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Email Organization Tips

Folks are communicating more than ever via email. So here are some tips to help you keep the additional volume organized!

Let’s Get Organized!

Who hasn’t experienced frustration trying to organize their inbox? I receive close to 100 emails daily due to the variety of online activities and contacts.

Some I am genuinely interested in – some I am not.

A big part of keeping your inbox and email organized is discipline—yep, good ole fashioned discipline!

You need to have a system that you consistently put into practice. For example, upon checking your email, there are several tasks you can put into place to keep ahead of the increased traffic of bits and bytes finding their way to your inbox.

Put Your DELETE Button to Work

If you do not recognize the sender, look at the SUBJECT field. Are there funny characters, alpha-numeric gibberish, or does it just not make sense? Delete!

Don’t fall for tricky SUBJECT: fields that say any number of enticing comments only someone you know would or do business with would say.

For the emails that are left…

You are now ready to determine what to do with the remaining email.

  • Are several emails from the same person?
  • Is there email from companies that email you quite regularly?
  • Do you have some personal business emails and others that are more serious, so you probably need to keep a copy?

This is where filters come into play. Filters (called rules in Outlook) are a way for you to designate, based on specific criteria, what your email program will do with those emails on the download.

Say you get a bunch of emails from your best friend. Create a filter based on their email address, and emails go right into your BFF folder on the download.

Get eBills from companies you do business with. You can then send those emails to your “Need to Pay” folder. Based on company name or email address. You get the idea.

Find Out How to Setup Filters/Rules in Outlook

Another use for your filters?

As filters do not sound like the best thing since sliced bread, you can use them to send a specific email to the trash, bypassing your inbox. So, for example, the emails for certain enhancement products and adult topics are sent right to your spam/junk/trash folder.

Put filters in place to find a particular adult or offensive term displayed in the SUBJECT or BODY of an email message. This will then send them right to trash on the download.

Back to your inbox…

We now have filters in place that organize your email when downloading. So now, all the emails you requested and are expecting are in their appropriate folders for you to read at your convenience.

Your inbox should only have the orphan email with nowhere to go.

Read and Delete

Read your email as time permits. The sooner, the better, so you don’t create a backlog. Then delete any email that doesn’t have content worth keeping for future reference and empty your trash daily.

Loads of email files use a ton of your system resources. Not keeping copies of emails you will never need in the future helps remove the clutter and drain system resources.

Prioritize Your Email

You can prioritize your email based on the topic or when you want to address them. Many email programs allow you to label emails by the color that are still in your inbox or when viewing a particular folder.

For example, you could have labels that, at a glance, tell you how you have prioritized your tasks. Say red for urgent, blue for later, yellow for maybe.

By opening that specific email box, you know, at a glance, which email you have set to address right away and which you can get to as time permits.

Empty Your Trash Daily

However, before emptying your trash, you want to take a quick look-see. This is just in case any of your filters inadvertently picked up on some terms included in the email that you possibly didn’t want to trash.

This happens all the time. A quick once-over before deleting your trash will ensure that the legitimate email you want to read doesn’t get lost in the shuffle.

Create a General Folder

Call it Follow-Up, Interesting, or To Do. This is where you will file some emails from your inbox that piqued your interest that you would like to review in more detail but just don’t have the time.

Then, when time permits, you can go to that folder and check the emails worth keeping. Once you review them, either send them to another folder for keeps or send them to trash.

Avoid Email Accumulation

Be sure your inbox is cleared each day. Then, move the email to the trash, a specific folder, or your “To Do” folder, and empty the trash.

If an email is older than 90 days and in your “To Do” folder, send it to the trash. The information or offer is most likely no longer current. By doing so each day, you keep your inbox clear and your email much more organized.

What about all these folders?

Have as many folders as you need to be organized, and call them whatever intuitively works for you at a glance. This system is different and unique to each user. Make sure you use terms and a system that works for you.

Clear and Clutter Free

When practiced daily, the above tips will make a world of difference in keeping your inbox organized and clutter-free. Just a bit of discipline is all it takes to be on the road to less time spent dealing with email.

Which frees you up to do other important things, like responding to emails.

Get the word out...

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