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What you indicate on you resume as tasks could be much more useful to you if they were positioned as skills.  Employers may not see as much value in learning about what you did in your last job, as they would in identifying skills that they can utilize.  Of course if you are applying for a job in the…     Read more

Four Steps to E-mail Freedom Print E-mail
Written by DegreedJobs.com Staff   
Friday, 14 September 2007


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One of the most difficult challenges in time management seems to be dealing with email correspondence.  Reading and replying to emails is extremely time consuming, and can distract greatly from our scheduled tasks if we don’t establish an efficient system for email management.  There is something about the ping of new mail that renders us unable to tune it out and continue with whatever we were doing.  Inevitably, many of us can’t seem to resist the temptation to just check and see who it is from; then we want to know what they wrote.  Once we’ve opened and read it, we are naturally inclined to reply and/or address its contents immediately. Depending on what was in the email, we can invest up four minutes on a single email. These four minute blocks of time can add up.  Even if you merely read and file the email, you have allowed your focus to shift away from what you were doing, and you now need to refocus, which costs you time as well.

The solution is to take control of your time and not let your email alert dictate your efficiency, or your schedule.  If you receive only ten or twelve emails on an average day, then you can probably manage them efficiently. However, some people receive dozens of emails every day.  In this case, it helps to establish a routine for checking and sorting emails. As an example, if you receive on average 30 to 50 emails in a day, you might set aside half an hour in the morning and an hour in the afternoon for specifically dealing with email correspondence. 

During this time:

1. Open each email one by one and decide on appropriate action: there may be a specific task that you must complete or there is a reminder of some future event. It could be the contents need to be forwarded to another individual. If it does result in a task that is yours to complete
2. Assign the task into your calendar: rather than dropping everything else, prioritize the task to your time management tools.
3. Continue to the next email: now you can be assured that everything that was communicated to you in those emails is either scheduled to be done, has been forwarded to the appropriate person, or was simply deleted if it proved irrelevant.
4. Organize: delete all emails or file them into appropriate folders, and move on with your scheduled tasks. 

Keeping your inbox clear will help with limiting your distractions.  It is unsettling to constantly face an inbox full of emails.  It is also wasted time to go back and re-read notes you’ve already read and addressed. 

 
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