Talk about multi-tasking, on his commute, Joe manages the consulting business he has on the side and even keeps track of new messages on his BlackBerry. But he says he’s never tried anything this dangerous. This man is actually typing out an e-mail while driving in rush hour traffic.
Joe’s work day is a blur of business meetings, incoming phone calls, and hundreds of e-mails.
"I can check e-mails and respond to e-mails. I can have a conversation on the telephone. I can have a conversation via IM. And I can keep exactly probably half an ear on a conversation with a person," he says.
"In the room with you?" Stahl asks.
"Yeah, exactly," Joe says.
“If you are doing two or three things at he same time, are you really doing them all well?” Stahl asks.
"You know, this is not neurosurgery we're talking about here … but you can do a lot of that simultaneously." Joe says.
Joe may be able to pull that off, but many corporate executives say the volume of voicemail and e-mail they get has become unmanageable — eating up an average of three hours a day.
Combine that with a corporate culture that values endless meetings and "face time" with the boss, and you can see why so many employees toil into the night just to get their "real work" done.
------------------------------------------------------------------
Question 1.
What's the meaning of the word "blur". I think it's the mixture of a lot of things. Am i right?
Question 2.
Why "face time" and "real work" use quotation marks here?
What's the exact meaning here of face time and real work.
Thanks for your help. Thanks!!!!!