studio non troppo : mindful design : facilitation

Surviving the email inbox


Photo: IsaacMao

Spam is a hassle, no argument there. But many people suffer under the weight of a growing email inbox, and the messages piling up there aren’t spam. They’re emails that need answers, or emails that provide reminders of pieces of projects that need to get done, or emails that just haven’t found their way into the right folder to be filed away.

Frequently the emails there are there only because the user can’t even remember exactly what they’re about…and isn’t sure if they can be deleted safely.

I know someone who has thousands of emails in her inbox. I can’t say it makes her more productive.

Five years ago, Lawrence Lessig declared email bankruptcy because he was hopelessly behind on responding to his email.

Many others have followed suit, some simply deleting all their messages and starting again.

I must admit, I’m tempted in this direction for my university email account, where I find most crises emerge, blossom, and resolve themselves without need for any input from me. But for email accounts that relate to actual, productive work, I’ve found a less drastic solution.

Simply put, I incorporate all my email into my Getting Things Done system.

On my Mac, I use the clever add-on to my Mail program, Mail Act-On, which allows me to file and mark emails with just a keystroke or two. I keep my Getting Things Done system purring along using OmniFocus and iCal. My paper filing system is in two file cabinets, my electronic filing system is DevonThink Pro Office, and my carry-along inbox is comprised of a small Scully Leather blank book and a Fisher Space Pen.

Yes, it took me a while to get Getting Things Done to this point, but the benefits are worth it. My inbox, fast as it may fill up, is usually empty by the end of the day, with everything responded to, filed, tracked for future action, or deleted.

I can’t claim perfect inner peace, but at least my email inbox isn’t standing in my way.



3 responses to “Surviving the email inbox”

  1. Andy says:

    It’s all a nice system, and it seems that it should work in theory. There’s just one glaring problem for me, and it involved this statement:

    ‘If I know I won’t need to respond or act or refer to the email later, I delete it.”

    For me, aside from obvious spam, no email ever matches this description. Perhaps that’s why my email data file is 970 MB. But I’m never left wanting for that email I deleted once upon a time….

  2. doug says:

    Andy: Although I file away most messages when I’m done with them, I have found mindful use of the delete key to be emotionally freeing.

    It’s akin to the garage sale or trip to Goodwill, a (small) triumph of “I can live without that” over “I might need that some day.”

  3. Andy says:

    Well, I agree to some extent, with one caveat. The goodwill stuff would be taking up space at home, space that I need for other things. The email, not so much. I really should use the delete key more often, but when I try I’m haunted by those cases where I’ve said to myself one of the following statements, one of which is much more preferable than the other…
    “Dang I wish I’d saved that” or “See, that’s why I save all those emails.”

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