Is Email Ruining Your Life?
Is Email Ruining Your Life?
Recently I started reading a book with a seemingly
improbable title, "The 4-Hour Workweek" by Timothy Ferris.
In the book, Ferris makes a number of assertions about how
we all, whether employed or self-employed, can work less
and enjoy life more through leverage.
He makes some excellent points and I'd encourage you to
read the book.
A couple of pages in the book, however, caused me to re-
think one specific activity I engage in on an almost hourly
basis -email!
Though I've tried to "tame" the email tiger in the past, I
always seem to slide back into the habit of whacking the
"send / receive" button every 15 minutes and getting side
tracked.
But, this book reminded me that I really need to start
living (again) by the rules I suggest for everyone else.
Rule #1 - Only Check Email Twice Daily. It amazes me how
many people tell me they go out of town or on vacation and
only check email once daily and the world keeps on turning.
If you can do it on vacation, why can't you do it at home?
Only check email two times daily. I've chosen 12:00 noon
and 4:00 p.m. as my times and plan to cut that down to just
once a day at 4:00 within the next 60 days.
Rule #2 - Separate Business and Personal. Operate with a
different email box for both your business and personal
email. This keeps personal crisis from spilling over into
business and vice versa. That way if you must "cheat" a
little because of a special project, you reduce your
chances of getting derailed with an email that could have
waited if you never saw it.
Rule #3 - Eliminate Customer Support Email. Never handle
customer support via email, especially if you handle your
own customer support. Always route every bit of customer
support through a help desk system that tracks each
"ticket" and communication with the customer. Also, this
enables you to manage people's expectations about when
they'll receive a reply since you can place hours of
operation on a help desk.
Rule #4 - Not Every Email Warrants Response .Somewhere
along the line, many of us adopted the belief that every
email message needs a response from us. NO! If an email
needs to get deleted with no response, do it and don't feel
guilty about it.
Rule #5 - An Empty In-box Equals Bliss. Never, ever, under
any circumstances leave email messages in you in-box to
handle them later. You won't handle them later and it just
leaves you with a general sense of uneasiness about leaving
things incomplete. At the end of the day, take one of three
actions on every message in your in-box: delete it; refer
it to someone else; file it in an email folder.
Supposedly email would make all our lives better, but that
little dream train ran off the tracks for me back in 1997.
Don't let email dictate everything from your work hours to
your general mood, or even whether you have a "good" day or
not. Take control of email and use it as a tool, not as an
excuse to feel productive when all you really succeed at is
wasting time.
About the Author:
Jim Edwards is a syndicated newspaper columnist, author,
speaker and information publisher. Jim Edwards publishes a
NO BS multi-media newsletter that teaches "real" people how
to make "real" money online at www.IGottaTellYou.com
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