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The Most Productive Article You Will Read
this Quarter:
How to get Treatment for Email Overload
By Craig Davis, SLPowers
Corporate workers are now
spending as much as 40% of their time dealing with email. An average employee
can come to expect between 100 and 150 emails every business day. These e-mails
can range from the important, such as a new customer requesting information to
the mundane, such as an endless chain of email discussions between colleagues.
It's come to the point where the issue can no longer be ignored. Here are a list
of tips that you can use to help keep the problem at bay.
1. Get a search tool on your
PC or notebook, RIGHT NOW. The three leaders are Google Desktop Search ,
Windows Desktop Search, or my personal favorite, X1 by Yahoo. These tools index
all of the emails, files, pictures, documents, etc. on your hard drive in
advance. When you search for them, the files that match whatever you search for
get called up instantly and update as fast as you can type or delete another
letter. 2.
Eliminate SPAM from making it to your inbox. As obvious as it sounds, for
many people SPAM was once a small problem and because it has very gradually
gotten worse, they've done nothing about it. There are many solutions out there,
and though we at Panurgy recommend our SPAM solution (call Panurgy MailProtect)
even Outlook, especially since Outlook 7 was released, can do the job. Simply
setting Outlook to its most aggressive setting gets most of the work done for
you. Remember that it is always be wise to periodically scan your SPAM and junk
folders for false positives.
3. Create rules in outlook to direct all
"automated" emails to their own folder. For example if you subscribe to
routine news lists, you can direct them to a new folder called "News Lists."
Many users also create rules that direct any emails that do not contain their
email address in the "TO:" line out of their inbox and into a lower priority
folder which can be reviewed on weekly basis or even less.
4. Keep your inbox clean.
Use your inbox, literally as your workflow inbox. If you need to work on
something, it stays there. Otherwise it gets saved in another folder or deleted.
This simple tip saves from having to go through many emails to find something as
recent as this morning.
5. Rename your email subjects so that you can
recall emails later much more quickly. For example if you are about to send
a reply with the subject "RE: Info we spoke about" , change it to "RE: Sanchez
Account – Spam proposal" instead. This has saved countless hours searching for
things later. In fact, sometimes if no reply is called for, you can forward the
email to yourself with a more relevant subject and then drag that email to a
folder that gets saved.
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