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Saturday, July 10, 2004
Overcoming E-mail Overload: Part 1
I don’t know about you, but I currently receive about 100 e-mail messages a day. Some of my colleagues get more. Some get less. Regardless, almost everyone I know complains about e-mail overload.
Regardless of how many messages you receive a day, my experience is that most people have a couple of thousand messages sitting in their inbox at any one time. They may have read—and reread—most of these messages. They may have some that are still unread. Regardless, several times a day, they sit staring at a very long, unruly list of e-mail messages. They hardly know where to begin. This results in feelings of anxiety, frustration, and, sometimes, even despair. In short, e-mail overload.
Surely, there’s got to be a better way! Fortunately, there is. In the next several posts, I want to discuss how to conquer e-mail overload. It’s easier than you think, but it begins by making three commitments:
- Commit to implementing a better system. Admit it. What you are doing is not working. Or if it is working, it’s not working as well as it should. (Otherwise, you would still be reading this post.) You can’t work any harder. You are already working more than you should. What you need is a system that will allow you to work smarter. That’s what I hope to give you in this series of posts.
- Commit to emptying your inbox daily. This is the goal and, I promise, it’s a realistic one. You may have days when you get behind. You may even go for a few days. But you must commit to the goal of an empty inbox or you will never get ahead. If you haven’t experienced it in a while, an empty inbox gives you a wonderful sense of being in control.
- Commit to dealing with each message only once. The reason most people can’t get ahead of the curve, is because they keep reading the same e-mail messages over and over again. In effect, they are multiplying the number of messages they must process. They keep running the messages through the same processing loop without resolution. The secret to stopping this unproductive behavior is deciding that you will read each mail only once, then making a decision about what needs to be done. There are five and only five options, and I will discuss each of these in my next post.
By the way, in case you are wondering how many messages you actually get a day, Sue Mosher has created a simple macro in Outlook that will count your messages for you. If you want to use her macro, read the article carefully. It took me a couple of times through the article to get it right, but I now have it working.
July 10, 2004 at 01:19 PM in Microsoft Outlook | Permalink
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Comments
My inbox is empty most of the time. I hate to see emails piled there. But ALL of my colleagues have inboxes overflowing with emails. It becomes there default holding bin for emails. There rationale is that they get so many emails a day that even if they empty it - it will get filled up just as fast. So instead of expending on any energy cleaning up their inbox, they just let it grow and grow.
Posted by: Jonathan | Jul 12, 2004 10:27:34 AM
"Commit to dealing with each message only once. The reason most people can’t get ahead of the curve, is because they keep reading the same e-mail messages over and over again."
As stupid as this will sound.. I NEVER thought of this. When I read it I went "...wow. It's so simple." Good tip. Will be hard to implement. But I like it. :D When's Overcoming E-mail Overload: Part 2 coming out with solutions ("There are five and only five options, and I will discuss each of these in my next post.")? :)
-arebelspy
Posted by: arebelspy | Aug 15, 2004 3:40:08 PM
I have recently started at looking at using "Getting Things Done" for my workflow, both at home and at work, and I really like some of the VBA scripts you have presented for Outlook. I don't know if this fits under a challenge, or an idea, or what, but I don't have the brain power for it, so I thought I'd present it to you.
At my job I will receive emails on particular projects with key words or identifiers in the name of the project (e.g., P10022, P00345). I keep my email sorted in subfolders under the Inbox in a project specific folder named after this identifier. When the project is done, I delete the folder.
I would like to see a macro that allowed you to enter an identifier, and it created a subfolder named after that identifier, and it created a rule to move incoming mail (and possibly outgoing mail) to that folder.
Basically, the work flow would be --
1. Receive email asking if I wish to join project P45678.
2. I run the macro, which asks me for keyword ('P45678') and creates subfolder to the Inbox named P45678 and a rule, named P45678, which moves all incoming messages to the P45678 folder if 'P45678' is in the subject or body.
3. After this, any incoming messages are automatically directed to the appropriate project folder.
It might also be nice to have a clean up macro which removed the rule and the folder, but that'd be greedy.
Posted by: David Engel | Sep 21, 2004 1:40:41 PM


