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EMAIL_OVERLOAD_Taking_The_Overwhelm_Out_Of_Email
| EMAIL OVERLOAD. Taking The Overwhelm Out Of Email
EMAIL OVERLOAD Taking The Overwhelm Out Of E-Mail
?By the year 2000, we?ll have paperless offices.? Isn?t that
what many people were thinking and saying thirty years ago?
Electronic mail came along and the prediction threatened to come
true of messages whizzing back and forth with no paper involved.
It was a technological dream come true. However, we?ve traded
one problem for another.
The ease of e-mail communication has created a new monster in
the form of e-mail overwhelm. Seventy-four new messages today,
and it?s not even lunch time! Chain letters which promise sure
doom if you break them! Urban legends and virus hoaxes ?til the
cows come home. It?s a never-ending stream of messages, which
can be hard to manage. Plus, adding insult to injury, the turn
of the new century has come and gone and we?re more inundated
with paper than ever. How can this be? What of the high tech,
paperless workplace of our dreams?
Paper is a tried and true means of conveying information from
one person to another, and it often feels ?safer? to rely on
paper systems than to rely on technology. This security blanket
effect is the cause of e-mail paper clutter. One reason so many
people print e-mail is because they?re afraid if they don?t,
that they?ll never be able to find the original message again.
Using the steps outlined here, you should be able to rest easy
knowing that you can locate a specific e-mail any time you need
it, without worrying about printing it off and adding it to the
pile on your desk.
The first logical first step to combating e-mail overwhelm is to
have faith in your technology and stop feeling compelled to
print your e-mails. A good rule of thumb is to only print an
e-mail if it contains information that is absolutely necessary
to have with you in hard copy when you leave the office.
Consider the fact that when you print out your e-mails, you are
defeating the entire purpose of having electronic mail in the
first place.
Another very obvious tactic to managing the flood of e-mail is
to use the delete key joyfully and use it often! There is
absolutely no reason to waste time opening e-mails that you have
no interest in reading. SPAM -- jokes, chain letters, virus
hoaxes, and advertisements, are circulated millions of times a
day and they are a total waste of time. Nine times out of ten
you can tell what is spam simply by the subject line or the
return address, so don?t even bother opening them.
Your e-mail program may also have filters that you can set up to
redirect e-mails with certain key words in the subject line or
text body. For example, if you get a lot of junk e-mail
regarding contests, you could choose to flag any incoming e-mail
with the word ?win? in its subject line. Once the software sees
the key word, it automatically directs that e-mail into the
trash and you never even see it in your inbox.
A technique you can use to reduce the download wait time on your
e-mails is to set your preferences within your e-mail client to
only download messages that are a certain size or smaller. I use
a maximum setting of 15K (15,000 bytes), which means I don?t
automatically get any attachments unless I choose to retrieve
them from the server. Setting your preferences this way will
allow you to see the first few lines of a message, but will
leave the bulk of it on the server for you to retrieve, but only
if you elect to. This little trick also keeps many viruses from
landing on your computer because you never download the
attachments to your machine.
Once you?ve chosen which e-mails to save, create various folders
within the e-mail program to sort and track the messages. If you
have only one inbox and it?s holding every e-mail from the past
six months, you?re in ?communication chaos? and things are
slipping through the cracks. When setting up sorting folders,
choose carefully what you name the folders, so that you remember
what each one means. You can create folders with project names,
client names, sender?s names, or the action needed to be taken.
For example, create a folder called ?to be answered? for those
e-mails that require a definitive reply from you. There are many
categories by which to sort your e-mails, and only you know
which categories and labels will be the most relevant and
effective for you in your business.
If you try the steps outlined here, you can take control of your
e-mail overwhelm. Once you set up a framework for organizing
your e-mails, you?ll be amazed at how quickly you can find what
you need and more importantly, take the overwhelm factor out of
your electronic communication.
About the author:
Monica Ricci has been an organizing specialist since 1999, and
her motivational presentations teach effective organizing and
simplifying techniques for home and work. She also offers free
email tips and ideas on how to make life simpler and more
organized. Her topics include clutter control, paper management,
time management, organizing space and procrastination.Contact
Monica at 770-569-2642 or Monica@CatalystOrganizing.com.
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