Mar 24 / mark

Take Back Your Inbox: How To Better Manage Your Inbox

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If you are feeling overwhelmed by email overload, you are not alone. The average email user receives more than 50 messages a day and many business users are hit up with over 200 emails a day. It is time to take your inbox back, and with a little help from Scott Allen and Timothy Ferriss, I will tell you how to better manage your email.

While at SxSWi in Austin, TX, I had the great fortune to meet veteran entrepreneur and email consulting expert Scott Allen, co-author of “The Virtual Handshake,” (with David Teten). This post takes the best points from Allen’s chapter “Manage the Email Deluge,” and Ferriss’ “The Four Hour Work Week.” Both offer time-saving tips for managing your inbox, and your entire life for that matter. While some of their ideas seem radical, I promise they can help alleviate your inbox woes.

In short, Allen and Ferriss advocate handling email when you choose to rather than when it arrives. This involves checking your inbox less frequently, making quick decisions as to how you will handle each message, and creating a simple organizational structure using folders.

Review Regularly But Not Often
The best way to regain control of your inbox, is to develop a regular schedule for checking email. Checking email on the fly any time your inbox beeps is a very poor use of time. Allen and Ferriss, both, recommend turning off your email alert tool and checking your inbox once or twice a day. Ferriss even suggest setting an email auto-response that tells senders when you check your inbox and to let them know that you will eventually get back to them.

I will be the first to admit that for many people this is not practical, but if you are checking your inbox every twenty minutes or on the fly, try setting specific hours in the day to check mail. Honestly, if something is urgent, the sender should pick up the phone or ping you through instant messaging.

Keep Your Inbox Empty
Keeping your inbox empty does not mean you should immediately respond to every email. In fact, Allen argues the opposite. Referencing David Allen’s (no relation) “Getting Things Done,” Scott Allen explains that you have three options for dealing with messages: 1) Do It, 2) Delegate It, or 3) Defer It. If you can answer the email in two minutes or less, knock it out. If you are not the right person to answer the email, forward it immediately to the person who is. And most importantly, if an answer can wait, place the email in a To-Do folder and handle it later when you have more time.

Organize Around Action, Not Data
A simple organizational structure is critical. However, instead of organizing folders based on projects or subjects, you should create folders based on how you should handle email. Allen recommends the following folders:

  • Inbox: A temporary place for your emails to arrive and sit until you to determine how to deal with each one.
  • Deadlines: Create a separate folder for each deadline (ie: by day, week, project, etc.) The folder will dictate when you answer the email. For example, emails placed in the Tuesday folder will be addressed on Tuesday.
  • ASAP: This is a folder for emails that you can answer whenever you have time; as Allen points out ASAP does not mean urgent, it means any time you can get to it.
  • Delegated: This folder should store emails that have been sent to others to deal with. You should check this periodically to make sure each message has been answered.
  • Archive: These folders can be organized by project, customer, date, data or whatever works for you. If you use your delete folder as an archive; be sure to periodically save all messages onto a disk or external hard drive and purge the folder.

Don’t over Organize, Rely on Search
Don’t make your organizational structure too complicated; it should be intuitive and easy to follow. Most email clients offer search capabilities, which can help you find what you are looking for.

Use Multiple Email Accounts
Allen writes “you can save yourself much time and aggravation, and potentially protect your job, by keeping your personal and business email accounts segregated.” I have been doing this for years and have even created a third email account for e-commerce, ezines and other becn mail (becn, unlike spam is permission-based email that you want to read but just not immediately). Keeping separate inboxes is a great way to prioritize your life and keep you focused while at work. In addition, having a second email account with a free webmail provider like Gmail or Yahoo ensures that if you leave your current employer, you will still have a way to be contacted via email. If you find it difficult to manage your multiple email accounts or you can’t access your personal email at work, you can use NutshellMail, which offers a free service to help you manage, access and monitor your various messaging accounts.

If you found this post to be informative, I highly recommend you read The Virtual Handshake,The Four Hour Work Week, and Getting Things Done. All three books are about taking back your life and leveraging technology to simplify how you work and live. They have had a very significant on my life and have enabled me to get more (work and play) out of my day.

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7 Comments

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  1. Jared Goralnick / Mar 31 2008

    This is a really succinct way of describing Allens’ methods. Great job, and looking forward to your product that helps to facilitate it all!

  2. Scott Allen / Mar 22 2009

    Actually, there is a relation. David Allen is my uncle. He and I have always both been transparent about that — still, not really the kind of thing you say right in the middle of the text of a business book. :-)

  3. Rhona Schwartz / Jul 5 2009

    I need help I put information in inbox , draft ,and deleted on manage folders. I want to take out and put back on regular inbox, draft and deleted. How do I get them out ?.

  4. sandrar / Sep 10 2009

    Hi! I was surfing and found your blog post… nice! I love your blog. :) Cheers! Sandra. R.

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  1. Take Back Your Inbox: How To Better Manage Your Inbox : Get The Nut | richard-heider.de
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