Email - Central to Your Work
The use of email in business has mushroomed so quickly and
become so ubiquitous that it has become hard to remember working
without it.
Email has become the hands-down method of choice for business
communication, and for many great reasons:
*Communications move quickly and succinctly *Communications can
involve multiple parties in multiple locations easily *Content
of the communication is traceable - things don't get lost
*Communications develop a thread of continuity as the email
bounces among the participants *Emails can have attachments and
links which enhance the breadth and depth of communication
For these reasons, email has moved to the core of our business
functioning. At work, the first thing we do is check our email.
It stays on all day. New emails pop in as we work and we shoot
off quick answers without thinking twice. We juggle and
multitask with ease, because email has made it so easy.
One of the difficulties of using computers is that we need to
select and use the software appropriate for use for a particular
task. One moment we are word processing, spreadsheeting the
next, using profession-specific software a moment later.
It can be a disjointed experience for us and even for our
computers as they crash from having too many windows open
simultaneously.
Why not try to use the power of email to assist in unifying your
work experience?
Examples:
*When jotting down notes from a phone call, jot them on a new
email. They won't get lost and you can email them to yourself or
others as you see fit.
*If you think of a document you will need to create, put your
initial content on an email and build it during your work day.
When you have accumulated enough content, open the appropriate
software and copy/paste.
*If you travel and need to access files from multiple locations
and computers, email the file to yourself and download the file
when you are remote.
*Conversely, when working remotely, email your work file to
yourself with the subject line, "File This". When you get back
to home base, file it where you need it.
*Explore your email system's search capabilities. There is a
wealth of information buried in your old emails. Think
creatively about how to get the most out of this wealth of data.
Realize that information kept in email is the most easily
searchable work you have at your disposal.
*Begin your email subject line with a 3 or 4 letter prefix which
represents the project at hand. When you wish to search the
history of your project, use the prefix letters in your search
and get a wonderful chronological record of your project.
*Use a tickler service such as Bounceback
Server(http://www.poingo.com). Using this type of service, you
can send yourself emails which return to you at a time interval
you specify. This adds a follow-up reminder system to the
already broad capabilities of your email.