Denise’s Daily Work Update – February 18th 2013

Overview
Work Period: Feb 18, 2014
Hours Worked: 10:00 (8 hours regular and 2 hours to make up for the past few days) Overall Difficulty of Tasks: Medium
  • After a quick email to Sir Francis and his main assistant explaining about why I stopped the task and asking for further instructions, I checked out the latest audio file that I got from Sir Francis. It was only 2 and half minutes long. (15 minutes)
  • Preface Writing For Icebreaker Games E-book – Then, I decided to go over the Icebreaker games eBook to prepare again for the preface. I only have to get at least a gist of what it was about so I didn’t read it all the way through. I just browsed here and there. Next, I searched online for tips and guides on how to write a great preface. I found some really good ones and took notes. After so, I started writing the first draft. For a few more hours, I alternated between these three tasks until I got a pretty good draft going on. The preface should be ready by Thursday – if not tomorrow. (4 hours)
  • I logged in to Gmail again and chatted with Francis’ main VA about some tasks. First, he asked me to write a short document about my experience with TimeProof. Also, he told me to download and install Hubstaff and to familiarize myself with it. Then we chatted about Daily Updates and then said goodbye. (1 hour) 
  •  I checked out the Hubstaff website since I basically knew nothing about it or why a Hubstaff widget is showing up on my desktop screen. There was a Help center on the site with a lot of videos, though, so it was not hard to learn all about this application. Eventually, I got a good grasp of what it was about but I still have to talk to your main assistant again to learn what I should do – especially with regards to the projects that I should be included in and such. (2 hours)
  • I wrote my experience with TimeProof and uploaded in on Dropbox. (1 hour)
  • Then finally I called it a day and did some changes on my Google Docs drive so that my daily updates can be easily monitored. (1 hour and a half)

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