Business professionals often spend a lot of time reading and responding to emails. If you are one of them, follow the 5 tips below to reduce the amount of time you spend dealing with emails.
1. Read and Respond to Emails Only at Designated Times
When you get a notification that an email has arrived, what do you do? If you are like most people, you stop what you are doing and look at the email. However, reading and responding to emails as they arrive can wreak havoc on your productivity. Even just quickly scanning an incoming email disrupts your concentration. It takes people an average of 64 seconds to recover from the interruption and return to their normal work rate.
Instead of reading and responding to emails as they arrive, a more productive approach is setting aside a block of time once or twice a day to go through all your messages. You should also consider turning off email notifications. That way, you can avoid the temptation of taking a quick peek at incoming emails.
2. Manage Emails with Rules
Most email apps let you set up rules to manage messages. For example, both Microsoft Outlook and Google Gmail let you configure rules to automatically flag messages or move them to designated folders based on who is sending them or keywords in the subject line. Flagging and moving messages to folders can help you prioritize and organize emails.
3. Be Concise When Writing Emails
You likely have gotten them — emails that ramble on and on rather than getting to the point. Don’t be one of those senders. When writing an email, get to the point quickly and keep the message as short as possible.
When a longer email is necessary, consider using elements such as bullets and numbered lists to help organize and call attention to items. If a matter needs to be discussed in-depth or will involve a lot of back-and-forth conversation, you might consider talking to the person rather than sending an email.
4. Repeat Important Points in Long Conversation Threads
When replying to a long conversation thread, it is a good idea to reiterate important information relevant to the matter you are addressing. For example, suppose you want to answer one of the questions brought up in a thread about company policies. Rather than say “To answer your question, we …”, it is better to say something like “In regard to the question about whether our company needs a social media policy, we ….”. This will make it easier for the email recipients to quickly understand what you are communicating. It will also save the recipients time, as they won’t have to reread all the previous emails in the thread to find the question you are addressing.
5. Filter Out Spam
Although email servers filter out a great deal of spam, some messages inevitably make it through to users’ Inboxes. If you often see spam in your Inbox, you might want to filter it out using the spam or junk email filtering system provided by your email app or security software.
For example, you can use Outlook’s Junk Email Filter to move spam to the Junk Email folder. You have the ability to change the filter’s level of protection from the default of “No Automatic Filtering” to a more aggressive setting (“Low”, “High”, or “Safe Lists Only”). You might also create a blocked senders list. When you add a name or email address to this list, Outlook automatically moves incoming messages from that source to the Junk Email folder.