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5 Sneaky Ways To End The Day With An Empty Inbox

5 Sneaky Ways To End The Day With An Empty Inbox
Carly Jacobs
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ou’re really going to hate me when I tell you this but I finish most work days with an Inbox Zero. An Inbox Zero is an email inbox with zero or very few emails in it. My brother in law has an Inbox 63,567. Which is totally fine because he’s not losing any sleep over it. Any kind of system that you’re comfortable with is great for inbox management but if you have an email account that’s bursting at the seams and it makes you want to cry a little bit, I’ve got a few tips for you.

5sneakywaystoenddaywithemptyinbox

Make friends with Unroll.me

This is my most favourite thing that’s ever happened on the internet including this guy. I’m terrible at unsubscribing from emails because it’s annoying and I have to click through things and sometimes leave feedback which is almost more annoying that just deleting the damn email. With unroll.me you can unsubscribe from dozens of email list with one click. It’s so much easier to keep your inbox empty if you aren’t deleting twenty unread emails every time you open your inbox.

Only open emails you really have to open 

There’s no law that says you have to open every single email you receive. If you get a letter in the mail that says Dear Resident on the front with lots of dollar sign pictures all over it, would you waste your time opening it? I wouldn’t. I apply the same thing to emails. If I see an email that comes from someone I’ve never heard of, the subject line is questionable and the first two words of the email are ‘Hi there!’… I won’t open it. If someone is contacting you for a legitimate reason, they’ll say so in the subject line. Only dodgy people are elusive. Delete it. If you delete something important (which you probably won’t) that person will get in contact with you again. I promise.

Use your waiting time

If you’re waiting in line at the post office, resist the urge to check Instagram and deal with a few emails instead. Answer any under-two-minute-reply emails whenever you have a spare second. The limitations of replying on your phone will force you to be brief and concise, which is a huge time saver for you and the person reading your email. iPhones also leave a note at the bottom of the email that will tell the receiver that the message was written on an iPhone – people are usually more forgiving of brief replies if they come from a mobile phone.

Archive every day 

You need to think of your inbox as a physical desk top and your archives as your filing cabinet. If you’re finished with a file, you put it away in the filing cabinet. If you’re finished with an email conversation, put it in your archives. If the person replies, it will just come straight back into your inbox. There’s nothing to be gained from having it sitting right there where you can see it every time you open your inbox.

Stop romanticising emails 

Unless you are actually proposing to someone via email (and I strongly recommend you don’t do that) there’s no reason to go all Hemingway on every email you send. 90% of emails can be deleted or replied to in two minutes and the rest, you can spend a bit more time on. Focus 90% of your energy on the top 10% of your most important emails and deal with the rest as quickly as possible.

This week’s topic on Straight and Curly is all about inbox zero. Kelly and I chat about the whole she-bang how you can keep your inbox from eating itself. You can listen to it on your phone or right here if you like!

I’ve also got a new episode of Sweet Teen Club out this week and Stacey and I talking about 90s fashion. So pile on your black rubber bangles, dab some glitter on your cheeks, put twenty sparkle butterfly clips in your hair and wear some pants you could fit a family of four in. It’s 1991 and we haven’t realised how gross brown lipstick is yet.

I just wanted to take a moment to thank everyone who’s been so supportive of the podcasts so far. It’s always hard to branch out and try something new, especially when you’ve been in the online space for almost a decade and most people are pretty used to the stuff you do. You’re all just very nice okay? I like you a lot.

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What does inbox look like? Empty inbox? Or the type of inbox that would give me nightmares?

 

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P.S If you want more Smags sign up here. There’s always a Beyonce gif and a fact you didn’t know… last week’s fact was about Val Halen. For real.

8 Comments

  1. chrisatpb 8 years ago

    I love a clean inbox – and thank you so much for the unroll me recommendation a while ago. Best thing ever! Xx

    • Author
      Carly Jacobs 8 years ago

      How good is it? You really need to re-do it every couple of months but it’s such a life saver. I tell so many people about it.

  2. I am an Inbox Zero fan and file everything on completion, then archive or supersede when it’s no longer relevant. Some people don’t see the point but when I can retrieve stuff from five years ago as needed, it’s worth it. Unruly inboxes freak me out. I don’t even like badge notifications sitting on my phone.

    • Author
      Carly Jacobs 8 years ago

      Me neither! I hate them so much. I actually have mine turned off on my email otherwise I get distracted but my brother in laws inbox makes me squeamish.

  3. smoodgee 8 years ago

    I’m an inbox zero fan and with every email refer to the 4D approach (do it now, decide when, delegate, delete). I also have notifications switched off including sounds when emails arrive. Amazing the stress it reduces when you feel in control instead of being controlled.

    • Author
      Carly Jacobs 8 years ago

      Oh I love the concept of the 4D approach – is there a book or an official person who invented it? Would love to cover it on the podcast!

  4. Janna 8 years ago

    Thank you, I finally did unroll me after hearing you talk about it in your pod casts…feels very liberating unsubscribing from over 100 stores and other things…the thing is I never even remember subscribing to most of them. Work email is now down to the minimal check list of what needs to be done! Loving your podcasts as well, so thank you!

    • Author
      Carly Jacobs 8 years ago

      Isn’t unroll.me the best? I’m addicted. I do it at least once every few months. I’m so glad you’re enjoying the podcast and thank you so much for listening!

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