Wed Aug 16, 2006 1:26PM EDT
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ClearContext's Deva Hazarika receives hundreds of emails every day. He also works for an email management software company. Together those put him in a unique position to offer advice on how to handle your email so you don't get overloaded by the onslaught.
Here's some of his advice, along with some of my own.
Got an email management strategy that's better than either of ours? Let's hear about it!
Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.
Get a Gmail account. It automatically files emails into drop down boxes so you can still delete what's not important and let the system "file away" what you need to keep.
I ask for snail-mail from those devotees of my writingsetc.com website....because I really do miss the mailman, and the ol' thrill of opening an envelope that is not a bill....and I love buying cool stationary, pens and a collection of stick-on stamps!
Here is a perfect description of some of the key things to avoid when parsing mails: - stop doing thing to check and act on just arrived mail - check once or twice an hour, which mean you can't work for more than 30min which does not make sense - having the inbox functions like a too list may drive you to miss important tasks This article gives better advices: http://tech.yahoo.com/blogs/devlin/7849
I'm surprised no one mentioned mail filters, which are a complete godsend. Most mail programs allow you to automatically file messages from a particular sender or with certain words in the subject line to another folder, which allows for automatic prioritization and organization. I don't know why everyone doesn't use them!
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1 Posted by abdulaziz_myfriends on Thu Sep 3, 2009 2:44PM EDT Report Abuse
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