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Five fast email productivity tips

There’s been a lot of great discussions about email productivity going around on sites I enjoy, so I thought I’d throw in five no-brainers that I’ve seen help a lot of folks.

  1. Shut off auto-check - Either turn off automatic checking completely, or set it to something reasonable, like every 20 minutes or so. If you’re doing anything with new email more than every few minutes, you might want to rethink your approach. I’m sure that some of you working in North Korean missile silos need real-time email updates, but I encourage the rest of you to consider ganging your email activity into focused (maybe even timed) activity every hour or three. Process, tag, respond to the urgent ones, then get the hell back to work. (See also, NYT: You There, at the Computer: Pay Attention)
  2. Pick off easy ones - If you can retire an email with a 1-2 line response (< 2 minutes; pref. 30 seconds), do it now. Remember: this is about action, not about cogitating and filing. Get it off your plate, and get back to work. On the other hand, don’t permit yourself to get caught up in composing an unnecessary 45-minute epistle (see next item).
  3. Write less - Stop imagining that all your emails need to be epic literature; get better at just keeping the conversation moving by responding quickly and with short actions in the reply. Ask for more information, pose a question, or just say “I don’t know.” Stop trying to be Victor Hugo Marcel Proust, and just smack it over the net—especially if fear of writing a long reply is what slows your response time. N.B.: This does not mean that you should write elliptically or bypass standard grammar, capitalization, and punctuation (unless you want to look 12 years old); just that your well-written message can and should be as concise as possible. That saves everyone time.
  4. Cheat - Use something like MailTemplate to help manage answers to frequent email subjects. Templates let you create and use boilerplate responses to the questions and requests to which you usually find yourself drafting identical replies over and over from scratch. At least use a template as a basis for your response, and then customize it for that person or situation. Don’t worry—you can still let your sparkling prose and winning wit shine through, just without having to invent the wheel 10 times each day.
  5. Be honest - If you know in your heart that you’re never going to respond to an email, get it out of sight, archive it, or just delete it. Guilt will not make you more responsive two months from now, otherwise, you’d just do it now, right? Trust your instincts, listen to them, and stop trying to be perfect.

Update 2005-10-18 07:33:45

Yep, you read it right: in the eightish months since I posted this, I’ve set my email to check every hour. The result? I ain’t missing much. A lot of stuff that can wait, a lot that resolves itself, and a huge mass of items that previously would have sent me on a 50-yard-dash to nothing.

Friends: stop letting your email poke you with a stick. It’s just not worth it.


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David Ivory's picture

Auto check for me is...

Auto check for me is fine - Just turning off the sound and bounce in Mail and NewsFireRSS works in lowering the threshold for interuptions.

I also make sure that the dock is hidden - that way the red flag of a new message is off the screen and thus I the urge to check for new mail is reduced to only when I want to and not when I’m ‘told’ to.

Oh and I never have chat apps running during the working day - yikes - at least with email I have the choice to ignore it… with a friend wanting to yak there is no getting out of it.

Michael Tinkler's picture

number 1 and number 4...

number 1 and number 4 changed my life. I check my email when I feel like it. I’m a professor and — umm — I repeat myself professionally. If I get one emailed question I get three more, and it’s easy to build templates after that.

MrLithic's picture

You missed the most important...

You missed the most important one.

If you have difficulty in saying it in an email, pickup the phone or stroll over to the person and just talk to them.

Cuts down on more emails flying back and forth due to your problem in explaining something in an email.

Marc's picture

Anyone know of a Windows...

Anyone know of a Windows equivalent of MailTemplate?

John's picture

just wanted to ask that...

just wanted to ask that question as well Marc, there seems to be a steady influx of Windows based GTD-ers here Merlin!

H's picture

The NY Times article was...

The NY Times article was pretty good. But the reporter apparently wrote it after reading a similar, more in-depth article on Mark Taw’s blog: http://marktaw.com/blog/GettingBackToWork.html

H

Merlin Mann's picture

MrLithic: That&#8217;s absolutely right. Sometimes...

MrLithic:

That’s absolutely right. Sometimes it seems like people forget that the point of email is to communicate. Esp. on tech-ier projects I’ve seen ridiculously long and talmudic threads that could have been settled with one call or a chat over coffee.

H:

I have no way of knowing what that reporter has read, but, yeah, I enjoyed Mark’s article very much. :)

Ken's picture

On point #1: I...

On point #1: I find it’s more productive to automatically check email, because otherwise I can use it as a procrastination device. Just as rss lets me stop refreshing webpages all day, automatic mail checking allows me to kill the dang check email reflex.

Having it set to at least 20 minutes is a must though. I thought ISPs get mad if you set it any lower anyway. :-)

Roy's picture

Allowing a maximum # of...

Allowing a maximum # of e-mails to sit in the inbox at any one time. When I have over 100, I go through the stack and eleminate some of them.

Elaine's picture

Windows people, if you are...

Windows people, if you are using Outlook: I use email signatures to fill in little blocks of common text.

Just give the signature a good name, and don’t set a default. Then your text is available as a dropdown from the signature button.

For longer ones, I keep a Word document with some boilerplate that I can tweak as necessary.

I’m the web manager for a college, and I am the triage point for our site’s main contact form. This really saves me time, which means I can pay more attention to either internal emails, or those external emails that are really unique!

About Merlin Mann

Merlin Mann's picture

Bio

Merlin Mann is an independent writer, speaker, and broadcaster. He’s best known for being the guy who started the website you’re reading right now. He lives in San Francisco, does lots of public speaking, and helps make cool things like You Look Nice Today. Also? He looks like this, answers questions, and has something like a life.

Merlin’s favorite thing he’s written recently in the past few years is a short essay entitled, “Better.”

 
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Inbox Zero

The original 43 Folders series looking at the skills, tools, and attitude needed to empty your email inbox — and then keep it that way. Don’t miss the free video of Merlin’s Inbox Zero presentation.

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