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My 3-Part Workflow to Stand Out In Academia (Keep it simple)
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# My 3-Part Workflow to Stand Out In Academia (A Simple Approach)

In academia, working harder isn’t always the answer to publishing faster or standing out. Many researchers waste time on activities that don’t move their work forward significantly. The key is to establish efficient workflows that maximize output while minimizing distractions. Here’s a powerful three-part workflow system that can transform your academic productivity.

## Workflow 1: Spark – Generating Ideas Continuously

When you feel lost or uninspired in your research, this workflow helps reignite your creativity:

1. **Search** regularly for research ideas around your main topic
– Use tools like Google Scholar, Open Alex, or AI tools like Elicit to get summaries of top papers
– Stay at the leading edge of research in your field

2. **Save** all references to your reference manager (Zotero, Mendeley, EndNote)

3. **Synthesize** to find patterns in the research
– Read abstracts to understand each paper
– Use tools like Notebook LM to upload sources and chat with your reference list
– Delve deeper into interesting papers
– Read extensively on topics that spark your interest

**Pro tip:** Run this workflow whenever you feel uninspired. It also gives you valuable information to share in supervisor meetings—starting conversations with “I was reading an interesting paper recently…” makes you stand out as a valuable source of information.

## Workflow 2: Map and Frame – Turning Data into Stories

Once you have data, this workflow helps transform it into compelling research narratives:

1. **Create figures** as you collect data
– Don’t procrastinate on analysis—do it the same day or next day
– Each figure should tell a clear story that you can explain

2. **Draw conclusions** from individual figures

3. **Craft research stories** by combining multiple figures
– Identify the problem you’re solving
– Present the evidence from your figures
– Highlight the outcome and its importance
– Keep your big reveals simple (one or two main points)

4. **Tell people** about your research regularly
– Present at departmental symposia or research group meetings
– Speaking about your research helps you identify gaps
– Explaining to others

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