Merlin’s weekly podcast with Dan Benjamin. We talk about creativity, independence, and making things you love.
Merlin’s weekly podcast with Dan Benjamin. We talk about creativity, independence, and making things you love.
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43Folders.com is Merlin Mann’s website about finding the time and attention to do your best creative work.
Hide your inbox!
mcnicks | Apr 3 2006
One of my biggest problems at work is being forced into an event driven mode by responding to urgent emails as they come in. I have found that, even if I properly file actionable emails, store important information in a reference folder and so on, the very fact that my Inbox is staring me in the face drags me back into being event driven. Today, I hit upon a solution: Hide my inbox! That is, I have created various subfolders for different types of email underneath my inbox, and added filtering rules to make sure that every single new email goes into one of them. The result? My actual inbox looks empty. Furthermore, I can only see whether I have new emails by explicitly choosing to expand the inbox folder so that I can see what has arrived in the various subfolders. So far it is working out really well. I can keep working on my actionable stuff, on the stuff I have decided is important and choose to scan my email every so often to make sure nothing is on fire. My aim is to gradually reduce my inbox scanning to a few times a day (first thing in the morning, after lunch, and late afternoon). D 1 Comment
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I love email filtering rules,...Submitted by emuelle1 on April 3, 2006 - 8:54am.
I love email filtering rules, and I need to learn to use them more effectively. I tend to get a lot of newsletters, since I'll find a website that I like and decide that I'd like to hear more of what they have to say. Then later on when I'm feeling overwhelmed I'll start deciding which newsletters to unsubscribe from. I used to create folders for each of them, then have a rule to route them to the appropriate place. I found that I ignored them though, and they piled up on me. On my last job, there was a woman who seemed to have no other function than to send up 5+ emails a day for every barbeque, charity event, sporting event, or anything else that has taken place in the last 5 years or will take place in the next 5 years. After working there several years and realizing that I'd never really gotten an email from her that meant anything to me, I set up a rule to route everything from her straight to trash, saving wear and tear on my delete key. » POSTED IN:
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