon, author of Genuine Curiosity
Are you part of those stats? What was your RFL from each or any of those postings?
Pretty cool to see Ariane’s RFL still in there from January…it seems our monthly RFL habit itself is a good way to share and trigger even more for each other. [Have you read the 25 Reasons to Adopt Rapid Fire Learning?]
Authors, perhaps you'd like to chip into the comments and give us just a sentence or two on the core message you had hoped to convey for those of us who'd like to take another look at what you had written?
Any other thoughts or reactions?
~ Rosa Say for Joyful Jubilant Learning
Postscript: This was our theme for February, though our contributors are welcomed to write on whatever other learning triggers their writing muses for us:
You can write for us too! Guest Author guidelines can be found in our JJL FAQ.


Thank you Rosa (and thanks to everyone who clicked into my post).
I have gone from a reluctant presenter to an enthusiastic one, and I think Beyond Bullet Points is able to bottle up some fantastic methods which will enable *everyone* to deliver more impactful, memorable presentations.
And the methods also work beyond presentations, and can help you improve your communication effectiveness in virtually any media.
They say that public speaking is one of the big fears that really gets to people - this book will help you get past that (then you can move on to shark attacks or some other phobia).
Posted by: Dwayne Melancon | February 24, 2008 at 08:57 PM
Powered by the light within
joyful jubilant learning
dispels the darkness
Honk! Honk!
Posted by: Steve Sherlock | February 25, 2008 at 03:22 AM
Our brains are designed to catalog what we need to maintain our belief systems.
To change the direction of our lives we must change the way we thing.
In doing so, our brain has no choice but to do as expected, keep all things which support the new beliefs.
Once we realize we can direct the course of our lives we take the power back.
Posted by: Tim Draayer | February 29, 2008 at 11:11 PM