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Showing items tagged with "email overload" - 128 found.

Should I send this email?

Posted Thursday June 7th, 2012, 9:30 am by

If you still have any doubts about the extent of email overload take a look at this recent Infographics from Online It Degree. Email is now the biggest drain on our own and our collegues productivity. Mesmo Consulatncy’s own data collection from our clients shows that we waste up to 21 days per person per year. Moreover email overload is often a major cause of stress. Figures from the USA now show that absenteeism through stress in rising.

Email Overload

Created by: OnlineITDegree.net

However investing ninety mintes of your time in one of our Brilliant Email Master classes has helped many business reclaim up to 45 mintes of the time lost through email overload.

Dr Monica Seeley, founder of Mesmo Consultancy has spent the last fifteen years coaching and training people from a wide range of organisations and businesses to use email more effectively to improve personal and business performance and manage the risk associated with cyber crime. Monica is a Visiting Senior Fellow at Cass Business School City University and Bournemouth University Business School. She is passionate about helping people to save time by using email effectively and has written several books on the subject, the latest being Brilliant Email. She runs regular workshops and masterclasses on email best practice.

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Notebook story to stop email overload – responding to the Out-of-Office message

Posted Monday May 28th, 2012, 11:30 am by

You receive an Out of Office Message, what is your natural reaction next time you want to email that person?  Aside from a touch of jealousy as they are on leave and have escaped the daily dose of email overload, you just send them another email.

Is that the best email behaviour for those serious about stopping email overload and reducing the resulting wanton waste of time (estimated now to be half a day week).

One in five business users now receive in excess of seventy email a day.  Yet our own and that of others research shows that less than a third of all incoming email is ever read.  Take a week off and there will be at least 350 emails waiting for you.

Half leather bound - journals2
My notebooks from our sponsor BomoArt

There is a very high chance that your email will either be missed or redundant by the time its read.  However the recipient may not know that and so more unecessary emails flood back into your inbox.

Be innovative.  Don’t firing of more emails.  Instead write down the things you want to email the person about and either send them one email on their return or and better still talk to them.

Now watch the email traffic go down along with the email overload.  You  might even find you too reach the empty inbox status more quickly.

This is part of an ongoing series of notebook stories to reduce email overload – see also my recent column in TechRepublic.

What else can you do using pen and paper instead of email to save time and reach the empty inbox status? 

Dr Monica Seeley, founder of Mesmo Consultancy has spent the last fifteen years coaching and training people from a wide range of organisations and businesses to use email more effectively to improve personal and business performance and manage the risk associated with cyber crime.  Monica is a Visiting Senior Fellow at Cass Business School City University and Bournemouth University Business School.  She is passionate about helping people to save time by using email effectively and has written several books on the subject, the latest being Brilliant Email.  She runs regular workshops,webinars and masterclasses on email best practice. 

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Green Office Week – stop email overload

Posted Wednesday May 16th, 2012, 12:55 pm by

Its Green Office Week this week and stopping email overload is one way to make a very significant contribution to reducing your carbon foot print.

Green email
Green Email Usage

If your office and desk space was awash with papers you wouldn’t just go and ask for a new desk/larger office.  You would be forced to clear up. Yet with email most people tend to ignore the warnings about mailbox sizes. Old emails are simply moved to another destination (for Outlook users often a pst file) and the inbox allowed to overflow again.

Unlike paper we can not see our emails, but make no mistake the more emails the more energy needed to process them.   Even if you opt for email archiving to reduce the storage requirements, servers and energy is still needed to process them.

The main suppliers of email like Google, Microsoft and BT all promote large inboxes as an advantage.  In my book this is amoral as it increases our carbon foot print and encourgaes email overload.   It’s akin to the banks lending to people who could not aford to repay the loan.  Instead of promoting bloated inboxes, responsible email providers should be promoting and rewarding those who downsize and maintain small sustainable inboxes.

Many business are now downsizing their office space to reduce overheads and be more sustainable.  We should be doing the same with email to reduce our carbon foot prints.  For example, reduce the volume of traffic through our inbox by reducing the number of emails chains, better email etiquette, sharing rather than sending the complete file.

During the week I will tweet more tips on how going green can also help you stop email overload.

For more ways to save time and reduce email overload by why not join on one of our Brilliant Email masterclasses or webinars?Dr Monica Seeley, founder of Mesmo Consultancy has spent the last fifteen years coaching and training people from a wide range of organisations and businesses to use email more effectively to improve personal and business performance and manage the risk associated with cyber crime.  Monica is a Visiting Senior Fellow at Cass Business School City University and Bournemouth University Business School.  She is passionate about helping people to save time by using email effectively and has written several books on the subject, the latest being Brilliant Email.  She runs regular  workshops and masterclasses on email best practice. 

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Email etiquette to reduce email chains and email overload

Posted Wednesday May 2nd, 2012, 10:30 am by

Five steps to improving productivity
From Brilliant Email by Monica Seeley, Pearson, 2010

Can email etiquette help stop email overload and enable you to reach inbox zero status?  In my book Brilliant Email,  email etiquette is identified as step 3 for improving productivity – see diagram opposite.

Like any form of communication, it is about conveying the right message right first time and know when to stop the conversation and move on.  In a previous blog I wrote about the importance of good grammar and spelling.

How often in an email do we leave ourselves open for the recipient to send a reply which adds little or nothing to the communication but means that out of courtesy we must reply again?

Take a look at the email chains in your inbox and I’ll bet you have quite a few which could have been terminated much earlier.  For example, when you ask someone for information, to do something etc. There are often two or three quite unnecessary rounds of email ping pong as you each play what I call the ’email thank you game’.

Recipient – Yes OK will do.
Sender – Thank you.
Recipient – That’s OK.
Sender – By the way can it be done by 12.00 noon?
Recipient – Yes.
Sender – Thanks.

Etiquette suggest that we say thank you.  But how about using brilliant email etiquette to reduce the number of rounds of the email thank you game and hence stop email overload.

Here is what I would say in my email as the sender.

Sender – Please can you do X and if possible by noon today.  Many thanks for your help.
Recipient – Yes.

End of the email chain and a chance to reach inbox zero status more quickly.

For more ways to save time and reduce email overload by using an alternative medium why not come on one of our Brilliant Email masterclasses or webinars?

What email etiquette do you use to be courteous yet reduce the rounds of the email thank you game?

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Pen and paper helps reduce email overload

Posted Tuesday April 17th, 2012, 8:55 am by

Can pen and paper help stop email overload and reach inbox zero? Yes. No, I am neither mad nor suffering from the first stages of dementia.  Keep a check today on how many times people ask you to do something (from arrange a meeting to join them for lunch):

  • by email when they are within a five desk radius of you;
  • in passing and you say ‘put it in an email’.
BomiArt Daybook
My BomoArt Daybook

Walking around any office, going to a meeting and I see most people with a notebook and pen in addition to all the technical gizmos.  We seem to use the traditional writing tools for doodling (when the meeting is boring) and making our own personal notes but rarely for jotting down what someone has asked us to do.  Why?  One reason is because we want a record so we can play cover my backside.  Many such emails are unnecessary and just drive up the email overload and hence reduce the chance of reaching inbox overload.

Email is just one of a multitude of communications and organisation tools one of which is the traditional notebook.  Picking the right tool for the right purpose is key to saving time dealing with your email.

If you are serious about stopping email overload and reaching the inbox zero status quo, then next time someone asks you to do something, take ownership and make a note in your own day book.  Don’t ask them to send you an email.  It smacks of playing politics and laziness.  Here is my beautiful day book (from BomoArt) which goes everywhere with me.

For more ways to save time and reduce email overload by using an alternative medium why not come on one of our Brilliant Email masterclasses or webinars?
Meanwhile, what else could you do using pen and paper instead of email?

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