Email - A Tool You Can Control
If you let it, email can take over your life. Or, you can choose
to be in charge by taking control of the volume, content, and
importance of your email.
1. Filter it! To limit the time you waste reading junk emails
and spam, you could use a filter program. This is a system that
weeds out emails based on subject lines and content. They can be
effective, but use caution. They can filter out too much. Some
filter programs will put the questionable messages in a separate
folder, which you can review. Of course, that will take some
discipline on your part to view the messages periodically and
ensure that nothing important was trapped.
2. Determine when to unsubscribe. If you subscribe to numerous
newsletters, quotes-of-the-day, etc., take the "consistent" and
"significant" test. When the item appears, do you "consistently"
read it? That is, do you read most of the issues? Secondly, does
it past the "significant" test? Do you read quite a bit of the
information and find it useful? If you answered yes to both
questions, stay on the mailing list. Otherwise, remove yourself.
3. Prioritize! Make a conscious choice regarding when you'll
review email. Once per day may be sufficient for some, while
others may need to check for messages several times. Does your
job really require you to be glued to the computer screen? In
the six years I've been speaking and writing about email
communication, I've never found anyone who had to be as
connected as he/she thought! Email is an invaluable tool that
helps you in conducting the communication portion of your job.
You control this tool. Don't stop what you're doing every time a
new email arrives. That's inefficient. If you can't resist the
mystery shrouding the new message, turn off the tone that tells
you a new message has arrived.
4. Make a time management plan. When drafting your plan,
remember to include not only the time you spend reading
messages, but also the time you spend responding to messages.
Personally, when I check email in the morning, I catch myself
reading junk mail and typing lengthy responses to friends or
colleagues. The next thing I know, the most productive part of
my day is wasted. To avoid this, I review my email in the
morning and wait to respond to "non-essential" messages until
mid-afternoon, which is my unproductive (i.e., "sleepy") time.
5. Implementation. Once you've created a plan for reading email
messages, implement it. Any time management plan will be
effective if you'll simply use it.