The 7-Step Guide To Achieving Inbox Zero—And Staying
There—In 2018
Getting your email under control is the best thing you can do for your
productivity. These strategies and tactics will make it happen.
Our
inboxes have become perpetually overflowing mountains of irritation—and instead
of helping us to be more productive, they just seem to suck hours out of our
days.
So
what’s the secret to managing your inbox while also managing to stay sane? I’ve
spent a lot of time trying to figure that out. And while I’m still working on
achieving that ever-elusive state of email nirvana, I’ve identified the optimal
formula for getting an inbox in order and keeping it that way.
Incorporating
any part of this process into your email routine will help you stay organized
and avoid unnecessary time wasting and frustration. If you can actually manage
to internalize every step listed below, email enlightenment will be yours.
Consider it the ultimate New Year’s resolution for busy people.
1. REFRAME THE WAY YOU THINK ABOUT YOUR INBOX
Quick:
Look at your inbox and see how many messages have been sitting there for 24
hours or more. If the answer is anything other than “zero,” it’s time to step
back and reevaluate your strategy for managing email.
When
you stop and think about it, it’s actually pretty obvious: Having a giant list
of pending messages in your face all the time isn’t an effective method of
organization. How often do you lose track of emails or realize you never got
around to taking care of something you meant to handle several days ago? Being
visually overwhelmed tends to lead to those sorts of issues rather than
efficiency.
That
doesn’t mean you have to answer every email immediately, of course. For most of
us, that’d be impractical. It just means you have to make it your goal to deal
with every email in some way soon after you see it.
For
every email you encounter, choose from the following fast-triage options:
1.
If
a message requires no action on your behalf, archive it immediately.
2.
If
a message requires a simple reply that you can knock out in a minute or less,
respond right then and there—and then archive it immediately.
3.
If
a message requires some level of thought or response that you can’t get to
right away, snooze it to a time and date when you will be able to handle it—whether
it’s later that same day, sometime the following week, or on a Friday two
months down the road. That’ll get the message out of your way so it doesn’t
serve as a constant source of distraction. And then it will reappear and grab
your attention when the time is right.
(Google’s Inbox app has a native
snooze function designed for this exact purpose, while several excellent add-ons can bring the
same concept into Gmail. If you’re stuck using Outlook, meanwhile—well, good luck.)
A
good rule of thumb: Never open an email twice, and never leave an email in your
inbox beyond a single day. The next several items will help make that objective
even easier to maintain.
2. START THINKING OF EMAIL LIKE A MESSAGING SERVICE
An
entire movement exists around the idea of writing every email in five sentences
or less. There’s even a website you can reference in your
signature if
you’re worried about coming across as rude.
But
being concise doesn’t have to be boorish. Heck, five sentences leaves you ample
space for a quick “Hope you’re well” opening and a friendly
closing line, if you feel the need. (Hey, I’m from the Midwest. I get the
yearning for unwavering politeness.)
The
secret is to think of email like a messaging service: Ask yourself how you
would compose any given email if it were a text. Make it a touch more formal,
perhaps, and add in pleasantries as appropriate, as there’s your message.
Aside
from saving yourself time and letting you plow through incoming emails more
efficiently, this approach comes with an added bonus: It’ll make your outgoing
emails more effective—because you’ll be making it easier for the recipient to
read your message, understand what you want, and then fire off a similarly
succinct reply.
This
doesn’t have to be a hard-and-fast rule: You can get more wordy when you’re
describing a meaty project proposal or writing your dear Aunt Ethel. But it’s a
good guideline to keep in mind for most emails, most of the time.
3. STOP WRITING THE SAME STUFF OVER AND OVER
We
all have our own sets of stock emails—the standard messages we write over and
over for our work or personal affairs. Maybe it’s making an introduction,
declining an invitation, or sending an expected document. Whatever the case may
be, you almost certainly waste your time (and test your sanity) by hammering it
out repeatedly, day in and day out.
So
here’s the fix: Stop repeating yourself. Almost every email service has some sort
of system for creating and using templates. Take 10 minutes to create templates
for all of your recurring messages, then take care of all future instances with
a two-second click. Gmail’s Canned Responses feature, available in the Labs
section of the website’s settings, lets you create and insert templates for
common responses.
4. SEND YOUR TIME-CONSUMING CLUTTER AWAY
If
you’re anything like me, less than 10% of your incoming mail is actually
pertinent—in other words, anything you need to know or that requires a
response. And that means a staggering 90% of your email is likely doing little
more than eating up your day.
Let’s
cut it off at the source, shall we? First, the easy part: For the next week,
unsubscribe from every list-based email you get—unless you really, truly need
it or benefit from receiving it.
Next,
for recurring messages from which you can’t easily unsubscribe, create filters
that automatically place them in out-of-the-way areas of your email hierarchy.
(Google’s Inbox is designed explicitly to do this, with built-in
sections like “Promos,” “Social,” and “Updates” that can be set to appear only
once daily or once weekly. Gmail also has an option for a similar set of autosorted categories, though it’s a bit
less powerful and intuitive.)
Inbox
can identify certain types of emails and then show them to you in clusters
periodically.
If
you know emails from certain senders are never going to be relevant to you,
meanwhile, consider the nuclear option: creating a manual filter that sends
them directly into your spam or trash folder. Every future email you don’t have
to deal with is time saved.
Finally,
when you get a reply-all thread that isn’t going anywhere, use your email app’s
mute or ignore function to quietly unsubscribe from any future responses. And
think about giving out alternate addresses for certain types of emails, like
those associated with online accounts or reward clubs.
If
you use Gmail or Inbox, you can create a virtually infinite number of aliases
by placing a period anywhere in your username or placing a plus sign followed
by a word at the end of your username. That’ll give you a simple variable for
creating scenario-specific filters to keep inconsequential messages out of your
hair.
All
of these steps work toward the same basic goal: turning your inbox into a place
for messages that actually require your attention, with less time-consuming
clutter getting in the way.
5. STOP ORGANIZING YOUR EMAIL!
In
the physical world, devoting time to organizing documents into folders makes a
lot of sense—because how else are you going to find all those papers when you
need them?
In
the virtual world of email, however, that same system has turned into a
time-wasting shackle. The fastest way to find an old email is almost always by
searching—and consequently, clinging onto a dated method of meticulous
label-placing and folder-filing is giving yourself extra work for no real
reason.
So
you know what? As a wise virtual princess once said, let it go. Stop worrying
about organizing all of your incoming email and just power through it. Then,
when you need to find something in the future, search. Familiarize yourself
with your email app’s advanced search parameters (Gmail and Inbox have
some pretty robust options), and pat yourself
on the back for letting machines do your heavy lifting.
6. CONSOLIDATE YOUR EMAIL-HANDLING SCHEDULE
If
you were to set out to devise the most annoying and ineffective system for
email management, you’d probably come up with something where a sound or alert
interrupted you every time a new message comes in, commandeering your attention
and while you’re busy doing something else.
And
yet that’s precisely how most of us deal with email—in the most
productivity-wrecking manner possible. Study after study shows that switching
tasks causes us to work less effectively and efficiently, with some research
suggesting we lose as much as 40% of our productivity by hopping between
multiple things. Opening up email is no exception.
So
stop fighting your brain’s nature and set up a system that works with your
brain instead of against it. Pick a handful of designated times throughout the
day to deal with email—maybe mid-morning, after lunch, and late afternoon—and
then stop peeking at your inbox outside of those windows.
Set
yourself up for success by keeping your email app closed by default and open
only during the times you actively need it. And turn off email notifications on
both your computer and your phone. If you’re worried about missing any urgent
incoming messages—messages that actually demand immediate attention and can’t
wait a couple hours for a response—take a few minutes to create custom notifications that’ll alert
you only about those highest-priority messages.
The
end result is a win-win: You’ll manage your email more efficiently by tackling
it in a small number of dedicated moments, and you’ll be more focused and
productive with the rest of your day without the constant barrage of
inbox-oriented interruptions.
7. CONSIDER SOME NEXT-LEVEL EMAIL MANAGEMENT TOOLS
Throughout
the course of this story, I’ve mentioned a few different utilities that make it
easier to keep your inbox under control. If you’re in a position to try them
out, you may find it to be a beneficial time investment.
The
simplest option is Inbox—because it takes many of the concepts we’ve just
discussed and turns them into a native part of your email environment (and if
you’re a Gmail fan who’s tried it before without success, this Gmail-to-Inbox switching guide was written
specifically with you in mind).
If
Inbox doesn’t work for you but you are in Google’s email universe, some choice
Gmail add-ons can go a long way in enhancing your email experience. From
reimagining your inbox’s interface to adding on valuable productivity features,
there’s a whole world of possibilities just waiting to
be tapped—and there’s no better time to explore it than now.
BY JR RAPHAEL
https://www.fastcompany.com/40507663/the-7-step-guide-to-achieving-inbox-zero-and-staying-there-in-2018?utm_source=postup&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Fast%20Company%20Weekly&position=7&partner=newsletter&campaign_date=01052018
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