How MY Inbox Stops ME from Getting Things Done
Your inbox can hinder your ability to get things done in two ways.
1. The first are notifications. Even if you don’t have your email open on
your desktop, you likely have alerts for new email set up on your
smartphone.
So if that alert goes off, your mind will always wander
into thinking about what new email you just received. Sometimes that
quick distraction is all it takes to get your focus off the task at
hand.
2. Another way your inbox can stop you from getting things done is
by
being overloaded. I don’t know about you, but I work a lot more
efficiently if I feel like I have a manageable to-do list. A flooded
inbox with tons of emails waiting for responses does not feel
manageable, and the more overloaded it gets, the less I want to deal
with anything in it.
Why, is an EMPTY Inbox is a ;-) Happy (-; Inbox
So why would you want to get your inbox down to zero?
I like to look
at an empty inbox at the end of the day as a day where everything that
needed to get done was finished.
Think of each email in your inbox as a
task that needs to be completed. Email tasks generally boil down to
the following four things:
- Someone needs you to complete something for them.
- Someone needs you to make a decision.
- Something needs to be filtered.
- Something needs to be deleted.
When you want to empty your inbox, you need to focus on doing one of
the above four things.
Now let’s look at how to do an initial cleanup
of an overloaded inbox!
Cleaning Up Your Inbox
When I first decided that I wanted to get my inbox down to zero
emails, I had to tackle about 200+ emails, some which dated several
months back. But at that point, enough was enough. So I dedicated the
weekend to start going through my emails, one by one, to see whether I
could immediately do one of the four above things for each email.
At the end of the weekend, I had gotten things down to five emails in
my inbox, all of which required me to finish a major project I was
still working on.
Everything else was moved out of the inbox by doing
the following:
- If the email was from someone who needed something done for them
(most of the time it was something simple), I
either did it immediately or politely declined. The judgment call on
that was if it took more than 5 minutes to complete, it was declined.
If it took less, I just made myself do it.
- If the email was from someone who needed me to decide on something
(whether I would attend an meeting, event,etc..) I just made a fast decision and replied with my response of yes,
I’ll be attending, or no at this time I can not.
- If the email was from a newsletter or mailing list I had subscribed
to, I created a new filter for it to go into a folder automatically when
the next installment arrived or, if I didn’t plan to read it again, I
unsubscribed.
- If the email was something that I wasn’t interested in responding to, or regular enough to require a filter, I deleted it without responding.
Sometimes,
the toughest part of emptying out your inbox is finally saying no to something.
I know many of my emails were hanging out in my inbox simply because
they required me to say no to some request.
Once you’ve started to say no
to some things, it has made it easier to do in the future and leave
your inbox open to receive more good requests that you will want to say
yes to.
Keeping Your Inbox Clean
There are three great habits you need to adapt to if you want to keep your newly emptied inbox at zero.
Before I get into these, it’s important to think about how you use
email. Some people use emails as a reminder that they need to be on a
particular network or website to do something. By turning off
notifications, you might miss out on those reminders to do something
whereas you will remember them by filtering.
If you know you’ll be in HootSuite all day every day, then there’s no
need to get an email notification every time you get a direct message.
But if you know you only check your LinkedIn group when they send you
the digest, then you might want to keep that email notification on but
filter them from your inbox.
Now let’s move onto those good, inbox-cleaning habits.
1. Turn off unnecessary notifications.
Whenever you sign up for a new social network, forum, or other
website, chances are you are going to be opt-in automatically to
notification emails from that website. Be sure that when you sign up to
a new website, you find your email notification settings and turn off
the ones you do not need. Otherwise, you’ll have new emails for friend
requests, new messages, offers, products, and a whole slew of other
things you may not need bombarding your inbox.
Some popular networks’ email notification settings pages include the following. You’ll need to be logged in for these to work.
Another area where you might get a lot of emails is from blog
commenting. For blogs using third-party commenting systems, you can
change your notification settings globally by going to the following.
For commenting on other blogs using the base comment system, look for
checkboxes before the submit button asking if you want to subscribe to
comments.
Sometimes these are automatically checked, especially if you
have subscribed to comments from a previous post.
2. Filter anything you will not need to respond to immediately.
This is huge when it comes to keeping your inbox at a neat,
manageable level. If it is an email you will not need to take an
immediate action on, be sure to filter it. This includes:
- Any notifications from social networks, forums, or other websites you have signed up for which you want to receive.
- Comment reply notifications from blogs.
- Newsletters or mailing lists.
- Casual acquaintances (who 90% of the time only send you FW: emails).
Really, you can filter almost everyone and just keep an eye on the
folders you filter them to, that way your inbox is only prioritizing new
people that you might have to respond to the fastest. Some general
filters that work well include the following.
- Create blog commenting filters with New Comment on, Your comment on the post, and There is a new comment to in the subject line. Send them all to a folder named Comment Replies.
- Create social media filters with @facebookmail.com, @twitter.com, @linkedin.com, and @youtube.com in the senders or from field. Send them all to a folder for that particular network.
- Getting a lot of emails from PR people without an option to
unsubscribe? Create a PR People folder and start filtering each one as
they come through to that folder.
- Filter clients into their own folder using their email address in the senders or from field.
One perk to Gmail over other email programs is that you can create a
filter that will label specific emails but not automatically send them
to the folders. That way, they will show up in your inbox so you can
take action on them, then you can just easily click archive to move them
to their folder for future reference. That way if the same person is
always emailing you, you don’t have to keep scrolling through your
labels / folders each time to organize their emails. YOU'VE got to love that!!!
3. Unsubscribe to anything you’re not reading, don’t intent to read, or didn’t opt-in to immediately.
It sometimes feels faster to just delete something every time it hits
your inbox. And, per email, it is. But if you are regularly deleting
something without reading it, do you really want to continue letting it
hit your inbox? Worse, do you want to stay subscribed to something you
didn’t intentionally want to opt-in to in the first place?
Each time I get an email from someone I don’t recognize, I look for
an unsubscribe or opt-out link on the email. You’ll usually find those
links at the top or bottom of the email, especially ones that are in
newsletter format or are from PR companies. It usually doesn’t take too
long to unsubscribe, and it’s worth it not to have the next email from
that list alerting your via your inbox notifications.
And for those particular nasty emailers who don’t have an unsubscribe
link on their newsletters, I tend to mark them as spam and then create a
filter to skip the inbox and delete them. This also goes for sites
that make you try to login to an account that you don’t even remember
creating to get to the unsubscribe option. It seems harsh, yet it’s the
fastest way to go about things because you don’t want to spend all day
trying to hunt someone down to remove you from their list.
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