
Use the âOne-Touchâ Rule to Manage Your Email Inbox
For as useful as emails are, they sure have a way of hampering productivity. Not only do endless emails bog you down and keep you stuck in a loop of endless replies, but the stress of even having to wade through both the important messages and the junk is enough to make you avoid your inbox altogether. There's a reason "answer emails" is always the example I use for a tedious-but-important task when I'm explaining more complicated, detailed productivity techniques . But there are smaller techniques you can apply directly to email management, too. To stay on top of your work, school, and personal correspondence, you need a productivity plan, but it doesn't have to be intense: You can try the simple âtouchâ rules of inbox management. The one-touch rule Start reframing how you think of every email you get and consider them each an immediate priority. Crucially, I only mean the email itself is a priority; if you think too hard about this, you'll get overwhelmed fast. You donât have to do whatever task is outlined in it the moment it arrives, but you do have to open it. The âone-touchâ rule is similar to the âtwo-minuteâ rule of productivity in that way: A task that takes less than two minutes to complete should be done right away. The Daily Newsletter Open the email, respond to it, and either delete or archive it, depending on if youâll need it later. If it requires no response, even better. This method works best for people who get a lot of emails that arenât necessary to respond to, like all-staff updates. The goal is to touch it once instead of coming back to it repeatedly and deliberating if and when youâll respond or deal with it or instead of procrastinating, never opening it, and being unaware of its contents (or even existence) when you actually need to know what it said. Open it, take in the information, send feedback if necessary, and be done with it. The two-touch rule If you tend to have a lot of emails that need a response and the one-touch rule isn't working well, you can move on to a âtwo-touchâ method to clear your mind and be more productive. On the first touch of the email, decide if you need to respond to it right away (making it one-touch) or itâs something that can or should be responded to later in the week. Use your email serviceâs flagging or snoozing functions to categorize it, so it is available to you easily when youâre ready to respond. Your first touch is still opening it right away-thatâs key. Letting emails pile up is overwhelming, but opening them right away will help you maintain peace in your inbox. Designating a specific time to respond to non-urgent messages will also free you up to be more productive, as youâll know youâll get it done and wonât feel it weighing on you. Make sure you schedule time into your week to...
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