Categories
Productivity

Managing the Email Flood

Every morning many of us wake up to an email flood that fills our inbox with new messages. It’s overwhelming and usually results in spending many hours each week reading, sorting, and replying. When we don’t take the time to deal with email, our inbox unread message count climbs into the thousands or tens of thousands.

A Better Way

This endless flood of email messages started me on a path to find a better way to handle email. My ultimate goal was to make managing my email inbox as easy as possible based on how I work. There are many different strategies for efficiently managing email, including Merlin Mann’s Inbox Zero and David Allen’s GTD method. Every strategy can work, but I knew the key was to find something that fit my thought process.

I created a list of the strategies and sub-strategies that I liked the best, then planned to make small changes gradually. This allowed me to master each change, make adjustments and improvements, and finally move to the next change.

Email Flood Inbox

Slow the Email Flood

The first and most important step I took was to reduce the number of messages that arrived in my inbox each day.

Categories
Productivity Technology

Become More Productive and Eliminate Notification Overload

Ding! A new mail notification appears.

Chirp! A friend just mentioned you on twitter.

Bleep! Someone just liked your facebook post.

Many of us are bombarded every day by the various sounds, message boxes, and vibrations made by our desktop computers, phones, and tablets when a new notification arrives.

iPad and iPhone
Photo by Noel Schäfer

Many years ago when I first started using a desktop email application, I changed the settings to check the server for new mail in the shortest interval possible, I think it was every minute. I wanted read that new mail the instant I received it.

Later, I clearly recall being in awe of the notification options available to me when I bought my first smartphone. Suddenly, I could receive notifications about text messages, news, weather alerts, sports scores, social network interactions, and more. Nearly every app on my phone provided some kind of notification.

Within a year, I was experiencing notification overload and decided I needed to eliminate as much of the notification distractions from my life as possible. If anything, just to get my some sanity back in my life.

There were two things I did to get the notifications under control and reduce the distractions.