drown again

By Aimanness Photography

Drowning in hundreds of internal communication emails, updates from social network sites like Linkedin, Facebook and Twitter and automatic notifications?

Deluged with office circulars, software updates and message-board notifications?

A Circulars/Newsletters/Notifications folder is a great place to keep all of that low-value noise. Once you have this folder set up, it’s time to get Ninja ruthless.

First Steps

If there are regular email circulars that you receive that are useless, unsubscribe.

Most of the ones you’re not ready to unsubscribe from just yet can be viewed once a week as part of your inbox review and left alone the rest of the time.

That being the case, if you don’t have these going to a set folder every day, you’re creating a huge amount of work for yourself, unnecessarily. For each list you’re subscribed to, you have the task of reading, clicking and dragging or deleting. Multiplied by 365, multiplied by the number of lists you’re subscribed to. That is a lot of time and attention in itself.

If you have notifications turned on, each ‘ping’ of those low level emails coming in is a potential interruption and distraction during proactive attention time too. That’s insane.

Rules

A good, reliable set of rules, auto-filing low level noise email into folders like your ‘Circulars’ folder is essential to keep the task of email as effortless as possible and keep your mind clear and free from distractions at the same time.

Set up rules in your system so that emails that you receive regularly and where you know there won’t be any immediate actions needed can be filed straight into the folder rather than even appearing in your inbox at all. This folder reduces a huge number of potential distractions by automatically filing them into your Circulars folder.

I spend just a minute or so each week quickly scanning this folder, safe in the knowledge that it’s extremely unlikely there’s anything actionable. During that minute, my job is to look for the rare exception to my rule, but I can do so starting from a position of being almost certain everything in the folder is utter crap that can be immediately deleted. Starting from that position, rather than the worry that there could be lots of useful stuff mixed in with all the noise really speeds things up.

Bacon!

Picture by Dinner Series

Bacn

You may be asking why not unsubscribe from those notifications in the first place?

Well, at Think Productive we call these kinds of emails ‘Bacn’: it’s not quite spam, it’s kind of worth having, you don’t want it around you every day, but occasionally it provides some real value.

Now and then I change my mind over what’s bacon and what’s spam depending on what I’m working on. At that point I’ll unsubscribe from a few things, but given that it’s never a huge drain on my attention, it’s not an issue that needs too much consideration. There’s work to be done, remember!

Useful Links

Most email programmes (Gmail, Outlook etc.) have the facility to create rules based on criteria you set – find some key instructions here:

Creating Rules on Gmail

Creating Rules on Hotmail

Creating Rules on Outlook

Creating Rules on Mozilla Thunderbird

Creating Rules on Apple Mail

How do you deal with these emails? Do you filter by sender or by subject line? What system works for you?

 

We <3 our email - do you?!

Like this? Try these

Sign up for one of our Getting Your Inbox to Zero email training workshops

Email Etiquette Challenge – 5 Sentences thinkproductive.co.uk

The Rise of Bacn [Infographic]

 

Big thanks to everyone who came to the How to Get Things Done workshop in Birmingham on Valentines Day and helped make it a great success!

I’m delighted to announce that we have added another Midlands venue for our Think Productive workshops, and I will be running How to Get Things Done in Stafford on 16th May.

Wondering what you’ll get out of it? Here’s what some of our delegates had to say last time:

 

Packed with opportunities to consider real-life issues and workable tips

Tony Burgess Director of Academy of High Achievers - NLP & DiSC specialists, developing coaches & trainers, leaders & managers Grace is an excellent trainer. The course 'How to Get Things Done' was packed with opportunities to consider real-life issues in business and to get workable tips and approaches that we started to apply straight away in the classroom. Grace lives and breathes her message. She is real. She understands the day-to-day juggling act of being a parent, a spouse and a business person meeting demands from lots of different directions and still 'smelling the roses' along the journey. I highly recommend Grace as a trainer and a coach and I happily recommend the 'How to Get Things Done' course.

Helping me approach my work in a more purposeful and less frenetic manner!

Malcolm Egner National Director of Dalit Freedom Network UK I attended a training day on productivity run by Grace. It was well organised, and Grace delivered the material effectively while maintaining an atmosphere conducive to learning and engaging with both the subject, other delegates and trainer. I have been impressed by Grace's willingness to respond outside of the training day and offer support. It is early days, but the content of the course is helping me to approach my work in a more purposeful and less frenetic manner!

Fresh ideas on how to organise my work load without getting stressed

Christine Littler-Thomas HR Consultant & Leadership Coach I have known Grace for some time and always regarded her as a true professional. I had the opportunity recently to attend a Productivity workshop which Grace was presenting. Whilst I have attended "time management" seminars in the past this was definitely different, and a new way of looking at how to be more productive in less time. I now have fresh ideas on how to organise my work load without getting stressed. Thank you Grace

 

Want less overwhelm, less stress, and more playful, productive momentum? Join us in Stafford, for this fun, practical productivity workshop – book your place here!

 

EmailAre you drowning in emails? Is Inbox Zero an impossibility right now?

In previous posts we asked you to tell us your Email Pet Peeves, looked at improving your email use by introducing better subject lines, and smarter use of TO, CC and BCC.

In this post we look at how to keep your emails short and sweet.

 

The challenge here is to keep as many of your emails as possible shorter than 5 sentences. The theory is that the shorter the emails you send out, the shorter the ones you get back. Plus think of all the time you’ll save writing and reading long messages!

 

Step 1

Decide to do it. Set yourself a challenge  - spend 1 day writing 5 sentence emails. See how it feels!

Step 2

Tell your colleagues and encourage them to do the same

Step 3

Add a signature to your emails, informing external contacts. Find one at Five Sentences - and more information!

Step 4

Just do it! Yes, there are obviously exceptions to every rule, but the ‘five sentences rule’ is a great benchmark that will add discipline to not just your own emails, but the emails that you receive back in return. 

If you do have a lot to say, that you simply cannot fit into an email, try a link to a Word document report or a phonecall instead – remember, email is just another medium and its not always the most effective one!

 

Email

 

Like this? Try these

Sign up for one of our Email Etiquette workshops

Improve your use of Email Subject Line

Be smarter with TO, CC and BCC

 

Sharon Dale is our Productivity Ninja, based in the north of England. 

She will be hosting our How to Get Things Done public workshop in Halifax on 31st January

Book your place here (not in Halifax? Click here to see our other How To Get Things Done training)

In this post she explains how she reclaimed time in her busy schedule, by unsubscribing to a host of email newsletters and mailshots. 

 

 

Since New Year’s Day I have been doing some clearing out.

This is customary for me. Each year I feel the need to make some changes (read improvements) at this time of year.

This year I realised that there are lots of newsletters and marketing email’s which I have subscribed to over time but am no longer reading. What I noticed is that each time I go into my mailbox I automatically delete these and whilst this is not taking up a lot of time, sometimes it steals more attention than it should.

Inbox zero - graphic showing how an email inbox can be emptyI was reminded this week that there are 168 hours in a week, that is all and it is impossible to create more time. All we can do is make sure that we are giving our attention to the right things.

So I decided it was time to get rid of these attention grabbing, mainly marketing emails about old interests for good. I have gone against type and tried not to worry about recording anything and decided to use my admittedly poor memory and deal with any laggards later on.

Some of these emails are very simple to unsubscribe from, you click on a link at the end of the message and reach a page which generally thanks you for your interest and tells you that you have successfully unsubscribed.

Some ask if you are sure and you have to press a button or another link (do not back out now – press the button!), and yet others require you to remember a login and password that you set up some time ago and this turns into a multiple action project. These are the ones I will deal with, one at a time, probably as part of a post weekly review tidy.

I already feel better; for a few seconds work each time I am incrementally reducing my inbox clutter.

If you would like to learn more about managing your attention and getting things done, get along to my How to Get Things Done workshop in Halifax on Friday (31st Jan 2013)

 

Like this? Try these

 Need some help? Sign up to one of our email training workshops 

 Lost all your emails? what’s the worst that could happen? | thinkproductive.co.uk 

Rethink Your Email in 3 Steps | thinkproductive.co.uk 

Swizzle Turns All Your Email Newsletters Into a Weekly Digest