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The Old Value-Cost Conversation
Was late to the game in your last post, but I agree with you that the biggest difficulty is forcing yourself not to check. Since I pretty much run a whole business focused on helping people to stop checking email (no really, remember me? I was the guy who had the cards at SXSW that said "STOP CHECKING YOUR EMAIL"), I figure I can add some other little trinkets...
* Turn off auto-checking on your cellphone--since that's a hack that a lot of people use to get around the not-checking their email on their computer (how to do that)
* For Outlook Exchange people, switch to Work Offline
* Use programs like Writeroom (Mac) or Darkroom (PC) -- since you'll be free from some distractions
* Consider programs like LeechBlock which will limit your access to sites like Gmail within Firefox
* You could also try AwayFind once it comes out of private beta -- since that program routes any urgent messages to you via SMS (or to someone else) if you decide not to check your email for any length of time [note: that's my product]
Hope that helps a little--you're dead on that not checking email all the time is the biggest step toward being able to manage email. Then when you do check it you're able to batch through all the messages...
Try the www.xobni.com email plugin. It really has changed the way I view my email box. It is no longer a vast pit where email gets tossed and disregarded. It is now an information library that is not bound to folders and rules. I highly suggest checking it out and have an invite if you need one.
I have light days of 15 or less emails but have some days where I get 60 and sometimes over 100 emails in a day. Best advice you have given is to not to be a crazed inbox checker. Anytime I close the inbox and refuse to peek, I get much more steady stream of work in. But I admit I don't practice that technique more times then none. It is part just wanting to know what is going on at all times, part I appreciate when someone gets back to me quickly and try to respond to my emails quickly, and part a lot of emails I deal with require a quick response.
The Calendar really needs to be a sacred place, not just for throwing stuff into. Getting stuff out of your Inbox is great, but I've found it works best to use IWantSandy http://www.iwantsandy.com/ and just forward the email with a tickler date if you want it to float back to you at a later time. Then just delete it from your Inbox. It's not just a great way to procrastinate, it's a wonderfully effective tickler system that you can loop in to your cell phone with SMS alerts, email etc.
Adam
I found this article from Zen Habits helpful when thinking about cleaning out my inbox(es!)
Like anything else, it requires commitment and focus, neither of which I am willing to spend on my email box at the moment. I should, because there's a good payoff in mental health & productivity, but nonetheless, I don't.
Maybe I will take some inspiration from you today and get on it. :) I like Merlin Mann's technique of just declaring amnesty and deleting everything in the InBox. I don't have the courage to do that, but I might create an amnesty folder and move everything there, to be able to start fresh.
Would you use such a tool?
Thoughts?