Overwhelmed by Email? One Firm Goes Email-Free on Fridays

Tue Oct 9, 2007 3:57PM EDT

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I'm sure you know the feeling: You spend five minutes answering one email, only to find that a dozen more have taken its place while you were crafting your response. During business hours, email can be a vicious cycle that never stops, to the point where some are taking drastic steps to get out from under its crushing weight.

The latest idea: Email-free Friday, which a group of engineers at Intel are kicking off in an attempt to stem the tide of electronic noise. The idea isn't just to get people away from Outlook for the day, but to get them interacting more in person or even over the phone, hopefully to encourage better idea generation and more effective problem solving than the coldness of email can offer.

There may also be a secondary benefit of stopping people from sending so much email on the other days of the week: One company says that, after implementing an email-free Friday plan in early 2006, overall messages sent within the company have dropped by a whopping 75 percent. That's incredible.

Sounds like a great start. As a companion, can I humbly suggest a telephone-free Thursday? 

Here are some additional personal tips on getting more control over your inbox:

  • Don't check your inbox so often. I tweaked Outlook to check for new messages once ever 10 minutes instead of every 2 or 3 to help eliminate distractions from other tasks. Some heavy mail users check once or twice an hour. You aren't going to miss anything, I promise.
  • Delete or file messages you're done with. Some people just leave everything in their inbox, from critical tasks to newsletters to spam... and I have no idea how this "system" could possibly function. Create folders for related messages you want to save, and delete the rest. Invest in a spam filter. Most experts say that you should aim for a maxmum of 10 to 20 messages in your inbox at any one time. I personally feel a great sense of accomplishment when I am able to delete or file an email permanently.
  • Use a calendar to help you. There's no need to leave a message in your inbox for months to remind you to do something in January. Set an appointment in your calendar and file away the message until you actually need it.
  • Use appropriate subject lines. Or change them if someone sends you a "keeper" with a vague heading. Seeing "Project due on Friday 10/19" will be much more helpful than a subject line that reads "Hey..."
  • Don't forget the phone, IM, or even a walk down the hall. If it will take you longer to type it than it will to discuss in person, consider getting up out of your seat. The walk will do you good, and they might have candy in their office.

Comments on Overwhelmed by Email? One Firm Goes Email-Free on Fridays

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  • 46 Posted by bbowen32006 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:03PM EDT Report Abuse

    Playing catch up on Monday would be heck Plus 50% of the emails I send are Spreadsheets. What would I do on Friday. Suffer the internet all day? Wait.......

  • 47 Posted by highonezra on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:19PM EDT Report Abuse

    My inbox is immaculate and everything is filed accordingly so this doesn't happen to me. However, I also have the biggest mailbox in the comapny because of it. AND I agree with the person who posted about Europeans and email - my company is based in the UK with offices in Paris and Germany and they never read emails and also ask us to call if we send an important one!

  • 48 Posted by kedaidua on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:48PM EDT Report Abuse

    This is a silly idea. Most of my regular contacts spend a lot of time out of their homes and offices; as a result (at least as often as not) I will have to leave a voicemail. Calling and leaving voicemails is a bigger waste of time than emails, plus there is no documentation than you actually contacted the individual (the cover your @$$ issue). "Real" letters are even more wasteful. Personally, I think I am about twice as productive as I was ten years ago, largely due to the convenience of email.

  • 49 Posted by karmabox1 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:47PM EDT Report Abuse

    In my business I communicate only by email so any day (or hour) with my inbox off would not be an option. For Mac users: If you use Apple Mail for heaven's sake use folders and set up rules to sort your mail. Once a mailbox gets too large (unfortunately they don't tell you how large is too large), all your older emails vanish and despite what Apple says, you can't get them back. I just learned this the hard way. :( I'm grateful most of my important emails were backed up.

  • 50 Posted by grewjac on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:13PM EDT Report Abuse

    I'm betting all the change in my pocket that Intel didn't even THINK about doing an impact analysis for their critical operations to see what the impact to the enterprise is if they "lost" E-mail for a full business day. I'm a business continuity planning consultant and a recent client had certain operations that would cause huge adverse impacts had E-mail gone down, because that was how they communicated with trial sites for new medications. If I had a position in Intel, I'd be telling my broker to dump it ASAP. And this goes for phone usage, too. Phones in some industries are considered life-critical. And PLEASE, let's not use Europe as anything but a bad example: France riots if the government even hints at relaxing laws that limit work weeks to 32 hours.

  • 51 Posted by kn.duke on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:52PM EDT Report Abuse

    What about industries where records must be strictly kept especially with SOX? Even if I do something over the phone, I have to send an e-mail confirming it and then archive the message so this just adds a step.

  • 52 Posted by dispater3 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:44PM EDT Report Abuse

    Worst idea ever, now phone free friday is a good idea

  • 53 Posted by ekraines1@att.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:52PM EDT Report Abuse

    We have had a email free day for well over a year and it works gives you more "face to face" interaction which we as awhole have gotten away from

  • 54 Posted by sunzzip on Thu Sep 3, 2009 9:48PM EDT Report Abuse

    hey just email in important matters is not a right thing email should be to inform the things that are in the right directions or just in case bad news but only the true one to be aware of or prepare person but never seeing each other ever is not a good thing.person misses out on the true eye expretions some use the phone machines only to avoid catching lying also. I guess after finding out whose emails are worth reading and relayable let them go easy a little so they can spend time on doing things instead delaying in meetings or get their meetings shorter so they countinue their computer type speed.its should not be for who are only their to collect a paycheck or raise the empolyment rate.

  • 55 Posted by elvismah on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:54PM EDT Report Abuse

    did anybody in USA mention that Today is the biggest Moslem holiday???????????? end of Ramadan thank you Yahoo for mention it, let alone to congratulate to Moslem

  • 56 Posted by keech01 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:48PM EDT Report Abuse

    Yeh right. Phone is SO much more effective than e-mail - NOT! Step 1: Call Step 2: Person not available, you leave a message to call back Step 3: When call back happens YOU are unavailable. Step 4: You get a voice mail to call them back. Step 5: Repeat steps 1-4 another 100 times Step 6: You finally get to talk Step 7: One month later people want to know what decisions were made on that call but you cannot remember enough detail and there is nothing written to refer to. Give me e-mail any time. "email free" Friday is a really stupid idea. Train people to use the tool wisely not take it away. How about having "hammer free" Wednesdays because hammers could be used to kill people. BTW: Know how I handle the "telephone tag" situation above? I set up a date / time to talk. How? Using Outlook and e-mail of course!!!

  • 57 Posted by mr_krypto on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:28PM EDT Report Abuse

    ARE YOU EVEN SERIOUS??? DO YOU HONESTLY THINK THIS IS NEW NEWS????? MY COMPANY HAS GONE EMAIL FREE ON FRIDAY FOR OVER 2 YEARS TO ENCOURAGE COMMUNICATION BETWEEN DEPARTMENTS THAT USUALLY DO NOT SPEAK. WAY TO GO INTEL!!!! YOU GUYS ARE SO INNOVATIVE, NO EMAIL FRIDAYS, WHO EVER WOULD HAVE COME UP WITH THAT IDEA?

  • 58 Posted by bradleyracn11 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:12PM EDT Report Abuse

    At GEICO, years back we had "Outlook Free" Fridays. Every Friday they sent us an Outlook on Friday to remind us.

  • 59 Posted by melissa_palmtak on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:15PM EDT Report Abuse

    hi my name is melissa i'm 19 yrs old finish high with my high school certificate and my career is to become a doctor but rigth now i'm trying to get up some thing.but if i have a friend who want to help and getting to know me this is my email adress Melissa_palmtak@yahoo.com and when you get contact with me i will give you more information about me ok cool bye

  • 60 Posted by pete2plus on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:07PM EDT Report Abuse

    This is not a "new idea" I've been a part of "no email wednesday" for almost 8 months and it makes it the best day of the week. I just wonder if a "no e-mail week" would be even better.

  • 61 Posted by chanlabing9021 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:21PM EDT Report Abuse

    This is an absolutely frightening concept. My life mandates coffee and email! Although email does increase one's responsibilities in a day, I would much rather review at a glance all of my emails and determine what is priority than having to listen one by one to voicemails ... and then write them down. Truth be known, when one calls another they get voicemail anyway. If one feels the need to interact with other employees...take some to lunch...now that will make a difference! :o)

  • 62 Posted by joyagooden on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:41PM EDT Report Abuse

    This is not Europe, it is America. And if you want to use a foreign example, what about Japan? Hmmmm... turns the tables a little, doesn't it? I would be dead in the water without my emails! I have to transfer a large amount of information to a lot of people simultaneously. Email and web collaboration sites are the only way to do this efficiently. The two biggest "time wasters" for me are spam and pointless meetings. I've employed a great spam filter and devised a way of making meetings short. We've removed the chairs from our meeting rooms for meetings that really don't require a lot of overthinking. Not being able to sit certainly has helped to keep people from getting pointlessly longwinded!

  • 63 Posted by spewshooter on Thu Sep 3, 2009 9:36PM EDT Report Abuse

    Not only will Monday be "heck," but Sunday night will be murder - Doesn't most of corporate America begin their week on Sunday evenings?

  • 64 Posted by henry_duong on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:18PM EDT Report Abuse

    I think the statement "Some heavy mail users check once or twice an hour." is pretty funny since I check my mail constantly throughout the day (more like twice every 60 seconds) AND I consider myself to be more efficient than many people I know.

  • 65 Posted by mostly2002 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:26PM EDT Report Abuse

    brozenec, have you not cottoned on that we have different time zones? It may be during the working day there when you send, but it may be the middle of the night here! Numpty!

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