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.
”What’s 43 Folders?”
43Folders.com is Merlin Mann’s website about finding the time and attention to do your best creative work.
Health warning: email
mcnicks | Apr 19 2006
I have come to the conclusion that email is bad for my health... First of all, email is just efficient enough as a system of communication to allow people to rattle off whatever happens to be in their heads without indulging in a bit of review and rewriting. How many of our emails - those we send and those we receive - are badly written, containing half-formed thoughts and badly specified actions? Secondly, because email is more or less guaranteed to be delivered properly, senders assume that an email sent is definitive and, as such, is a sufficient method of delegating work. In my experience, this management-by-proxy actually displaces proper management processes. Thirdly, because we live in an instant-on world, people assume that emails are delivered almost instantly and often expect a reply, or another result, instantly as well. Yesterday, I stopped looking at my email for an hour or so in the morning. In that time, two separate people said to me, "did you get that email I sent you?" All of these things make it difficult to integrate email into any GTD practice... First of all, one email never contains one action. Emails have to be scanned and interpreted to check whether a) they contain any actions at all and b) to extract which actions and which contexts are involved. This means that we are effectively doing the planning on behalf of the sender! Also, because of the speed that emails are sent and received, we are often expected to check our mailboxes at very short intervals. This would be ok if we were simply scanning emails but, in terms of GTD, emails are stuff, which means that we must process them properly and completely. The whole point of processing in GTD is to clear the decks, gather proper actions and free up time to get on with real work. While we are constantly checking emails and processing them, we never get any time for the latter. As you may have guessed, I have been having some trouble managing my email with GTD. Yesterday, I started work on a two-stage processing method that would allow me to scan my inbox often and defer processing of 'interesting' emails till later. It looked something like: . If the email will take less than two minutes to do, do it. The idea was that, several times a day I would do proper GTD processing on my 'for processing' folder, generating actions, calender entries, new projects and filing for reference as usual. Sounds reasonable in theory but, in practice, it was pretty overwhelming. The fact that I knew there were many unprocessed emails sitting somewhere meant that I found it difficult to feel free enough to get on with work. In effect, I still had 'stuff' hanging over me. So what is the solution? I am gradually coming round to the conclusion that I will have to take some radical steps. . Check and process my email three times a day: once first thing in the morning, once around midday and once near the end of the afternoon to catch really urgent items that cannot wait till the next day. . Let my fellow workers know that this is happening, so that they do not expect instant replies, instant decisions or instant results. . Train myself not to look at my inbox outwith my 'processing' times and trust that all of the emails I receive will be handled in good time. I think that this will be exteremely difficult. However, it is interesting to ask why it will be so difficult? It is not because my work is so critical that the business will fail if I do not action emails immediately. I think it is purely a social phenomenon: we have trained ourselves, like Pavlov's dog, to respond to incoming emails immediately and, as a result, we expect the same when we send emails to other people. 14 Comments
POSTED IN:
Very interesting post. It's...Submitted by direwolf on April 19, 2006 - 2:53am.
Very interesting post. It's definitely a symptom of today's 24/7 society, where computers & email are supposed to make everything easier & everyone more productive [whereas the opposite appears to be true - how many man-hours are lost dealing with viruses, spam, crashed machines, pointless email overload etc etc etc]. I've also suffered from the 'did you get my email?' call, completely unnecessary & irritating. One answer would be to sit it out [ie, to train people that you *won't* be answering their every whim within 4 milliseconds]. Also, turning off your email programme completely whilst you're not dealing with email might help. I try to ignore email sometimes but that nagging little envelope in the taskbar [Windows/Outlook] bugs me so much I feel I just have to have 'a quick look' - very bad from a GTD POV I know - need to train myself even more. The 'management by proxy' & 'poorly formed emails' is something else I'm frustrated with at work. Because I'm fairly low down in the food chain, I tend to get emails that have already been forwarded via several management tiers with bits added along the way, which makes it very difficult/time-consuming to scan & extract the relevant info. I'm just starting out with GTD & the more I think about it, the more I think I'm going to tend towards 'lo-fi' solutions. I already spend way too much time in front of a computer at work/home & the thought of also introducing other electronic gizmos that need synching etc gives me the screaming abdabs! » POSTED IN:
|
|
EXPLORE 43Folders | THE GOOD STUFF |