Escaping E-mail Overload

Clear out your inbox and get on with your life.


TechCrunch king Michael Arrington recently revealed through his blog that he has more than 2,400 unread e-mails in his inbox and an additional 721 unread messages in his Facebook inbox. No, that's not a typo. He has more than 2,000 unread messages. What's the world coming to if the technological elite can't keep up?

Arrington isn't alone, not by a long shot. Every day entrepreneurs carry the psychic weight of thousands of unanswered e-mails. Not only are they are missing out on untold opportunities by being unresponsive, they are in a constant state of heightened stress, panic and guilt because they're worried about those unanswered e-mails.

Spinning Out of Control
Donald Rubin (not his real name) is the CEO of a software firm and a venture capital professional. Rubin confesses to having 14,651 unread messages in his inbox, 1,535 of which have been flagged as important.

Rubin, a technologist himself, has tried to use technology to manage the problem, to no avail. He has activated all available spam filter options, resulting in what amounts to an exclusive whitelist, and he filters his e-mail automatically through 88 separate rules, 102 individual folders and three dozen project folders. He still ends up with more than 150 e-mails in his main inbox every day.

Rubin's sentiment about the situation says it all: "I'm a really sick puppy. Some day I'm gonna get out of this crazy business and go live on a desert island with no internet connection!"

Although Rubin was talking tongue-in-cheek, many entrepreneurs really do want to bail on e-mail. But declaring e-mail bankruptcy--a process of deleting everything in your inbox and starting fresh--isn't an option. So many business professionals have developed customized systems for stemming the tide.

Consuelo C. Bova, CEO of online clothing retailer ForTheFit.com, has struck gold by sorting e-mail messages alphabetically by sender and deleting entire blocks of unwanted messages originating from the same source (such as spam or marketing messages). This allows her to identify multiple messages or requests from the same person that can all be addressed in one reply.

"It's a quick way to categorize and clear my inbox and get it back down to manageable numbers, and it only takes a few minutes once a week to do," Bova says.

What the Experts Say
An abounding number of productivity experts offer great approaches to alleviating e-mail overload.

Timothy Ferriss, author of The Four-Hour Work Week, teaches the readers of his book and popular blog how to get to the point where they check e-mail once every 10 days. He suggests sending a short note to your network and setting up an autoresponder. These would inform people that you only check e-mail every 10 days and explain how to reach you in the interim. Ferriss actually walks the talk on this. I know Ferriss and, depending on when you send him e-mail, it does take him two weeks to get back to you.


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Other experts are not as radical. David Allen, author of Getting Things Done, presents a thought- and idea-management system to help business owners and executives "get to zero," which means nothing in your inbox and no ideas floating around in your head that are unrecorded to-dos. With a combination of specialized to-do lists, and daily and weekly processes, Allen's system slices through mounds of messages like a Ginsu knife.

Of course, there are software solutions, such as the newly released Email Center Pro by Palo Alto Software. Email Center Pro addresses the challenges many small businesses face responding to, managing, assigning and tracking e-mail that comes into general inboxes like sales@yourcompany.com or info@yourcompany.com.

However, according to Mark Hurst, author of Bit Literacy and the creator of web-based to-do management system GooToDo, many solutions fail to address the core issue of e-mail overload.

"This is a relatively recent change. In years before the internet and e-mail became popular, people would have memos and to-do lists, but no one ever had an inbox filled with 35,000 pieces of paper. And yet that's unfortunately a pretty common occurrence today," Hurst says.

Many productivity gurus have approaches to offer, but none of them really meets the problem of digital overload head-on.

"Timothy Ferriss is focused on outsourcing and not checking e-mail so often. The last time I checked, the amount of e-mail you get is not a function of how often you check e-mail," Hurst says. "David Allen's approach is a bit of a throwback to a pre-internet age when having complex flowcharts, filing papers and creating tickler items was relevant.

"People need to learn how to let the bits go and do a better job of managing their to-do lists. Digital overload isn't a function of too much e-mail; it's a product of not managing your action items appropriately," Hurst says.

Hurst must be doing something right. When I sent him an e-mail about being interviewed for this article, he responded within 20 minutes.

The Last Word on E-mail
E-mail overload isn't going to be spontaneously solved by installing software or adopting one guru's approach. The right solution for you may not be the best solution for someone else. Because of that, addressing the issue takes trial and error.

When one system doesn't work, try another until you find an approach that works for you--whether the solution is process, software or a combination of the two. E-mail is here to stay, and we all have to figure out what works for us individually.


Lena L. West is the CEO ofxynoMedia Technology, a company that makes social media easy to use, manageable and worthwhile for businesses of all sizes. She also writes theTech Forward blog.





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