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Vox Pop: Managing actions from list emails?

Inbox Zero Tech Talk
7/23/2007
00:58:38

During the Q&A portion of my Inbox Zero presentation at Google the other day, an audience member stumped me with a question about how to manage action around mailing list distributions (the question starts at about 48:22).

He said he frequently receives email requests and questions that are also distributed to the other 20 people on his team. He describes a "waiting game" in which team members hang back to see if other people will respond first -- at least partly out of not wanting to duplicate effort or flood the sender. I thought it was a really intriguing question, although I said (and still believe) that distributed email would not personally be my first choice to handle this kind of communication.

Well, based on the reaction in the room that day, I gathered that this is a common dilemma for Googlers. Funny thing is that, since the video went up, I've received a lot of email from people outside the Googleplex who share the same problem -- a few of whom were aghast that I wasn't aware what a huge pain this is for knowledge workers. And to an extent, I'll admit those folks were mostly right.

I do know about the pain of being on multiple email lists, and it's why I've spent the last ten years trying desperately to stay off of them. I also know and dread the poorly-worded action request that requires vivisection with a magnifying glass and tweezers.

But I suppose I never really thought about the cumulative effects that distribution lists can have across a company -- especially given the geometric nature of their influence, and especially if some 500 emails a day must be monitored and processed for potential action items. That's just stunning to me.

So: open thread for you email veterans to chime in...

How does your team handle these sorts of distributed requests? How are you personally managing possible actions that stem from email distributions? Are there success stories for the distributed email approach? Anyone found better media than email for managing this stuff? Do we all just need to make our peace with getting 2,000 interoffice emails a week, and move on? What's the solution?

Kraft's picture

I work in a small...

I work in a small office (~12 people) and while most of our requests/questions/issues are sent to individuals, we do have some that are sent to our general staff@ e-mail address (an internal-use only mailing list, mostly for reference memos, etc).

Even though I'm very low in the chain of command, I've started forwarding the message to a specific individual saying "I think your [skills/knowledge/experience] would be perfect to handle this issue--can you send a reply and copy the staff on it so we'll know you've handled it?" Likewise, if it is within my sphere, I'll reply to all.

While I'm not management and by no means would my e-mail be an "order", most of the time, the individual will take ownership of it. Between boosting their ego and making them feel personally responsible, they'll do it even coming from under them in the structure.

Of course, I've built up respect within the organization. I'd never try this if I was the newest guy or not respected.

 
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