With email:
- Deal with email at a time other than first thing in the morning. I struggle with this...but this is what keeps me on there too long to begin with...off to a bad start. Check it mid-morning, and you'll get thru it faster. If something is truly urgent, someone will have called you about it.
- Get off email mailing lists. This may be easier said than done! The legitimate ones, go ahead and unsubscribe from them. For the others, just mark them as spam and they'll get directly deleted or sent to your spam folder. For those of you who still like but just don't have time for these lists, most email programs will let you assign a folder to incoming email. That way, all those newsletters will go into one folder and out of your inbox. Iff you do get some downtime, you can go and do some reading without feeling the pressure of having to clear your inbox.
- Block junkmail senders. Tell family and friends you just don't have time to read joke and forwarded emails. And those you just get randomly....block them.
- Sort your email. Make folders for various projects or by person, follow up on longer responses next time you open email.
- Delete trash folder once a week on Friday. I like to keep trash around and not delete it immediately, just in case I do miss something, but even I have my limits.
- Have an action or temporary file and empty it once a week or when the item is completed.
- Have a read file and read during breaks at work.
- Always put a title you can understand in emails you send out..use that subject line to your...and the other person's... advantage.
- Track your email checking and responding for one day and prepare to be shocked. Make email checking just a part of your day and not your whole day.
- When writing your emails
- Use brief answers...you are not writing any essays.
- Get right to the point at the beginning of your email.
- Provide accurate info in your email.
- Don't forward junk.
- Keep a stock file of FAQ and common responses.
- Re-read your email before you send it. It's amazing the syntax and other errors we make. This way you can also catch when something just doesn't sound right or come across how you meant it.
- Have a plan for what you are going to do when you get off the computer.
- Make a conscious decision to get off the computer at a certain time. Use a timer or alarm if you have to.
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